Top Items:
Arn / MacRumors:
Another Buried Apple Trademark - ‘iGuide’ as Another Name or Service for iSlate? — With the revelation that Apple had acquired the iSlate.com domain and iSlate trademarks, it seemed clear to us that iSlate was the likely name for Apple's upcoming tablet computer.
Discussion:
9 to 5 Mac, ITworld.com, QuickPWN, Mashable!, VentureBeat, The Next Web, TeleRead, Silicon Alley Insider, AppleInsider, EverythingiCafe, PC World and iLounge
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Robin Wauters / TechCrunch:
The Apple Tablet: Will It Be Called iSlate, iGuide, Or Something Else? — After discovering that Apple had registered iSlate.com in late 2006 (we dug a little deeper and found trademarks had been filed for ‘ISLATE’ in both the United States and Europe by a company that was most likely …
Discussion:
AppleInsider, Webomatica, The iPhone Blog, GeekBrief.TV, TECH cocktail, Switched, IntoMobile, GalleyCat, GeekBrief.TV and The Register
Marshall Kirkpatrick / ReadWriteWeb:
It Was a Facebook Christmas; Site Hits #1 in US For First Time — Christmas is a holiday that brings people together, so perhaps it should be no surprise that Facebook has become a part of millions of peoples' Christmas experiences. For the first time in its history, Facebook was the #1 …
Darren Murph / Engadget:
Ford becomes first automaker to offer HD Radio with iTunes tagging — If you thought the automakers would be leaving CES to the TV and PMP makers, Ford would like to have a word with you. A few words, actually. Aside from announcing that in-car WiFi will be available next year …
Andrew Parker / Financial Times:
O2 says sorry for snags in London network — has apologised to customers who could not make phone calls because the mobile operator's London network was overwhelmed by bandwidth-hungry smartphones. — Ronan Dunne told the Financial Times he was disappointed with O 2 's network performance in London since the summer.
Discussion:
Digits, The Register, MacRumors, DSLreports, AppleInsider, Digital Daily, Reuters, Boy Genius Report, mocoNews, 9 to 5 Mac, Engadget, Telegraph, Softpedia News, All About Symbian and LOOPRumors
Gary Merson / HDGURU.Com:
DirecTV To Launch A 3D Channel-HD Guru Exclusive — (December 28, 2009) DirecTV intends to launch the first US 3D HDTV channel early next year. The satellite TV provider plans to make the announcement at the 2010 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on January 7th.
Discussion:
NewTeeVee, DSLreports, Softpedia News, Engadget, I4U News, Gizmodo, Gadgetell, Boy Genius Report, Home Theater, SlashGear, Electronista and DVICE
Chris Ziegler / Engadget:
Ten years of BlackBerry — The year is 1999. Bill Clinton is the President of the United States, gas is 94 cents a gallon, Bondi Blue iMacs are a staple in dorm rooms across the country, and Microsoft is trying to bring the desktop Windows experience to the pocket, pushing its Palm-size PC concept …
Trevor Johnston / Google LatLong:
Plan a trip in one click — Why should trip planning be any more complicated than opening your browser and entering the name of your favourite city? Six months ago we launched City Tours on Google Labs with the goal of making vacation planning as easy as searching the web.
Totlol:
The story of Totlol — Prelude - a trap set up by Google Every start-up has a story. This is the story of Totlol. Because I did everything myself, it is also the story of almost two years of my life. It's the story of a flourishing service into which I put tons of work.
Thanks:atul
Harry McCracken / Technologizer:
The Speculative Prehistory of the iPhone — Remember the very first iPhone-the one that sold for $249, had an iconic click wheel, a cool slide-out keypad, and a unique two-battery design-and which ran on Apple's very own nationwide wireless network? No, not the iPhone that Steve Jobs unveiled …
Discussion:
Brainstorm Tech, GigaOM, Engadget, Shanzai.com Analyzing …, Zatz Not Funny!, CrunchGear, The iPhone Blog, Gizmodo Australia, Bits, Gizmodo, MacDailyNews, ParisLemon and TUAW
Azaria Jagger / Gawker:
Escaped Inmate Taunts Cops with Facebook Pictures and Status Updates — Remember how, in Catch Me If You Can, fugitive Leonardo DiCaprio kept calling Detective Tom Hanks to taunt him? Here is a convicted burglar doing the same thing, in real time on Facebook. Should we celebrate or fear him?
Discussion:
Mirror.co.uk
Times of London:
Why we can never rest: a year in the life of Twitter — ON June 15, our technicians told me to add a note to our website, writes Biz Stone, a co-founder of Twitter. — The note warned users of a planned maintenance session that meant our service would be inaccessible while we carried out an overdue system upgrade.
Discussion:
Softpedia News, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, VentureBeat, Twitter Blog and WebProNews, Thanks:atul
AppleInsider:
Magic Mouse helps Apple double share of market in 8 weeks — Apple's new Magic Mouse helped Apple see a twofold increase in its share of domestic mice sales last month, AppleInsider has learned, garnering the Mac maker a double-digit slice of the market for the first time ever.
Bloomberg:
Netflix Envoy to Wary Hollywood Pitches Web-Viewed Film Rentals to Studios — Dec. 29 (Bloomberg) — Netflix Inc. Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos bypassed Hollywood to jumpstart the company's online film-rental business last year. Now he has to convince the studios the company is a friend and not a foe.
Dean Takahashi / VentureBeat:
Will good come from the huge piracy of Modern Warfare 2? — Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 has broken records for game sales. So it's only natural that it is also the most-pirated game of 2009, according to downloads measured by TorrentFreak. — Modern Warfare 2 was the most pirated game on the PC and the Xbox 360 this year.
Aaron Ricadela / Business Week:
Google's Chrome OS Cited as Likely Hacker Vehicle — The HTML 5 technology intended to power Google's forthcoming computer operating system can access a PC online or off, warns security vendor McAfee — Google's computer operating system, due to be released next year …
SophosLabs blog:
Twitter banned passwords — As you may have heard in the last few days, Twitter has banned 370 passwords (actually only 369, ‘password’ appears twice in the list) as ‘too obvious’ to be safe for their users. A good move in theory but why are so few words banned? And what are they?
Dan Butterfield / iPhonAsia.com:
China Unicom has now sold 300,000 iPhones — iPhone sales are building momentum in China. On the heels of a major iPhone advertising campaign, last week China Unicom launched a 46-city iPhone roadshow/education campaign. Today we've learned that China Unicom has now passed the 300,000 iPhone sales threshold.
Erik Larkin / PC World:
Good Guys Bring Down the Mega-D Botnet — Chalk up one for the defenders. Here's how a trio of security researchers used a three-step attack to defeat a 250,000-pronged botnet. — Recommends — For two years as a researcher with security company FireEye, Atif Mushtaq worked …
Jeff Barnard / Associated Press:
Couple stranded 3 days after GPS leads them astray — Buzz up! — KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. - A Nevada couple letting their SUV's navigation system guide them through the high desert of Eastern Oregon got stuck in snow for three days when the GPS unit sent them down a remote forest road.
Reuters:
Microsoft pegs China search market as top priority — SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China is a vital market for Microsoft's Web search business, as it chases leaders Baidu Inc and Google in the world's biggest Internet market, the world's largest software maker said.
Brooke Crothers / CNET News:
Verizon sees rise of ‘slate’ computers in 2010 — Verizon is looking closely at “slate” computers as it plans to expand its portfolio of offerings in 2010. — In an interview, Brian Ullem, who heads emerging devices for Verizon Wireless, discussed slate computers (aka tablets) …
Neil Fraser's News:
Google Multivac — In 1958 Isaac Asimov wrote a short story titled “All the Troubles of the World” (included in the collection “Nine Tomorrows"). It described a world transformed by Multivac, a giant all-knowing computer. Asimov died in 1992, a mere four years before Larry and Sergey started …
Alexei Oreskovic / Reuters:
AT&T site resumes selling iPhone to NYC residents — SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - AT&T Inc temporarily stopped selling the iPhone on its website to New York City residents over the weekend, raising fresh concerns about the wireless network's capacity in the Big Apple.
Discussion:
Silicon Alley Insider
Jonny Evans / 9 to 5 Mac:
Apple sells 1.8million-2 million iPhones in France in 2009 — Apple has achieved almost 10 percent of the entire French mobile phone market in 2009, according to leading French newspaper, Le Figaro. — The report 'The iPhone, France's favourite smartphone' doesn't provide sources for the claims …
Wall Street Journal:
Keep a Civil Cybertongue — Rude and abusive online behavior should not be met with silence. — Printer — Friendly — In less than 20 years, the World Wide Web has irrevocably expanded the number of ways we connect and communicate with others. This radical transformation has been almost universally praised.