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Clearing Up Confusion on Google and China — From Silicon Valley to Zhongguancun, Google's surprise announcement that it may pull out of China has fueled an enormous amount of discussion in recent days, not all of it 100% accurate. Below are some misstatements and misunderstandings we've seen:
Discussion:
James Fallows, Silicon Alley Insider, Voices on All Things Digital, Imagethief and Wall Street Journal
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Chinese authorities behind Google attack, researcher claims — Forensics expert who examined malware believes it's too good to have come from independent hackers — Computerworld - The malware used to hack Google is so sophisticated that researchers brought in by the company to investigate believe …

“Aurora” Exploit In Google Attack Now Public — Computer code that exploits the yet-to-be-patched Internet Explorer vulnerability used in Operation Aurora to attack Google and others in December has now been published on the Internet. — McAfee Labs researchers have seen references …
Discussion:
eWeek, InfoWorld, The Next Web, Bloomberg, The Register, CNET News, Download Squad, DailyTech, TechSpot, The Forrester Blog …, Computerworld and Praetorian Prefect

Verizon undercuts AT&T, reduces monthly voice plan by $29 — Competition in the mobile landscape became more intense Friday, when Verizon Wireless announced it has cut its basic voice plan by $29 per month, to $69.99 for unlimited calling. — Verizon also has an unlimited voice and text plan …
Discussion:
Macworld, MacRumors, MarketWatch, The Atlantic Business Channel, Electronista, Crave, Wall Street Journal, Gearlog, ChannelWeb and PC World
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AT&T Matches Verizon With $69.99 Unlimited Voice Plans. iPhone Not Included (But Also Cheaper). — As you may have heard, Verizon made some headlines today by unveiling new, cheaper plans to its customers. Specifically, they cut the price of their unlimited voice plans by $29 down to $69.99.


Verizon Wireless revamps calling plans; Goes for customer grab ahead of 4G — Verizon Wireless is going on offense as it tweaks pricing plans, pares its device portfolio and markets heavily with its “there's a map for that” ad campaign. The grand plan for Verizon Wireless: Grab customers …


Sarcasm punctuation mark aims to put an end to email confusion — Expressing sarcasm in the written word can be a dangerous business, as anyone forced to apologise for sending a tongue-in-cheek email will confirm. — The SarcMark costs $1.99 to download — Now a US firm has come …
Discussion:
Technologizer, CNET News, Maximum PC, iGeneration, broadstuff, Pocket-lint.com and blogs.telegraph.co.uk


Yelp Enables Check-Ins On Its iPhone App; Foursquare, Gowalla Ousted As Mayors — When you think of the idea of “checking-in” at a venue in a mobile app, you likely think of Foursquare or Gowalla right now. The two gained significant momentum, funding, and users in the location space in 2009.
Discussion:
Yelp Official Blog, ReadWriteWeb, VentureBeat, Mashable!, The Download Blog, Widgets Lab and Gizmodo


Analyst: Apple tablet ‘in full production’ — An analyst at AVI Securities said Friday morning that the Apple tablet is “in full production” and a research note stated that Apple “NAND” flash chip requirements may be increasing because of the tablet. — The Apple tablet information comes from …


Twitter's Answer To Facebook Connect — Twitter is preparing to launch a new set of tools that will let third party websites easily integrate Twitter features directly into their web sites and services, multiple sources have confirmed. In a nutshell, this is their response to the massively popular Facebook Connect.
Discussion:
GigaOM, Shooting at Bubbles, Fast Company, SocialTimes.com, All Facebook, VatorNews, Silicon Alley Insider, Softpedia News and BaltTech
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Facebook Connect Appears on MySpace Video Site
Discussion:
Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, 901am, Mashable!, TechCrunch, Softpedia News, bub.blicio.us, GigaOM and The Web Services Report


Making A Living (Barely) On The iPhone App Store (aka The Numbers Post) — The App Store is a very hit-driven environment. A few apps sell a large amount of units, and the great majority sell next to nothing. That's somewhat similar to the music industry, except that the audience for music …


The return of the mainframe: Back in fashion — The mother of all computers no longer looks that old — GEEKS may roll their eyes at the news that Namibia is only now getting its first mainframe—a technology that most consider obsolete. Yet the First National Bank of Namibia …
Discussion:
broadstuff


Patent Reveals Possible Groundbreaking Multi-Touch Features for Apple's iSlate — Now that everyone knows the iSlate is real, the question is: what the hell is this thing going to be like? How will it work? What will wow us about the iSlate that we never really expected?

The Original Tablet — I enjoyed Paul Thurrott's daily coverage of CES last week. A big trade show is a hard thing to capture in prose, and Thurrott got it. — But I chuckled at this piece starting his CES coverage, “Exclusive! Microsoft to Announce Tablet PC Before Apple!”:


Nokia 2010 Symbian UI update detailed: built on Qt — Remember the concept mockups of what Nokia envisaged its Symbian S^4 UI might look like after it's reworked in 2010? The company showed off a brief video demo back in early December 2009, and now they're opening up the floodgates …
Discussion:
Symbian Blog, Gizmodo, Electronista, DailyTech, Mashable!, Fone Arena, 901am, Pocket-lint.com, Softpedia News, Electricpig and Ubergizmo

Why freemium is bad for business — I've never been comfortable with free products for business use, even though it's difficult to avoid using them if you're a small or one-person business (web analytics, for example, has been all but wiped out as a low-end paid service by Google's free offering).
Discussion:
broadstuff


Apple's Media Players will One Day be Both Portable TV & DVR — On January 14, 2010, the US Patent & Trademark Office published a patent application from Apple that reveals one of the next chapters coming to Apple's Media Players. In Q4 2010, Apple introduced their fifth generation iPod nano …
Discussion:
Engadget, Obsessable, Gizmodo, EverythingiCafe, 9 to 5 Mac, Pocket-lint.com and Electricpig


Xobni takes over Twitter's old offices — You can measure the success of a start-up in square footage. — Just ask Xobni. — A few weeks ago, Xobni moved into Twitter's old offices in the South of Market area of San Francisco. With 30 employees, it could no longer squeeze into the offices …
Discussion:
Xobni Blog


Music file-sharer ‘Oink’ cleared of fraud — A man who ran a music-sharing website with almost 200,000 members has been found not guilty of conspiracy to defraud at Teesside Crown Court. — Alan Ellis, 26, was the first person in the UK to be prosecuted for illegal file-sharing.
Discussion:
TorrentFreak, Press Association, PC World, Guardian, Mashable!, Threat Level and Techdirt


The inside track on Apple's tablet: a history of tablet computing — Apple's anticipated press event later this month is widely expected to debut a new tabled-sized device as a sibling to the company's Mac, iPod and iPhone product lines. Here's what has led up to the launch, and why the futuristic tablet hasn't taken off so far.

Is Apple Ready for Merger Mania? — The company has hired a banker from Goldman Sachs and looks to be in a more acquisitive mode — Historically, Steve Jobs has not been the acquisitive type. Since he returned to Apple (AAPL) as chief executive in 1997, the company has bought only 11 small companies …
Discussion:
LAW.com, Ars Technica, Tech Trader Daily, Digital Daily, Macsimum News, mocoNews, TUAW, Silicon Alley Insider, 9 to 5 Mac, The Apple Core, MacRumors, iLounge, Edible Apple, MacNN, MacDailyNews and AppleInsider


AOL To Name An Ex-Googler “Head Of Technology” (AOL, TWX) — Several sources close to AOL (AOL) management tell us the company has hired Jeff Reynar, a former Google engineering manager, to “run overall technology” and report to CEO Tim Armstrong. — Jeff's title will be something like “head of technology.”
Discussion:
TechCrunch