Top Items:
Richard Pérez-Peña / New York Times:
The Times to Charge for Frequent Access to Its Web Site — The New York Times announced Wednesday that it intended to charge frequent readers for access to its Web site, a step being debated across the industry that nearly every major newspaper has so far feared to take.
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Business Wire:
The New York Times Announces Plans for a Metered Model for NYTimes.com in 2011 — NEW YORK—(BUSINESS WIRE)—The New York Times announced today that it will be introducing a paid model for NYTimes.com at the beginning of 2011. — The new approach, referred to as the metered model …
Jim Romenesko / Romenesko:
Read NYT execs' memo to staff about plans to charge for NYTimes.com — Subject: On the Record - A Message from Arthur and Janet — Vol. 1 2010: An Important Decision about Our Future — Today we are announcing that we will be introducing a paid model for NYTimes.com at the beginning of 2011.
Jonny Evans / 9 to 5 Mac:
NYC: Apple in 11th hour ‘tablet’ meetings with leading US book publishers — Apple negotiators are in New York this week for a series of eleventh hour “secret” iSlate-related meetings with leading US book publishers, reports The Bookseller. — The report suggests publishers are attempting …
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Eric Savitz / Tech Trader Daily:
Apple: Verizon To Get iPhone 4G In June, Canaccord Says — It's become a tradition at Apple (AAPL) product launch events for CEO Steve Jobs to save some extra juicy bit for very end, which he typically provides after reviewing all of the other day's news, using the phase, “one more thing.”
Paul Carr / TechCrunch:
Anticipating the Apple Tablet: When journalism becomes fanfiction — For the record, I'm writing these words on a MacBook Pro; the third Mac I've owned in the past twelve months. As I do so, I'm listening to music on iTunes through my standard issue iPod headphones, so as not to disturb my neighbours.
Business Week:
Apple, Microsoft Discuss Giving Bing Top iPhone Billing — Amid an accelerating rivalry with Google, Apple is discussing ways to make Bing the default search engine on the iPhone — In 2003, when Apple said its iTunes music software would work on PCs using the Windows software of its age-old rival …
Discussion:
Download Squad, TechFlash, Between the Lines, MacRumors, AppleInsider, Mashable!, The Register, Reuters, Engadget, Bloomberg, Search Engine Land, Guardian, CNET News, Network World, IntoMobile, Macsimum News, Rev2.org, AppScout, DailyTech, louisgray.com, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, EverythingiCafe, Erictric, InformationWeek, iPhone Buzz, Tech Central, Silicon Valley Watcher, Tech Trader Daily, Silicon Alley Insider, GMSV, Maximum PC, Internet2Go, SlashGear, mocoNews, LiveSide.net, Search Engine Journal, The iPhone Blog, App Advice, TUAW, The Next Web, Apple Gazette, I4U News, Newlaunches.com, Search Engine Watch, FierceMobileContent, Fudzilla, GottaBeMobile.com, Neowin.net News Feed for, Gizmodo, Edible Apple, Pocket-lint, 9 to 5 Mac, T3.com News, Go Rumors, Tom Foremski: IMHO, Ubergizmo and PC World
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Dave Cole / The White House Blog:
WhiteHouse.gov: Anywhere — Today, we're excited to announce the new White House App available for Apple iPhone and iPod Touch. The White House App delivers dynamic content from WhiteHouse.gov to the palm of your hand. — One feature that stands out is live video streaming.
Nathania Johnson / Search Engine Watch:
5 Bing Updates to Know and Love: Data Retention, AutoSuggest, Maps, and Apps — If I had to guess, I would say the Bing team's 2010 resolutions are to continue growing fast and furiously. If the five updates they've released in the past two days are any indication, they're on track to do just that.
Discussion:
Search Engine Land, The Microsoft Blog, Mashable!, Bing Maps Blog, Softpedia News, Data Mining, Search Blog, Bing and Erictric
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Avner Ronen / Boxee Blog:
Coming soon: Boxee Payments — Users want to see more content on Boxee. Content owners want to be paid for what they produce (whether that's TV Shows, movies, music, or applications). We don't believe these are conflicting interests. — This is why we plan to release a Payment Platform …
Discussion:
A VC, Silicon Alley Insider, VideoNuze, SlashGear, CenterNetworks, Mashable!, I4U News and CrunchGear, Thanks:chrismessina
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David Kaplan / paidContent:
Boxee Plans New Pay Wall For Summer; Will Keep Less Than 30 Percent Of Rev Split
Boxee Plans New Pay Wall For Summer; Will Keep Less Than 30 Percent Of Rev Split
Discussion:
Download Squad
Larry Dignan / Between the Lines:
Amazon gives publishers a bigger royalty cut for Kindle; Apple Tablet defense? — Amazon on Wednesday outlined a new royalty option for its Kindle platform where authors and publishers can get 70 percent of list price net of delivery costs. There are a few catches in the royalty package …
Discussion:
Amazon.com, Tech Trader Daily, Engadget, paidContent, MediaMemo, TechCrunch, Gearlog, Electronista, Mashable!, PC World and The Mobile Gadgeteer
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Henry Blodget / Silicon Alley Insider:
Amazon Fires Missile At Book Industry, Launches 70% Kindle Royalty Option (AMZN)
Amazon Fires Missile At Book Industry, Launches 70% Kindle Royalty Option (AMZN)
Discussion:
Ubergizmo
Jaikumar Vijayan / Network World:
Military contractors targeted in Chinese attacks, says F-Secure — Attacks followed apparent China-based hacks targeting Google, other tech firms — The targeted cyberattacks apparently originating in China that hit Google and more than 30 other companies late last year are now targeting …
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Tamar Lewin / New York Times:
If Your Kids Are Awake, They're Probably Online — The average young American now spends practically every waking minute — except for the time in school — using a smart phone, computer, television or other electronic device, according to a new study from the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Alex Wilhelm / The Next Web:
Bill Gates Joins Twitter - Uses The Web Interface — Bill Gates has joined Twitter and is tweeting away using the web interface. — Twitter employee @caroline has confirmed this. — Of course, Bill Gates is the famed man from Microsoft who brought us a talking paperclip and Windows 1.0 pillow cases, if you remember that far back.
Discussion:
Digits, BoomTown, BBC, Microsoft Watch, blogs.telegraph.co.uk, Engadget, Beyond Binary, Softpedia News, Mashable!, The Register, Geek In Disguise, textually.org, Switched, The Apple Core, internetnews.com, Howard Lindzon, T3.com News, Silicon Alley Insider, Neowin.net News Feed for and Tech Central, Thanks:michaelklurfeld
Robin Wauters / TechCrunch:
Opera Buys Mobile Ad Startup AdMarvel For $8M In Cash Plus A $15M Earnout — This morning, Norwegian browser maker Opera Software announced that it has agreed to acquire AdMarvel, a small privately-held mobile advertising company based in San Mateo, California.
Discussion:
mocoNews, Opera Press Room, Computerworld, The Register, Web Browsers, Unwired View and Internet2Go
Stephen Lawson / PC World:
Analyst: AT&T Needs to Spend US$5B to Catch up — AT&T would need to spend about US$5 billion on its wireless network to catch up with the coverage offered by Verizon Wireless, a financial research firm said Tuesday. — The public's perception of AT&T's network is poor and declining …
Frederic Lardinois / ReadWriteWeb:
Want to Know Where Your Neighbors Are Spending Their Money? Bundle Will Tell You — Do you want to know where your neighbors are spending their money? Or do you want to know if your spending pattern is in line with that of others in your age and income group in your neighborhood?
Karen Gullo / Bloomberg:
Microsoft Sues TiVo Over Two Patents Related to Video Programs — Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) — Microsoft Corp. sued TiVo Inc. alleging infringement of patents for a system that displays programmable information and a secure method for buying and delivering video programs.
Rafe Needleman / CNET News:
BumpTop brings 3D, physics to Mac desktop — The creative and attractive desktop replacement app BumpTop is coming to the Mac. Launched last year on Windows, and a CNET Download Best of 2009 app, BumpTop makes desktop items act more like they're physical.
Jon Stokes / Ars Technica:
feature: Google talks Chrome OS, HTML5, and the future of software — On the last day of November, 2009, after the initial rush of excitement around Google's Chrome OS launch had quieted a bit, Ryan Paul and I sat down with Matthew Papakipos, the engineering director for the Chrome OS project, and Eitan Bencuya, from Google PR.