Top Items:
Nick Bilton / Bits:
Facebook Will Allow Users to Share Location — Starting next month, the more than 400 million Facebook users could begin seeing a new kind of status update flow through their news feed: the current locations of their friends. — Facebook plans to take the wraps off a new location-based feature …
Discussion:
Inside Facebook, Ars Technica, IntoMobile, Mashable!, PC World, TechCrunch, Maximum PC, Erictric, Webmonkey, All Facebook, InformationWeek, VatorNews, 901am, Screenwerk, VentureBeat, Geekosystem, The Next Web, GigaOM, Lost Remote, Switched, mocoNews, Silicon Alley Insider, GPS Obsessed, Pulse2, Phone Scoop, GeekSugar and L.A. Times Tech Blog
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MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Just In Time For The Location Wars, Twitter Turns On Geolocation On Its Website — When I wrote that location would be this year's Twitter at SXSW, I also meant that Twitter's geolocation would be this year's Twitter at SXSW. The service has just turned on geolocation on its website today for the first time.
Discussion:
John Battelle's Searchblog, Between the Lines, bub.blicio.us, the Econsultancy blog and The Next Web
Jonathan Schwartz / What I Couldn't Say:
Good Artists Copy, Great Artists Steal — I feel for Google - Steve Jobs threatened to sue me, too. — In 2003, after I unveiled a prototype Linux desktop called Project Looking Glass*, Steve called my office to let me know the graphical effects were “stepping all over Apple's IP.”
Discussion:
AppleInsider, The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs, ITworld.com, 9 to 5 Mac, Between the Lines and Electronista
Del Harvey / Twitter Blog:
Trust And Safety — As Director of Twitter's Trust and Safety team, a big part of my job is focused on the detection and prevention of spam and abuse. A couple weeks ago, Biz explained how Twitter users were being victimized by phishing scams spread primarily through links in Direct Messages.
Discussion:
Search Engine Land, MediaMemo, ReadWriteWeb, L.A. Times Tech Blog, The Next Web and Mashable!
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Ben Parr / Mashable!:
Google Launches the Google Apps Marketplace — Today at the Google's Campfire One event at the company's headquarters in Mountain View, California, the Internet search giant is launching its new app store for business, known as the Google Apps Marketplace. — Last week, we broke the story of today's Google Apps Marketplace launch.
Discussion:
VentureBeat, TechCrunch, Download Squad, Relevant Results, ZDNet, BoomTown and The Next Web
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Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Brainstorm Tech:
Apple talks tough to handset makers — The HTC lawsuit capped blunt talks that have reportedly shaken their faith in Google — Oppenheimer's Yair Reiner issued a behind-the-scenes report Tuesday that sheds a lot of light on the patent suits Apple (AAPL) filed last week against HTC, the Taiwanese smartphone maker.
Jay Yarow / Silicon Alley Insider:
February Search Results Are In: Bing Is Up Again, Yahoo Is Down Again (MSFT, YHOO) — Another month, another weak search performance from Yahoo. — The latest data from comScore on the US search market came out today. — It shows Bing had 11.5% of the search market in February, up from 11.3% in January.
Nick Bilton / Bits:
Foursquare Introduces New Tools for Businesses — Foursquare, a location-based social network, plans to distribute a new analytics tool and dashboard in the coming weeks that will give business owners access to a range of information and statistics about visitors to their establishments.
Discussion:
Mashable!, CNET News, TechCrunch, Fast Company, The Next Web, SocialTimes.com, Silicon Alley Insider, CloudAve and Internet Evolution
Slash Lane / AppleInsider:
Steve Ballmer praises Apple for creation of iPhone App Store — Microsoft chief Steve Ballmer recently had positive words about Apple's success with the iPhone and its App Store, adding fuel to rumors of a potential alignment between Apple and Microsoft to bring Bing search to the iPhone.
Jon Swartz / USA Today:
Once-fading MySpace undergoes youthful reincarnation — BEVERLY HILLS — Facebook thumped it, and Twitter threatens it as a source for entertainment news and real-time searches. — But MySpace, nestled in the entertainment capital of the world, thinks it can survive — even thrive …
Eric Savitz / Tech Trader Daily:
Apple To Build 5 Million iPads In First Half 2010, Analyst Says — Apple (AAPL) is on track to build 5 million iPads in the first half of 2010, according to FBR Capital chip analyst Craig Berger. — “We believe various news articles and competitor notes calling for a build delay were just false alarms,” he writes.
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Google's Chief Economist: “Newspapers Have Never Made Much Money From News” — Earlier today, Google chief economist Hal Varian gave a presentation to an FTC workshop on the changing economics of the newspaper industry. We all know that newspaper ad revenues have been falling off a cliff for years.
Nilay Patel / Engadget:
Samsung E6 e-reader coming to Barnes and Noble this spring for $299 — Samsung still hasn't committed to a formal launch date for the e-reader line it launched at CES, but the company narrowed down the launch date from “early 2010” to “this spring” this morning — which makes sense, seeing as spring has nearly, uh, sprung.
Discussion:
Business Wire, PC World, Pulse2, SlipperyBrick.com, Obsessable, CNET News, Kindle Review, Electronista, T3.com News and Gizmodo
Chris Ziegler / Engadget:
Eternal optimist Verizon calls iPad launch ‘an opportunity’ to sell some data plans — That's the “glass is half full” attitude we like, Verizon — always looking for a way to sign a few more of those lucrative data contracts, no matter the circumstances! Turns out Big Red is tipping off …
Mary Jo Foley / All about Microsoft:
Microsoft adds XNA Game Studio 4.0 to its Windows Phone 7 arsenal — This week, at the Game Developers Conference (GDC), Microsoft is slated to begin explaining part of its Windows Phone 7 tooling story — specifically how it plans to get more games developed for its new mobile platform.
Pedro Bustamante / Panda Research Blog:
Vodafone distributes Mariposa botnet — Here is yet another example of a company distributing malware to its userbase. Unfortunately it probably won't be the last. — Today one of our colleagues received a brand new Vodafone HTC Magic with Google's Android OS. “Neat” she said.
Nick Saint / Silicon Alley Insider:
Cisco's New Router Could Let Everyone In China Make A Video Call At Once — Cisco's major news is finally out: a new large-scale core router, the CRS-3, capable of handling 322 Tbps. — That number — three times what Cisco's current best product, the CRS-1, can handle — is just a theoretical upper limit.
Discussion:
Computerworld, BoomTown, Network World, Gadget Lab, Geekosystem, eWeek, SiliconANGLE, Brainstorm Tech, ReadWriteWeb, blogs.ft.com, p2pnet, internetnews.com and Electronista
Pui-Wing Tam / Digits:
Norwest: Starting to Put $1.2 Billion to Work — Norwest Venture Partners late last year closed a huge new venture-capital fund of $1.2 billion, nearly double the size of the Silicon Valley venture firm's last fund in 2006 that was $650 million. Now NVP is starting to put a chunk of that money to work.
Discussion:
PE Hub Blog
Lindsay Fortado / Bloomberg:
Pink Floyd Suing EMI Label Over Online Royalties — Pink Floyd, the band that recorded the best-selling album ‘The Dark Side of the Moon,’ is suing record label EMI Group Ltd. in London over online royalty payments and the sale of single tracks. — The band is asking for clarification …
Tim Conneally / BetaNews:
Samsung reveals just how expensive 3D in the home is going to be — At CES this year, every major consumer electronics company involved in the HDTV market had floorspace dedicated to 3D TVs. They were convinced that 3D in the home is ready for widespread adoption, and the popularity of James Cameron's Avatar would kickstart adoption.
Paul Bonanos / GigaOM:
Apple's iTunes LP 6 Months Later: LP What? — When it was first unveiled, Apple's new iTunes LP format — codenamed “Cocktail” and introduced at a “rock and roll event” in San Francisco — promised to give consumers a new reason to buy albums instead of individual songs.
Joseph Tartakoff / paidContent:
New MSN Homepage Begins Full Roll-Out—With Customized Headlines, More Local — After a month-long delay, Microsoft's overhaul of the MSN homepage is going live to the site's 100 million users over the next two weeks. Perhaps the three most significant of the 30 updates Microsoft (NSDQ …
Discussion:
msnblog.msn.com, Ars Technica, BoomTown, TechFlash, CNET News, 901am, Lost Remote, Erictric, All about Microsoft, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim and Neowin.net
Scott M. Fulton, III / BetaNews:
Almost #3 now: Dell's decline is Acer's gain — With the economic sinkhole of 2008-09 now a figment of many technology companies' past, most PC manufacturers are back on their regularly scheduled growth curve. Last month, Dell had indicated to investors that it was returning to that curve as well …
John Poirier / Reuters:
U.S. considers some free wireless broadband service — (Reuters) - U.S. regulators may dedicate spectrum to free wireless Internet service for some Americans to increase affordable broadband service nationwide, the Federal Communications Commission said on Tuesday.
Discussion:
Computerworld, DSLreports, ZDNet Government, Digits, Erictric, dailywireless.org, FierceWireless, The Seattle Times and ResourceShelf
JG Mason / Gadgetell:
Breaking: Black Swan is ready: Google Voice returns to iPhone via slick weblication — What the heck is a “weblication?” The answer is in Riverturn's new Google Voice web application that looks more like a native app, in fact, it fooled everyone I showed it to.
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
MetaLab Accuses Mozilla Of Plagiarizing Its Design — Andrew Wilkinson of MetaLab has just written a blog post accusing Mozilla of plagiarizing the design of its FlightDeck editor. To make matters worse, Wilkinson says that MetaLab actually bid on creating the design for FlightDeck months ago, but was turned down by Mozilla.
Todd Bishop / TechFlash:
Microsoft researcher wins Turing Award, computing's Nobel Prize — Charles Thacker, a Microsoft Research technical fellow, this morning was named the recipient of the Turing Award, considered the Nobel Prize of computing, for his work designing the early Alto personal computer during his time at the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center.
Discussion:
Microsoft, Computerworld, Bits, Gearlog, EE Times, Softpedia News, CNET News, The Seattle Times and Digits
Ryan Paul / Ars Technica:
Mozilla borrows from WebKit to build fast new JS engine — Mozilla's high-performance TraceMonkey JavaScript engine, which was first introduced in 2008, has lost a lot of its luster as competing browser vendors have stepped up their game to deliver superior performance.