Top Items:
David Drummond / The Official Google Blog:
A new approach to China: an update — On January 12, we announced on this blog that Google and more than twenty other U.S. companies had been the victims of a sophisticated cyber attack originating from China, and that during our investigation into these attacks we had uncovered evidence …
Discussion:
Financial Times, New York Times, Computerworld, Tech Eye, Post Tech, hrw.org, PC World, Telegraph, p2pnet, Index on Censorship, BBC, the Econsultancy blog, Bloomberg, news.xinhuanet.com, thebigmoney.com, CHINAdaily, Salon, Agence France Presse, Reuters, Macworld, L.A. Times Tech Blog, Silicon Alley Insider, eWeek, pluGGd.in, All Shook Down, Andrew Lih, Epicenter, The Next Web, The Microsoft Blog, DailyFinance, Techdirt, Mobility Digest, Redmond Pie, gHacks technology news, ChannelWeb, Technology Review, Open IT Strategies, SlashGear, ReadWriteWeb, Datamation, SiliconANGLE and Digits
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Steve Lohr / Bits:
Interview: Sergey Brin on Google's China Gambit — China's censorship of the Internet may be blunt, but Google has found negotiations with the Chinese government in recent weeks to be subtle and uncertain. — That was the message from a brief interview in New York on Monday with Sergey Brin …
Discussion:
Computerworld, Silicon Alley Insider, PC World, NBC Bay Area, Guardian, news.xinhuanet.com, Seattle Times, DailyFinance, blogs.ft.com, CNET News and Fast Company
Joshua Topolsky / Engadget:
Official: Apple now offering iPhones contract free (updated: not unlocked) — We heard from 9 to 5 Mac that Apple was due to begin selling a contract-free variant of the iPhone in the near future “at list price.” And guess what happened when we inquired to an Apple store?
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Hardware 2.0, Computerworld, Gizmodo, 9 to 5 Mac, Gadget Lab, CNET News, App Advice, Shelly Palmer, SlipperyBrick.com, AppleInsider, Electronista, GeekSmack, EverythingiCafe, Erictric, TiPb, SlashGear, The Loop, TUAW and The Next Web
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MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
The Contract-Free iPhone Is Simply The First Sign That A New iPhone Is Nearing — This morning, the Internet was abuzz with the news that Apple would begin selling unlocked iPhones. The only problem? It's not true. In fact, it's no different from what Apple did last year at this time …
Discussion:
Gadgets DNA, PC World, Redmond Pie, Mashable!, Softpedia News, GottaBeMobile.com, Pocket-lint and MobileCrunch, Thanks:srikarlovesmanu
Nick Bilton / Bits:
Opera Mini Browser, Coming To An iPhone Near You — Opera Software on Tuesday announced that it is submitting its Opera Mini Web browser to Apple for use on the iPhone. — The Norwegian company boasts that Opera is the most-used browser on mobile devices; it offers a version of the software …
Discussion:
Between the Lines, CNET News, Opera Press Room, AppleInsider, 9 to 5 Mac, Technologizer, TechCrunch, Gizmodo, Electricpig.co.uk, The Next Web, Engadget and Neowin.net, Thanks:avinio
Andrew Silverman / Google LatLong:
Experiment to show hotel prices on Google Maps — Google Maps is often one of the first stops travelers make to find and compare hotels. Today we started experimenting with a new feature, visible to a small portion of users, to help make that process even easier by showing specific prices for selected hotel listings.
Discussion:
Screenwerk, Softpedia News, Tnooz, Mashable!, Search Engine Journal, Erictric, TechCrunch and Google Maps Mania, Thanks:atul
Ryan Tate / Gawker:
Exclusive: How Google's Eric Schmidt Lost His Mistress, His Partner and Steve Jobs … 02:50 PM — 25,329 — 35 — By Deadspin Travel Desk … Soak Yourself In Deadspin's Spring Break Week (NSFW) — All week long Deadspin will be celebrating the phenomenon of American Spring Break.
Jon Ying / The Dropbox Blog:
The Dropbox Android App! — In Dropbox's two year history, we've had some ardent fans salivating over the next killer Dropbox feature. We love these people! — Our first huge feature following (and birthplace of our Dropbox poetry tradition) was our Linux version, which was soon followed by the highly anticipated iPhone app.
Discussion:
Softpedia News, TechCrunch, Android Community, Android Phone Fans, AndroidGuys and Download Squad
Paul Carr / TechCrunch:
Amazon: You Need To Change Your Idiotic Customer Reviews Policy Right Now — It's hard to feel sorry for a wildly successful author, but in the case of Michael Lewis I'll make an exception. Just this once. — Lewis' latest book - The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine …
Thanks:concarjess3
Vladislav Savov / Engadget:
Nintendo announces 3DS — the glasses-free 3D successor to the DS — Whoa, now this is a whopper coming (almost) out of nowhere. Nintendo has just slipped out a press release in Japan informing the world that all-new 3D-capable portable hardware is coming, with a full unveiling set for E3 2010 this June.
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Times of India:
Bill Gates, Toshiba to build nuclear reactor — Text: — BANGALORE: Toshiba Corp and Microsoft Corp Chairman Bill Gates would team up to develop a next-generation nuclear reactor that can operate for up to 100 years without refueling, the Nikkei business daily said.
Discussion:
Fast Company, Wall Street Journal, Tech Eye, Reuters, DealBook, Engadget, istockanalyst.com, Bloomberg and Voices on All Things Digital
Keith Dsouza / Techie Buzz:
Mozilla Stops Firefox Development For Windows Mobile and Windows Phone 7 — Mozilla has been building a version of Firefox for Windows Mobile devices for quite some time now with anticipation that Microsoft might increase it's market share. The Windows Phone 7 announcement was watched quite keenly …
Discussion:
PC World, Mozilla Links, blog.pavlov.net, WMExperts, Unwired View, Engadget, MobileContentToday, Gizmodo and WMPoweruser.com, Thanks:keithlinks
Nick O'Neill / All Facebook:
Twitter Forces Facebook To Open Up Beyond “Friends” — At Facebook's developer conference (f8) next month, the company is expected to announce a number of services that continue the opening of the platform as well as expanding access to disconnected user data.
Elinor Mills / CNET News:
Malware delivered by Yahoo, Fox, Google ads — These charts show incidences of malware distributed by a number of ad delivery platforms over a six-day period last month that were detected by Avast. Yahoo and Fox have the highest counts. — Malware that exploits holes in popular applications …
Discussion:
Silicon Alley Insider
Michael / Mobile Marketing Watch:
Google Says Local Intent is Behind One-Third of Mobile Searches — Speaking at a Mobile Marketing & Advertising event in Las Vegas to coincide with CTIA Wireless 2010, Diana Pouliot - director of mobile advertising at Google - revealed that one-third of all Google searches via …
Discussion:
Forbes
Erez Zukerman / Download Squad:
SleepingTime.org lets you stalk Tweeter addicts even more effectively — “Twitter” and “privacy” are two terms which are as contradictory as they come. — When people post many times every day, the very act of posting reveals some interesting patterns. For example, if you know what timezone someone …
Steve O'Hear / TechCrunch Europe:
Updated: European Court of Justice: Google NOT liable for keyword trademark infringement but others maybe — Updated: Sorry for the confusion but we'd been given conflicting information relating this story. After a back on for, here's our understanding of the ruling.
Discussion:
New York Times, European Public Policy Blog, Financial Times, Computerworld, Bloomberg, Softpedia News and BBC, Thanks:sohear
Stephen Shankland / CNET News:
Firefox 3.6.2 addresses critical vulnerability — Mozilla released Firefox 3.6.2 late Monday to fix a critical security hole involving Web-based font technology. — “We strongly recommend that all Firefox users upgrade to this latest release. If you already have Firefox 3.6 you will receive …
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Mozilla, The Register, Tech Eye, Mozilla.org, InfoWorld, Security Watch, Softpedia News, Mozilla Security Blog and gHacks technology news
John Gruber / Daring Fireball:
GIF, H.264, and Patents — Arthur Wyatt, in a post on MetaFilter regarding the battle over HTML5 video codecs: … A few readers have emailed me expressing a similar sentiment — more or less that GIF serves as an example showing why Mozilla should continue to refuse to support H.264.
James Surowiecki / New Yorker:
SOFT IN THE MIDDLE — Apple's launch of the iPad next week is a gamble in more ways than one. To start with, it's obviously a bet that there are millions of people looking for a new way to surf the Web, watch movies, and read magazines. But it's also a more fundamental gamble; namely, that people will pay for quality.
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Bokardo
Joe Wilcox / BetaNews:
Palm's not dead, so why write its epitaph? — Wall Street's vultures are circling over Palm, screeching for its death. Tech pundits are joining the death watch, in one of the more morbid displays of graveyard tech journalism ever. As I've asserted repeatedly, in business perception is everything.
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Digital Daily
Media Decoder:
Perseus Signs an EBooks Deal for the iPad — Apple's iBookstore on the forthcoming iPad is set to get larger. The company has just signed a deal with the largest distributor of independent publishers to sell electronic versions of it books on the new device.
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
YouTube Axes Its RealTime Toolbar Experiment — Last year, we reported on an experimental new YouTube project called RealTime. The feature let you interact with your friends on YouTube, sharing videos and seeing what else they were watching using a slick toolbar that was integrated at the bottom of the screen.
Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry / Silicon Alley Insider:
The Startup Visa Act Must Be Stopped — Bad news: the widely-beloved Startup Visa project is a terrible idea — and this is coming from a guy who desperately wants to see it work. — About a year ago, Paul Graham of Y Combinator put out an idea for a Startup Visa that would allow foreign entrepreneurs …
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A VC