Top Items:
Ev / Twitter Blog:
Twitter for iPhone — Twitter has been growing by leaps and bounds around the world. Mobile has always been a focus for us—starting with SMS which lead to the 140 character limit. People everywhere should be able to access Twitter without friction or confusion.
Discussion:
ReadWriteWeb, Macworld, The Next Web, App Advice, paidContent, TechCrunch, MediaMemo, Download Squad, 9 to 5 Mac, Mashable!, GigaOM, Daring Fireball, Charles Hudson's Weblog, TiPb, iLounge, TUAW, diversity.net.nz, The Snitch, iPhone Savior, Android Central, The Loop, CloudAve, Scripting News, Ben Metcalfe Blog, FP Posted and MacStories
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Claire Cain Miller / Bits:
Twitter Acquires Atebits, Maker of Tweetie — Twitter, which has flourished thanks to tools built by outside developers, is taking more of those tools under its own wing. In a move that is sure to rattle its developers, Twitter has agreed to acquire Atebits, the start-up that makes …
Discussion:
VentureBeat, Gizmodo, Electronista, iSmashPhone, Phone Scoop and MediaMemo, Thanks:joshk
atebits:
An Amazing Ride — Once upon a time I wanted a better Twitter app for my iPhone, so I wrote one. My goal was to make something simple, beautiful, and intuitive. It's been a wild ride since 1., and over the last year and a half Tweetie has gone from a no-name app from a little known software company …
Lee / The Flash Blog:
Apple Slaps Developers In The Face — [Adobe would like me to make it clear that the opinions below are not the official views of the company and are entirely my own.] — By now you have surely heard about the new iPhone 4. SDK language that appears to make creating applications …
Discussion:
AppleInsider, PC World, TiPb, CNET News, TechCrunch, 9 to 5 Mac, Mashable!, VatorNews, Erictric, IntoMobile, DailyTech, Computerworld, Cathode Tan, MacRumors, AppScout, Neowin.net, VentureBeat, Gizmodo, EverythingiCafe, Hardware 2.0 and Daring Fireball
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Daniel Eran Dilger / AppleInsider:
Apple's prohibition of Flash-built apps in iPhone 4.0 related to multitasking — Apple's new iPhone 4.0 SDK license now blocks cross-compiled third party apps, such as those built from Flash CS5. Rather than being just a competitive blow directed at Adobe however, it appears the real motivation …
Discussion:
Electronista, TiPb, MacDailyNews, FoneGrove, Cathode Tan, TUAW, MacRumors, TG Daily and Macworld
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
Adobe: We'll Be Fine Without Apple — A day after Apple kicked it to the curb, Adobe has an official response, via a blog post from CTO Kevin Lynch. It's ostensibly a promotion for the company's Creative Suite 5 rollout, scheduled for Monday. But the part you care about is here:
Eric Kerr:
New iPhone Developer Agreement Bans the Use of Third-Party Analytics and Services — The updated iPhone Developer Agreement includes stringent clauses around the acceptable use of storing, transmitting, and processing user data. Here is the updated section 3.3.9 in its entirety.
Bruce Hopkins / VentureBeat:
Dear Adobe: When it comes to Apple, don't get mad — get even — As we reported yesterday, the new license terms for application development on Apple's iPhone platform now prohibit technologies such as Adobe's Flash CS5 (currently in beta) from compiling applications written in other languages …
Claire Cain Miller / Bits:
Evan Williams's Message to Twitter Developers — The romance between Twitter and its developers has hit a rough patch, one that Chief Executive Evan Williams, along with many Twitter developers, saw coming. — The storm began on Wednesday, when Fred Wilson, the Union Square Ventures partner …
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Loïc Le Meur / Loic Le Meur Blog:
Of course were hole fillers and why no-one should depend on only one platform — Twitter itself is filling a hole (start here if you don't know what this is all about), the status update craze hole it mostly created. We're filing another hole, if you want to keep in touch with your friends …
Matt McGee / Search Engine Land:
It's Official: Google Now Counts Site Speed As A Ranking Factor — Google has kept a promise it made last year: Site speed is now a ranking factor in Google's algorithm, and is already in place for U.S. searchers. But Google also cautions web site owners not to sacrifice relevance in the name …
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Google Webmaster Central Blog:
Using site speed in web search ranking — You may have heard that here at Google we're obsessed with speed, in our products and on the web. As part of that effort, today we're including a new signal in our search ranking algorithms: site speed. Site speed reflects how quickly a website responds to web requests.
Matt Cutts / Gadgets, Google, and SEO:
Google incorporating site speed in search rankings
Google incorporating site speed in search rankings
Thanks:jungleg
Bill Rigby / Reuters:
Microsoft's latest phone experiment — (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp will show off its latest mobile phones on Monday, but don't expect a direct rival to the iPhone. — The world's largest software company is trying a new tack in the hotly contested arena with its long-awaited “Project Pink” devices.
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John Gruber / Daring Fireball:
Reading Between the iPhone OS 4.0 Lines — A few months ago, I heard suggestions that Apple had tentative plans to release a developer beta of Mac OS X 10.7 at WWDC this June. That is no longer the case. Mac OS X 10.7 development continues, but with a reduced team and an unknown schedule.
Discussion:
Macsimum News
Jared Newman / PC World:
Netflix Delays Universal and Fox New Releases, including Avatar — If you're hoping to rent a copy of “Avatar” through Netflix when the hit movie comes to DVD this month, keep waiting. — Netflix has signed deals with Universal Studios and 20th Century Fox that will delay the arrival of new releases by 28 days.
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Kevinthau / Twitter Mobile Blog:
Twitter for BlackBerry App Now Available — There has never been a more exciting time in the mobile industry than right now. The speed at which devices, applications, and networks are evolving is inspiring. Thankfully, Twitter is perfectly suited to take advantage of all this goodness …
Discussion:
A VC, The Blog Herald, Computerworld, TechCrunch, The Next Web, Silicon Alley Insider, 901am and WebProNews
Financial Times:
Google accused of YouTube ‘free ride’ — Some of Europe's leading telecoms groups are squaring up for a fight with Google over what they claim is the free ride enjoyed by the technology company's YouTube video-sharing service. Telefonica, France Telecom and Deutsche Telekom all said Google …
Discussion:
Mashable!
Brian Krebs / Krebs on Security:
Hundreds of Wordpress Blogs Hit by ‘Networkads.net’ Hack — A large number of bloggers using Wordpress are reporting that their sites recently were hacked and are redirecting visitors to a page that tries to install malicious software. — According to multiple postings on the Wordpress user forum …
Matthew Lasar / Ars Technica:
Don't blink: Hard-charging FCC turns broadband plan into action — Federal Communications Commission watchers everywhere, gird thy loins. However frenetic you thought it was in FCC-land back during the media ownership, Comcast P2P, or Sirius XM merger wars, forget it.
Ryan Naraine / Zero Day:
Sun Java flaw exposes Windows users to dangerous Web attacks — Over on Threatpost, Dennis Fisher has a story about a serious Java vulnerability that leaves users running any of the current versions of Windows open to simple Web-based attacks that could lead to a complete compromise of the affected system.