Top Items:
Leena Rao / TechCrunch:
Twitter Will Have An Official Android App — At Twitter's Chirp conference today, Evan Williams announced that the microblogging network would be launching an Android app. It's unclear whether Twitter will acquire an existing app (like it just did with Tweetie), if the company will partner …
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Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Sorry Bit.ly, Twitter Confirms It Will Launch Its Own Link Shortener — Another hole is about to be filled in Twitter's product features. CEO Evan Williams just confirmed plans to launch its own link shortener on stage during the final Q&A session at Chirp.
Kim-Mai Cutler / VentureBeat:
The details: How Twitter's newfangled revenue model will work — Twitter's chief operating officer Dick Costolo said the company's new promoted tweets are fundamentally different from advertising at the Chirp conference in San Francisco. The company launched a new way for brands and businesses …
Discussion:
TechCrunch, Silicon Alley Insider, GigaOM, The Next Web, paidContent, Mashable!, Conversion Rater, The Social, ProgrammableWeb and Black Web 2.0
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Twitter COO Dick Costolo Spills The Beans On The @anywhere Platform
Twitter COO Dick Costolo Spills The Beans On The @anywhere Platform
Discussion:
Computerworld, AppScout, Mashable!, Webmonkey, VentureBeat, Silicon Alley Insider and Twitter Blog
Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Land:
Twitter Does 19 Billion Searches Per Month, Beating Yahoo & Bing (Sort Of)
Twitter Does 19 Billion Searches Per Month, Beating Yahoo & Bing (Sort Of)
Discussion:
TechCrunch, Twittercism, blogs.ft.com, ResourceShelf, MediaMemo, VentureBeat, GigaOM, The Next Web, Silicon Alley Insider, Webmonkey and Mashable!, Thanks:atul
Adam DuVander / ProgrammableWeb:
Twitter Reveals: 75% of Our Traffic is via API (3 billion calls per day)
Twitter Reveals: 75% of Our Traffic is via API (3 billion calls per day)
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Twitter has 105,779,710 Registered Users, Adding 300K A Day
Twitter has 105,779,710 Registered Users, Adding 300K A Day
Discussion:
Daily Patricia, ReadWriteWeb, Mashable!, Erictric, Neowin.net, VentureBeat, Bits and The Blog Herald
Biz / Twitter Blog:
Tweet Preservation — The Library of Congress is the oldest federal cultural institution in the United States and it is the largest library in the world. The Library's primary mission is research and it receives copies of every book, pamphlet, map, print, and piece of music registered in the United States.
Discussion:
BBC, Neowin.net, PC World, Switched, New York Times, Yahoo! News, The Next Web, San Francisco Chronicle, broadstuff, 901am, WebProNews, Crave, VatorNews, Fred Stutzman, Mashable!, Search Engine Watch and VentureBeat
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Matt Raymond / Library of Congress Blog:
How Tweet It Is!: Library Acquires Entire Twitter Archive — Have you ever sent out a “tweet” on the popular Twitter social media service? Congratulations: Your 140 characters or less will now be housed in the Library of Congress. — That's right. Every public tweet, ever …
Aaron Wise / The Official Google Blog:
Google Follow Finder: Find some sweet tweeps — This morning we announced a replay feature in real-time search that helps you search the public archive of updates from Twitter. Now, we have more Twitter news from today's Chirp Conference. We've just released a new experimental service …
Jay Yarow / Silicon Alley Insider:
Guess What App Is Now The Most Popular Paid App Ever (AAPL) — There's a new king of Apple's App Store. Doodle Jump is now the most downloaded paid app of all time, according to its one of its creators, Igor Pusenjak. — Igor anticipates hitting four million downloads by the end of April.
Dylan Casey / The Official Google Blog:
Replay it: Google search across the Twitter archive — Since we first introduced real-time search last December, we've added content from MySpace, Facebook and Buzz, expanded to 40 languages and added a top links feature to help you find the most relevant content shared on updates services like Twitter.
Discussion:
Kotaku, eWeek, Network World, HeyJude, WebProNews, VentureBeat, Lifehacker, Consumer Reports …, Softpedia News, Google Operating System, PC World, Switched, thebigmoney.com, Silicon Alley Insider, Download Squad, Epicenter, CNET News, L.A. Times Tech Blog, SocialTimes.com, Search Engine Watch, Mashable!, ReadWriteWeb, Brij Singh's Blog, Tech Eye, Erictric, Guardian, Search Engine Journal, Digital Trends, TG Daily, TechCrunch, OakLeaf Systems, ResourceShelf, Search Engine Land, Neowin.net, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim and Velocity
Brett Terpstra / TUAW:
Big upgrades for premium Evernote users — It's been no big secret that I'm a fan and frequent user of Evernote. It's useful, both as a memory augmentation and as a general information collection utility that makes it easy to locate what I need, when I need it.
Janko Roettgers / NewTeeVee:
Did Google Just Kill Ogg Theora? — Ever since we broke the news earlier this week that Google is going to open source its VP8 video codec at its Google i/O event next month, speculations have been abounded as to what this means for Ogg Theora, the video codec of choice of open source advocates and free software developers alike.
Walter S. Mossberg / Personal Technology:
Kylo and Loop Advance Viewing Web Video on TV — More consumers are watching TV shows over the Internet using computers hooked up to their sets. But this can be a hassle. The major Web browsers were made for close-up use, so they have icons, toolbars and menus that can be too small to see from an optimal TV-viewing distance.
Discussion:
Go Rumors
Ty McMahan / Digits:
You've Heard Of Foursquare. How About This Start-Up? — From Venture Capital Dispatch: — In the shadow of Foursquare, which is fast becoming a start-up darling, the marketing chief of a competing location-based service wondered how hype could help propel his company.
Discussion:
PSFK
Nick Farrell / Tech Eye:
Aussie telco hacked by China — Aussie telco Optus was suffering yesterday after a large number of its customers were hacked by China. — Amongst Optus's customers are the Australia's national news agency, AAP. — Optus announced that one of its corporate customers was hit with a …
Discussion:
Sydney Morning Herald, Associated Press, TheAustralian, Business Spectator, This Is London and ComputerWeekly.com
Derek Kessler / PreCentral.net:
Harbinger Capital Partners buys a 9.48% “passive stake” in Palm — Palm announced today that hedge fund Harbinger Capital has purchased a 9.48% “passive stake” in the company. The purchase of 16 million shares, completed on April 12, equates to an investment of approximately $83 million at Monday's stock price.
Mike Gikas / Consumer Reports Electronics Blog:
Microsoft's creepy Kin video: Does it encourage sexting? — Microsoft is promoting its new Kin phones, built for socially networked kids, with a video that we think comes uncomfortably close to advocating sexting—as in the sending of nude photos via cell phone.
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
MySpace Gets Serious About Events — Here's a ray of product sunshine in an otherwise overcast MySpace world. Tonight they are launching a new MySpace events and calendar platform that integrates technology from MySpace Music, iLike, Social Plan and Facebook Connect (told you).
Sarah Perez / ReadWriteWeb:
Goodbye, Gears - Google Docs Boots Plugin for HTML5 on May 3rd — Uh-oh, Google Doc's offline mode is going...well...offline. Starting May 3rd, offline access for Google Docs, the Internet search giant's web office suite, home to an online document editor, spreadsheet editor and slideshow creator, will be disabled.
Dave Rosenberg / Software, Interrupted:
Linux: Strong and getting stronger — At the Linux Foundation's annual collaboration summit in San Francisco on Wednesday, Executive Director Jim Zemlin kicked off the event with some interesting perspectives on the state of the Linux marketplace today. — The short version: Linux is going strong and getting stronger.
Evelyn Rusli / TechCrunch:
Amazon Goes Pro With Bit.Ly — Amazon has launched it's own shortened URL, amzn.to, powered by bit.ly's new Pro service. Twitter's default (for now) URL shortener has 6,000 corporate clients, including Amazon. The online retailer joins other corporations like nyti.ms (NYTimes), huff.to …