Top Items:
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Google, Mozilla, And Opera Take On H.264 With The WebM Project, A New Royalty-Free Video Codec — Just when the H.264 video codec is starting to take over a large portion of new Web videos, along comes Google to shake things up again. Today, along with Mozilla and Opera …
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Mashable!, BetaNews, Engadget, 1001 Noisy Cameras, CNET News, NewTeeVee, Icodom, Geek.com, Fortune, Erictric, Teaching Online Journalism, USA Today, Gizmodo, Maximum PC, The Register and Boy Genius Report, Thanks:atul
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Stephen Shankland / CNET News:
Google tries freeing Web video with WebM — Google unveiled an open-source, royalty-free video format called WebM on Wednesday, lining up commitments from Mozilla and Opera to support the encoding technology in their browsers and pledging to support it on its YouTube site.
Discussion:
VideoNuze, The Seattle Times, Ars Technica, Brightcove Blog, 9 to 5 Mac, The Register, MacRumors, OStatic blogs, Softpedia News, DVICE, EE Times, Ubergizmo and Google Operating System
The WebM project blog:
Introducing WebM, an open web media project — A key factor in the web's success is that its core technologies such as HTML, HTTP, TCP/IP, etc. are open and freely implementable. Though video is also now core to the web experience, there is unfortunately no open and free video format …
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Opera Labs, TechFlash, The Mozilla Blog, Network World, Techie Buzz, The Tech Report, Guardian, VentureBeat, Download Squad and Daring Fireball
Jason Garrett-Glaser / Diary Of An x264 Developer:
The first in-depth technical analysis of VP8 — Back in my original post about Internet video, I made some initial comments on the hope that VP8 would solve the problems of web video by providing a supposed patent-free video format with significantly better compression than the current options of Theora and Dirac.
Tom Warren / Neowin.net:
Microsoft planning to support VP8 in Internet Explorer 9 - with a catch
Microsoft planning to support VP8 in Internet Explorer 9 - with a catch
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The Microsoft Blog, IEBlog, PC Magazine, ZDNet, CNET News, TNW Microsoft, OSNews, Geek.com, Mashable!, BetaNews, NewTeeVee, SlashGear and Webmonkey
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Google Buzz Gets An API; Will Be Integrated Into Seesmic, TweetDeck, And More — Since Google Buzz was first released, there's been one major feature that's been noticeably missing: an API. Soon after the service was launched we hacked together our own ‘Share with Buzz’ button …
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DeWitt Clinton / Google Code Blog:
Introducing the Google Buzz API
Introducing the Google Buzz API
Discussion:
Boxee Blog, Google Geo Developers Blog, TNW Google, TNW Apps, Mashable!, Erictric, ReadWriteWeb and VentureBeat
Chris Cameron / ReadWriteWeb:
Google Buzz API: They Built It, But Will Developers Come?
Google Buzz API: They Built It, But Will Developers Come?
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Ping.fm Blog
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Proof That Google TV Will Make Its Debut Tomorrow — For the last couple months (and even before that), rumors have been swirling about a web-enabled Google TV project. Numerous reports have stated that the project will be launching this week at I/O, with the LA Times reporting …
Boy Genius Report:
Verizon Apple iPhone to launch with simultaneous voice and data? — One of our Verizon guys hit us up with some pretty interesting news. We have been told that when the mythical Verizon iPhone materializes, assuming it's not a LTE unit, it might launch with VoRA; Voice over Rev. A. According to our source …
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MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Watch Out Rivals, With Latitude API Google Starts Taking Location Very Seriously — Google Latitude has 3 million active users, but you wouldn't know it by the amount of buzz they get in the location space these days. (Which is to say, just about none.) The problem is that Latitude …
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First Round Capital / Redeye VC:
Location in the Cloud — I just read the news about Google's upgrades …
Location in the Cloud — I just read the news about Google's upgrades …
Stephanie Hannon / Google Wave Blog:
Google Wave Available for Everyone — Starting today, we are making Google Wave openly available to everyone as part of Google Labs. You no longer need an invitation to wave — simply visit wave.google.com and sign right in. Likewise, if you are a Google Apps administrator at a business …
Discussion:
Engadget, Google Enterprise Blog, ZDNet, Mashable!, L.A. Times Tech Blog, Maximum PC, VentureBeat, Technologizer, Google Wave Developer Blog, Lifehacker, SEO and Tech Daily, I4U News, Wired Campus, Google Operating System, CNET News, 901am, ResourceShelf, TechCrunch, Search Engine Journal, eWeek, SlashGear, Matt Cutts, WebProNews, TNW Google and ReadWriteWeb
Biz Stone / Twitter Blog:
Twitter for iPhone — Comprehensive analysis of the Twitter user experience in the iTunes App Store showed very plainly that people were looking for an app from Twitter—we didn't have one so they generally got confused and gave up. Obviously, we saw room for improvement.
Discussion:
CNET News, TNW Apps, Technologizer, L.A. Times Tech Blog, Boy Genius Report, Switched and TechCrunch Europe, Thanks:atul
Louis Gray:
At Google I/O, Apple Is Invisible and Ignored — Speaking in the shadows of Steve Jobs keynotes past, the first day of Google I/O seemed to work around the elephant in the room of Apple and Google's recent conflicts and ongoing battles in mobile, advertising and the OS.
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Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Land:
Sergey Brin On Google's Wifi Data Collection: “We Screwed Up” — At a press briefing at the Google I/O developers conference today, Google cofounder Sergey Brin didn't mince words about his company's accidental collection of wifi data. “We screwed up,” he said.
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Walter S. Mossberg / Personal Technology:
Sprint 4G Phone Hits New Speeds, but Battery Lags — The major wireless phone companies have begun building out the next generation of cellular phone systems, called 4G, or fourth-generation, networks. These networks are designed to offer much faster data speeds than the current speediest networks, which are called 3G.
Jason Chen / Gizmodo:
Chrome Web Store is Webapp Central In Your Browser — There's a new Chrome tag page (like the one there now that shows bookmarks) that you can “install” webapps onto your browser. Essentially, it's a shortcut center to the webapps you use. Then, there's the web store.
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Anthony Ha / VentureBeat:
Investor Dave McClure: ‘Open is for losers’ — A group of investors argued heatedly about the value of open versus closed technology on a panel today at Google's I/O conference in San Francisco. Dave McClure (pictured), who oversees the seed investing program at Founders Fund …
Wall Street Journal:
Amazon Branches Out with Publishing Arm — Amazon.com Inc. said it plans to launch a publishing imprint that will produce English-language translations of foreign-language books. — The imprint, AmazonCrossing, will acquire rights to books and hire writers to translate them into English …
M.I.C gadget:
The Real Truth Behind Foxconn's Suicide Cluster — The Foxconn suicide mess is all started from job stress. Within half a year, there are 9 suicides with 7 confirmed-deaths in Foxconn's factory of China, Shenzhen. In order to find out what's really going on in that factory, the Southern Weekly …
David Dahlquist / Macworld:
Netflix iPad app adds video output support — If you've used the Netflix iPad app, you've probably thought how cool it would be if you could connect your iPad to a TV to watch what's streaming to the app. Someone at Netflix must have read your mind, because the company on Wednesday updated …
Maija Palmer / Financial Times:
Google debates face recognition technology — Google executives are wrestling over whether to launch controversial facial recognition technology after a barrage of criticism over its privacy policies. — Eric Schmidt, chief executive, said a series of public disputes over privacy issues …
Eliot Van Buskirk / Wired News:
Sneak Peek: The Obama Administration's Redesigned Data.gov — One year ago this Friday, United States chief information officer Vivek Kundra launched an ambitious website called Data.gov to make the government's vast stores of data available to the public. The thinking behind the site then …
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Epicenter
Thomas Ricker / Engadget:
Hanvon CEO smashes Apple effigy at TouchPad launch (video) — Want to draw attention to an otherwise ordinary piece of consumer electronics? Do something emotive like, say, smash a giant Apple ice sculpture in front of the world's Chinese press. Besides putting the boys in Cupertino on notice …
Xinhua News Agency:
China issues new rules on Internet map publishing — An updated standard for Internet map servers will be implemented next month to avoid state secrets being disclosed and uncertified maps published online, authorities have said. — The new standard issued by the State Bureau of Surveying and Mapping …
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ReadWriteWeb