Top Items:
Marissa Mayer / The Official Google Blog:
Search: now faster than the speed of type — Search as you type. It's a simple and straightforward idea—people can get results as they type their queries. Imagining the future of search, the idea of being able to search for partial queries or provide some interactive feedback while searching has come up more than a few times.
Discussion:
InformationWeek, TechCrunch, Internet2Go, ReadWriteWeb, Engadget, Computerworld, PC World, Inside AdWords, Google Operating System, Google Webmaster Central Blog, Search Engine Roundtable, SmoothSpan Blog, MediaMemo, Ars Technica, Pocket-lint, Mercury News, AndroidGuys, Softpedia News, Gadgetwise, Search Engine Land, Guardian, gHacks Technology News, the Econsultancy blog, lalawag, Tnooz, Sidecut Reports, Techie Buzz, Lockergnome Blog Network, WebProNews, Redmond Pie, AdExchanger.com, Web Analytics World, OSNews, VentureBeat, Faster Forward, AuctionBytes Blog, CNET News, The Steve Rubel Stream, Google Analytics Blog, I4U News, The Huffington Post, PSFK, The Awl, Download Squad, Stealthmode Blog, 901am, The Seattle Times, Macworld, Lifehacker, GottaBeMobile, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, TechFlash, Nine By Blue, Digital Trends, Bits, Fast Company, Black Web 2.0, The Tech Report, Telegraph, Techland, When Will Apple?, Geek.com, Silicon Alley Insider, Digital Daily, GeekSugar, Rob Hof's Blog, Laughing Squid, msnbc.com, Pulse2, ResourceShelf, Neowin.net and Andrew Lark, more at Mediagazer »
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Matt Cutts / Gadgets, Google, and SEO:
Thoughts on Google Instant — The blogosphere is absorbing today's announcement of Google Instant. I wanted to give some context and some thoughts. — Google's web search (and web search infrastructure) team tries to do several things well: — We want the most comprehensive index of the web.
Discussion:
TechCrunch, Understanding Google …, Computerworld, CloudAve, Google, Between the Lines Blog, Bruce Clay Blog, Search Engine Roundtable and SearchViews, Thanks:atul
Stephen Hood / unique hazards may exist:
Google Instant is an example of how Yahoo could have won in search — Today Google launched Google Instant, and make no mistake: this is big. It's far more than just a new fancy interface. It's a fundamental change to a user interaction model that's been largely unchallenged for years.
Discussion:
CNET News and TechCrunch, Thanks:atul
Nicholas Carlson / Silicon Alley Insider:
Google Just Killed The “I'm Feeling Lucky Button” — Google just effectively offed one of it's oldest, quirkiest features - the “I'm Feeling Lucky” button. — The good news is that in the process, Google added at least another hundred million dollars in revenue.
Discussion:
TechCrunch and VentureBeat
Jennifer Valentino-DeVries / Digits:
The Google Alphabet — Google's new search feature …
The Google Alphabet — Google's new search feature …
Discussion:
TechCrunch, AdAge, Mashable!, Pocket-lint and Silicon Alley Insider
Alexia Tsotsis / TechCrunch:
Google Instant Will Save 350 Million Hours Of User Time Per Year
Google Instant Will Save 350 Million Hours Of User Time Per Year
Discussion:
Faster Forward, SFGate and CNET News
Jesus Diaz / Gizmodo:
Check Your iPhone 4's Antenna Reception With Field Test Mode In iOS 4.1 — Now you can put your iPhone into field test mode, which will allow to easily and precisely test your cell signal reception quality. You just need to follow these two easy steps: • First, upgrade your iPhone 4—or any iPhone—to iOS 4.1.
Discussion:
MacRumors, Erictric, Cult of Mac, TUAW, Covering Web and iClarified, Thanks:gizmodo
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AppleInsider:
Apple release iOS 4.1 with Bluetooth, proximity sensor fixes — Apple on Wednesday released the iOS 4.1 update for recent iPhone and iPod touch models, addressing issues with Bluetooth connectivity and proximity sensor accuracy, and also adding HDR photos the mobile operating system.
Discussion:
Boy Genius Report, App Advice, Gizmodo, ReadWriteWeb, displayblog, BetaNews, Engadget, TUAW, Redmond Pie, Gearlog, MacRumors, TechSpot, TiPb, iClarified and MacNN
Dean Takahashi / VentureBeat:
Apple launches Game Center social hub for iPhone with 4.1 update
Apple launches Game Center social hub for iPhone with 4.1 update
Discussion:
9 to 5 Mac, AppleInsider, TUAW, Technologizer, Crave, Gizmodo and Computerworld, Thanks:chirag_mehta
Bloomberg:
HP's Bid to Block Hurd's Oracle Move Is Long Shot, Lawyers Say — Hewlett-Packard Co.'s lawsuit seeking to block former Chief Executive Officer Mark Hurd from working at Oracle Corp. may be hard to win because California's courts favor letting employees move freely, legal experts said.
Discussion:
Wall Street Journal, Network World, DailyTech and Digits
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Larry Dignan / Between the Lines Blog:
HP's interim CEO: Board likes CEO candidates; We'll make up with Oracle — Hewlett-Packard interim CEO Cathie Lesjak on Wednesday said that company had a bevy of qualified CEO candidates and noted that it will patch up its relationship with Oracle, which just hired Mark Hurd.
Discussion:
eWeek, GigaOM, BoomTown, Enterprise Irregulars, Digital Trends, Electronista and Fast Company
Alexei Oreskovic / MediaFile:
Google's Brin: Make smartphone apps searchable — For more than a decade, Google has reigned supreme as the main gateway to online information. — But with consumers increasingly accessing the Internet through specialized apps on smartphones like Apple's iPhone, Google's Web search engine …
Discussion:
Reuters
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Liz Gannes / GigaOM:
Google Instant: A Mobile App Approach to Search
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Kno Raises $46 Million More To Build “Most Powerful Tablet Anyone Has Ever Made” — Marc Andreessen is normally enthusiastic about the startups he's invested in. Still, when I spoke to him last week about Kno, he surprised me by saying it will be “the most powerful tablet anyone has ever made.”
Discussion:
GigaOM, Mobile Magazine, SlashGear, Electronista, Liliputing, VatorNews, Obsessable, SiliconANGLE, paidContent, VentureBeat, alarm:clock, BoomTown, Xconomy, silicontap.com and GottaBeMobile, Thanks:srikardhanakoti
Dr. Siddharth Shah / Efficient Frontier Insights:
Google Instant: Potential Implications for the Advertiser — Google just unveiled Google Instant, where the search engine adjusts results in real time as the user types in the query. Google claims that Instant Search leads to 2-5 seconds of time savings per query.
Discussion:
Domain Name Wire
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Peter Jamison / sfweekly.com:
FarmVillains — Steal someone else's game. Change its name. Make millions. Repeat. — One of the Internet's greatest success stories in 2010 can be found in a former potato chip factory on Vermont Street in Potrero Hill. This is the original office of Zynga, the S.F.-based creator of online …
Discussion:
GamePolitics News, Thanks:ceelew
Janko Roettgers / NewTeeVee:
Boxee Embraces HTML5, Switches to Webkit — Boxee is going to switch its integrated web browser from Mozilla's Gecko to Webkit with its next major update, I was told by Boxee Lead Apps Developer and Community Evangelist Rob Spectre. The switch is an attempt to make full use of HTML5 within Boxee …
Discussion:
eHomeUpgrade and Electronista
Jane Wells / Tech Check:
Apple Pulls Back the Curtain for One Company — Apple is famous, or infamous, for not working well with others. It would rather make its own digital music player than let iTunes play on a different device. Ping doesn't connect to Facebook. Flash won't play on iPads. — That just changed.
Discussion:
MacRumors
Tomio Geron / Wall Street Journal:
Incubator Coaxes Start-Ups Out of Their Shells — Silicon Valley incubator Y Combinator recently held a daylong pitch session that underlined the organization's growing clout in the region. — At the event last month, 36 new companies that completed a start-up program run by Y Combinator pitched …
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Google Now Serving 1 Billion Users Each Week — Today at their Google Search event in San Francisco, executive Marissa Mayer kicked things off with a big state: Google is now serving 1 billion users each week. — Mayer noted that they have some big announcements coming up today (likely these) …
Neil Hughes / AppleInsider:
Apple forecast to sell 28M iPads in 2011, chipping away at PC sales — Apple's competitively priced iPad is expected to reduce sales of low-end notebook PCs in 2011, when consumers are projected to buy at least 28 million of the touchscreen tablet, one analyst believes.
Rebecca O'Brien / The Daily Beast:
My Classmate Mark Zuckerberg — As the movie The Social Network rolls toward theaters, Rebecca O'Brien writes about Zuckerberg's reputation around Harvard, his fraternity nickname, and why Facebook was such a hit. — Hollywood biopics are often the inverse of political autobiographies …
Mike Melanson / ReadWriteWeb:
VLC Submits iPad App to App Store — Video support on Apple's mobile devices is far from universal and that's an issue that Applidium hopes to solve with its submission of VLC, the open-source video player, to the App Store. — According to the company's release, “if everything goes well …
Associated Press:
NY town votes to stop Google Earth pool searches — RIVERHEAD, N.Y. - Big Brother's not watching anymore. At least not the pool. — Newsday reports that council members in the town of Riverhead have voted to stop using Google Earth to check whether all pools are properly permitted.
David Pogue / New York Times:
In Season 9, iPods Still Get High Ratings — CUPERTINO, Calif.—At a special press event today, Steven P. Jobs, Apple's chief executive, unveiled a new lineup of iPod models, just in time for the holiday season. The diminutive iPod Shuffle still has no screen and is still made of brushed aluminum …
Discussion:
Gadget Lab, Bits, Gizmodo, SlashGear and Engadget
Robert McMillan / PC World:
After Google Incident, Wi-Fi Data Collection Goes on — Four months ago, amidst a backlash from government regulators and privacy advocates, Google stopped collecting Wi-Fi data with its Street View cars. But that doesn't mean Google has stopped collecting wireless data altogether, and neither have other companies such as Apple.
Discussion:
Wi-Fi Networking News
Chris Davies / SlashGear:
Tablets killed Smartbooks says Qualcomm CEO — Qualcomm has all but confirmed that the smartbook is dead, with CEO Paul Jacobs admitting during the company's IQ 2010 event this morning that tablets such as the iPad had already occupied the niche his company expected smartbooks to.
Discussion:
GigaOM, Electronista, Thoughts from the Sidelines, Softpedia News and Liliputing