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:
Web Browsers, Electricpig.co.uk, Hitwise Intelligence, Softpedia News, Google Webmaster Central Blog, InformationWeek, TechCrunch, The Next Web, ReadWriteWeb, Internet2Go, MediaMemo, Silicon Alley Insider, AndroidGuys, Electronic Pulp, Enterprise Irregulars, eWeek, Thoughts from the Sidelines, Gadgetell, Geek.com, Googling Google Blog, The Huffington Post, Gizmodo, Technologizer, Search Engine Land, Mercury News, Pocket-lint, PC World, Google Operating System, gHacks Technology News, Tnooz, Lockergnome Blog Network, WebProNews, AuctionBytes Blog, Engadget, Sidecut Reports, The Awl, SmoothSpan Blog, lalawag, Gadgetwise, Techie Buzz, Google Analytics Blog, Search Engine Roundtable, Redmond Pie, Lifehacker, VentureBeat, OSNews, AdExchanger.com, CNET News, Faster Forward, I4U News, The Tech Report, V3.co.uk, Macworld, Computerworld, GigaOM, PSFK, Download Squad, When Will Apple?, The Seattle Times, 901am, Nine By Blue, Telegraph, Guardian, Digital Daily, The Steve Rubel Stream, GottaBeMobile, Bits, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, TechFlash, Digital Trends, Laughing Squid, Fast Company, Black Web 2.0, Techland, GeekSugar, msnbc.com, Pulse2, Neowin.net, Rob Hof's Blog and Andrew Lark, more at Mediagazer »
RELATED:
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:
Google Operating System, SEO and Tech Daily, Enterprise Irregulars, John Battelle's Searchblog, ReadWriteWeb, Pluggd.in, SearchViews, TechCrunch, Lockergnome Blog Network, Bruce Clay Blog, the Econsultancy blog, SiliconANGLE, broadstuff, bit-tech.net, Softpedia News, PC World, Stealthmode Blog, Google and Lifehacker, more at Mediagazer », 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:
Search Engine Land, CNET News and TechCrunch, Thanks:atul
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.
Cade Metz / The Register:
Google Instant blacklists the Slutskys — ‘Streaming’ search doesn't give a f**k — Google's “Instant” search engine includes a blacklist for words and phrases involving what the company considers “violence, hate, or pornography.” — Unveiled on Wednesday in the US …
Discussion:
Electricpig.co.uk
Jennifer Valentino-DeVries / Digits:
The Google Alphabet — Google's new search feature …
The Google Alphabet — Google's new search feature …
Discussion:
SFWeekly Tech, Digital Inspiration …, AdAge, Mashable!, PC Magazine, Pocket-lint and Silicon Alley Insider
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
No, Google Didn't Just Kill “I'm Feeling Lucky” — They Just Moved It
No, Google Didn't Just Kill “I'm Feeling Lucky” — They Just Moved It
Discussion:
Silicon Alley Insider and VentureBeat
Matt McGee / Search Engine Land:
Google Instant Search: The Complete User's Guide
Google Instant Search: The Complete User's Guide
Discussion:
BetaNews, Understanding Google …, Boy Genius Report and ResourceShelf, Thanks:atul
Dan Goodin / The Register:
Jailbreak hole in iOS 4.1 will be hard to close — All Steve Jobs's horses and all Steve Jobs's men ... Just hours after Apple released iOS 4.1 to great fanfare, hardware hackers found a way to jailbreak devices that run the new operating system. More surprising still …
Discussion:
Telegraph, 9 to 5 Mac, Computerworld, VentureBeat, Mashable!, Electronic Pulp, Phone Arena, Electricpig.co.uk, PC World, I4U News, Covering Web and The Register
RELATED:
Taimur Asad / Redmond Pie:
iOS 4.1 Jailbreak Using New Bootrom Based Exploit Confirmed ! — The iPhone hacker (pod2g of Chronic Dev Team) who previously found the 24kpwn exploit has successfully managed to find another bootrom based exploit which can jailbreak all iOS based devices on the latest iOS 4.1 firmware.
Discussion:
Download Squad, IntoMobile, DailyTech, Softpedia News, Cult of Mac, Engadget, Thoughts from the Sidelines and everythingiCafe, Thanks:mattyribbo
Om Malik / GigaOM:
Hey iPhone, Meet a Tiny Chip With Superpowers. — I can distinctly remember the day when Intel Corp. launched the Pentium processor. It was the day the desktop computing changed for me and for a lot of others. It was also the day when Intel started to put a gap between itself and all its wannabe processor rivals.
Discussion:
The Register, AnandTech, 9 to 5 Mac, Inquirer, TechEye, V3.co.uk, Electronic Pulp, The Next Web, IntoMobile, eHomeUpgrade, SlashGear, Engadget and The Tech Herald …
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:
Softpedia News, Cult of Mac, MacRumors, MobileContentToday, Erictric, Covering Web, App Advice, TUAW and iClarified, Thanks:gizmodo
RELATED:
AppleInsider:
Apple release iOS 4.1 with Bluetooth, proximity sensor fixes
Apple release iOS 4.1 with Bluetooth, proximity sensor fixes
Discussion:
Help Net Security, Gadget Lab, Graham Cluley's blog, Boy Genius Report, eWeek, ReadWriteWeb, MobileContentToday, App Advice, displayblog, TUAW, Gearlog, Engadget, BetaNews, Gizmodo, Redmond Pie, TechSpot and MacRumors
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
When Does A Company Deserve A Fresh Ethical Start? — Zynga has been taking it on the chin from the SF Weekly the last few weeks. First there was a four part series about some stickers that Zynga's ad agency put on the streets of San Francisco - lame but not exactly Third Reicht territory.
RELATED:
Peter Jamison / SFWeekly:
FarmVillains — Steal someone else's game. Change its name.
FarmVillains — Steal someone else's game. Change its name.
Discussion:
Joystiq, Gizmodo and GamePolitics News, Thanks:ceelew
Ryan Tate / Gawker:
The Google Ad That Steve Jobs Will Hate — Google sure knows how to push Steve Jobs' buttons. This advertisement for Google's new instant search system is bound to get under the Apple CEO's skin — and intensify one of the most heated rivalries in tech. — The ad combines a video …
Discussion:
Gizmodo, TechCrunch, Imaging Insider and Kotaku, Thanks:courtenaybird
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 …
RELATED:
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 …
Ranjit Devraj / AlterNet.org:
Creepy Biometric IDs to Be Forced Onto India's 1.2 Billion Inhabitants — Fears about loss of privacy and government abuse abound as India gears up to biometrically identify and number its 1.2 billion inhabitants. — Fears about loss of privacy are being voiced as India gears up to launch …
Gautham Nagesh / Hillicon Valley:
California testing iPads as algebra textbooks — A pilot project in four California school districts will replace 400 students' eighth-grade algebra textbooks with Apple iPads in an attempt to prove the advantages of interactive digital technologies over traditional teaching methods.
Thanks:gnagesh
Venture Capital Dispatch:
Want to Create Jobs? Certainly Don't Rely on the USPTO — The following guest column comes from venture capitalists Jason Mendelson and Brad Feld, who are managing directors at Boulder, Colo.-based Foundry Group, and Paul Kedrosky, a senior fellow at the Kauffman Foundation and author of the financial blog Infectious Greed.
Discussion:
The Huffington Post and PE Hub Blog
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
Joseph L. Flatley / Engadget:
QuickPay announces ROAMpay credit card swiper for Android, BlackBerry, iOS — We've seen our fair share iPhone-based credit card payment systems, but we both know that those aren't the only handsets people do business with. ROAMpay from QuickPay Merchant Services is a device agnostic card swiper …
Discussion:
Android Community, Go Rumors, SlashPhone and Ubergizmo
Chris Matyszczyk / CNET News:
Craigslist removes ‘censored’ bar from site — Is this the final capitulation? — After the mysterious disappearance of its Adult Services section, Craigslist uttered a symbolic protest by replacing it with a black bar that read “censored” in white type. — Wednesday, however, even that black bar was gone.
Discussion:
Fast Company, Electronic Frontier Foundation, ReadWriteWeb and The Huffington Post
Ben Grubb / Sydney Morning Herald:
Film industry hires cyber hitmen to take down internet pirates — The film industry is launching cyber attacks on websites hosting pirated movies. Illustration: Karl Hilzinger — The film industry is using pirate tactics to beat the pirates - by employing “cyber hitmen” …
Nate Anderson / Ars Technica:
European Parliament passes anti-ACTA declaration — The “written declaration” has no binding force; any MEP can issue one (there's a 200-word maximum), which is adopted when more than half of all MEPs sign on. If adopted, “written declarations are printed and posted on a board at the entrance …