Top Items:
Robert Andrews / mocoNews:
‘Nokia Is Back’ And Ballsy; 'We're Not Sorry We're Not Apple' — Nokia's beaten-down top dogs opened their annual Nokia (NYSE: NOK) World show in London Tuesday morning with a blunt and rousing pep talk and a direct riposte to their competitors. — “We're not going to apologise for the fact …
Discussion:
Digital Daily, Jonny Evans's blog, Ars Technica, The Register, Nokia, IntoMobile, Fast Company, Mobile Entertainment, SlashGear, Bloomberg, Guardian, GigaOM, TechEye, Telegraph, BBC, MobileCrunch, Electronista, 9 to 5 Mac, Boy Genius Report, Inquirer, Gearlog, The Next Web, WebProNews, Softpedia News, Engadget and Fortune
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Michael Gartenberg / SlashGear:
A Week with the Nokia N8: Can Symbian Survive? — I'm in London this week at Nokia World and it's a defining moment for Nokia. Last week Nokia announced their CEO's departure, and new CEO (and Microsoft alum) Stephen Elop. Nokia phones once defined state of the art and the S60 platform defined the modern smartphone era in 2002.
Discussion:
Technologizer, broadstuff and Engadget
Vlad Savov / Engadget:
Nokia makes E7 QWERTY slider official: ‘beautiful and all business’ (update: specs) — Nokia's just unveiled its aluminum-clad E7 QWERTY slider handset. One of the new family of Symbian^3 devices, it has a 4-inch tilting touchscreen display on the front and an 8 megapixel imager capable of 720p video on the back.
Wall Street Journal:
Nokia Chairman to Step Down in 2012 — Nokia Corp. Chairman Jorma Ollila, the executive credited with turning the Finnish company into the world's largest handset maker, plans to step down in 2012, a spokeswoman said. — Tuesday's surprise announcement, coming just days after Nokia …
Discussion:
paidContent, Crave, dailywireless.org, Gizmodo, TechCrunch Europe, Engadget, The Next Web and CNET News, Thanks:michaelkroker
Greg Sterling / Search Engine Land:
Nielsen: Bing Passes Yahoo To Become #2 Search Engine — According to Nielsen data out this morning Microsoft's Bing has passed Yahoo to become the number two search engine in the US. Nielsen says that Google's August share is 65% (and growth is flat) but that Bing and Yahoo have now switched places:
Richard Lawler / Engadget:
HDCP ‘master key’ supposedly released, unlocks HDTV copy protection permanently — Just as the MPAA is preparing to offer movies to customers at home while they're still in theaters by limiting playback to DRM-protected digital outputs only, the HDCP protocol they rely on may have been cracked wide open.
Discussion:
Techdirt, Boing Boing, Electronista, GeekSmack, MacNN, Neowin.net and TeleRead
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Ron Conway's Confidential Investment Guide: The Tech Megatrends — Angel investors SV Angel, led by Ron Conway invests so early in startups that he looks mostly at the team and current tech trends when making investment decisions. — Last year he was focusing on real time and location startups.
Discussion:
ReadWriteWeb, Silicon Alley Insider and broadstuff
Ben Bowers / Engadget:
Google TV officially launching October 17th? — It's been no secret that Google TV is scheduled to arrive sometime this fall and we've already seen the Logitech Revue box hardware pass the FCC, but a tipster has just shared an internal Best Buy document with us disclosing …
Discussion:
Fortune, Fast Company, Androidos.in, I4U News, Go Rumors and GeekSmack
Taylor Wimberly / Android and Me:
V CAST App Store to compete with official Android Market? — Verizon Wireless loves apps. In fact, Verizon loves them sooo much that they decided to create their own official app store, named V CAST Apps. Many users with Android phones on Verizon might already notice a V CAST Apps tab under …
RELATED:
James Kendrick / jkOnTheRun:
Verizon's Android App Store is Late, Not New
Microsoft:
Microsoft Unveils New LifeCam With Stunning 1080p HD Sensor: Closest Thing to Being There in Person — LifeCam Studio is the perfect HD video calling companion for Windows Live Messenger 2011. — Microsoft Corp. today sets a new standard in webcams with LifeCam Studio, featuring sharp high-definition …
Discussion:
Gadget Lab, SlashGear, Softpedia News, The Microsoft Blog, Electronista, LiveSide.net and Bink.nu
Darren Murph / Engadget:
Exclusive: Galaxy Tab, red / white BlackBerry Torch and Samsung Focus hitting AT&T in Q4 — Mmm, delicious. That's the feeling we're left with after being inundated with yet another round of AT&T leaks, this time giving us insight at a few flagship devices on tap for the carrier's holiday push.
Discussion:
IntoMobile, Appolicious Advisor, DailyTech, Gadgetell, Newlaunches.com, Androidos.in, Fone Arena, Softpedia News, Boy Genius Report, Erictric, MobileCrunch, SlashPhone, WMExperts, AndroidGuys, Android Community, WMPoweruser.com, SlashGear, Electronista, Phones Review, Android Phone Fans, CrackBerry.com blogs, Gizmodo and displayblog
Esther Shein / InformationWeek:
Microsoft Launches Massive Wireless Hotspot — The “White-Fi” network on the company's Redmond, Wash. campus runs over white space spectrum left over from the conversion of TV signals from analog to digital. — Microsoft workers both in buildings and aboard a shuttle bus are testing …
Discussion:
The Politico, DSLreports, The Register, CNET News, BetaNews, FierceWireless and Bloomberg
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Saying “RSS Is Dead” Is Dead, Saying “RSS Is Not Dead” Is Not — Today. — Of all the tech echo-chamber arguments, one of my favorites has to be the “RSS is dead” one. Sure, perhaps I'm a bit partial because Steve Gillmor set the discussion in motion in May of 2009 for TechCrunchIT.
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Joseph Tartakoff / paidContent:
Google Says Google Reader Is Doing Just Fine
Google Says Google Reader Is Doing Just Fine
Discussion:
Search Engine Land
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
No, RSS Is Not Dead, and Neither Are RSS Readers
No, RSS Is Not Dead, and Neither Are RSS Readers
Discussion:
OStatic blogs, Newsome.Org, Blogads for opinion makers, Stowe Boyd, Scobleizer, blogs.telegraph.co.uk and GeekSugar, Thanks:mathewi
Jon Stokes / Ars Technica:
Intel's walled garden plan to put A/V vendors out of business — SAN FRANCISCO — In describing the motivation behind Intel's recent purchase of McAfee for a packed-out audience at the Intel Developer Forum, Intel's Paul Otellini framed it as an effort to move the way the company approaches security …
Discussion:
Inquirer, Softpedia News, CNET News, Velocity, TechEye, Gizmodo, internetnews.com and VentureBeat
Robin Wauters / TechCrunch:
Evan Williams Coughed Up $7,500 For Twitter.com Back In The Day — Mid-2006, when Twitter was born, the domain name Twitter.com changed hands for $7,500, chief executive and co-founder Evan Williams tweeted yesterday night. — Roughly four years, 145 million users and 300,000 third-party applications later …
Discussion:
Domain Name Wire and Macworld
Christopher Mims / Technology Review:
Why Isn't the Price of Broadband Obeying Moore's Law? — The quality and cost of broadband Internet access haven't budged in years. — The U.S. government doesn't keep an index of broadband internet prices by which to evaluate the success of its broadband promotion policies …
Discussion:
DSLreports and blogs.chron.com
Vlad Savov / Engadget:
Samsung's i8700 Windows Phone 7 handset goes through the video leak ritual — It's well known around these parts that if you aspire to be a highly desirable smartphone, you have to leak out in three clearly delineated stages: pictures, video, and specs. We've seen the i8700 a couple …
Discussion:
MobileTechWorld, MobileCrunch and Phones Review
Jason Ankeny / FierceDeveloper:
Study: Absence of over-the-air updates slows iOS device upgrades — Almost twice as many Motorola Droid users have upgraded to Android 2.2 than iPhone 3GS users who've evolved to Apple's (NASDAQ:AAPL) iOS 4.0, according to new data issued by mobile app analytics firm Localytics.
Discussion:
Localytics, TechCrunch, MobileContentToday and FierceMobileContent
Richard MacManus / ReadWriteWeb:
Techmeme Turns 5: Interview With Founder Gabe Rivera — This week, leading tech news aggregator Techmeme turned 5 years old. The service launched in September 2005, under the name tech.memeorandum, and ReadWriteWeb was one of the first media publications to review it. — In 2005, tech.memeorandum mostly tracked blogs.
Tom Abate / San Francisco Chronicle:
Instead of IPOs, startups look to be acquired — The market for initial public offerings remains badly broken in the aftermath of the financial panic of 2008, but its malaise began even earlier. — “The ecosystem that allowed young companies to go public has been destroyed,” …
Discussion:
Silicon Alley Insider
Lindsay Powers / Hollywood Reporter:
AOL: Jonas Bros. can ‘help redesign Internet’ — CEO calls them ‘most creative people on the planet’ — Looks like the Jonas Brothers could have a new gig. — In an interview with Front Row Daily, AOL CEO and Chairman Tim Armstrong says his company wants to change the way both AOL properties …
Discussion:
Silicon Alley Insider, the Econsultancy blog and Daily Front Row, more at Mediagazer »
Ryan Singel / Epicenter:
Most Clicked Mobile Ads Aren't On Android or iPhone — Android, Blackberry, Windows Mobile and the iPhone's iOS may be the lead operating systems battling it out for smartphone supremacy, but when it comes to getting users around the world to click on ads, good-old flip-phones and Nokia's Symbian OS-powered phones beat them hands down.
Thanks:rsingel
Anthony Ha / VentureBeat:
DEMO's next wave of innovation: Here's the launch list — DEMO Fall 2010, the technology launchpad conference coproduced by VentureBeat and IDG, is kicking off tomorrow (actually, the parties started tonight), and we've got a lineup of big-name speakers from the tech world …
Ernesto / TorrentFreak:
Burn Any Web-Hosted File into a Torrent With Burnbit — Burnbit is a new service that allows users to generate a torrent for any file hosted online. It is especially useful for those who want to share large files with multiple people, at great speeds and without consuming too much bandwidth.
Discussion:
Download Squad
New York Times:
After Negotiations, Israel Emerges on Twitter — MADRID — Israel has acquired the user name @israel on Twitter, the microblogging Internet service, from the Spanish owner of a pornographic Web site, in an unusual transaction intended to help Israel exercise more influence over its image.
Discussion:
Mashable!, Gawker and Fast Company
Jacqui Cheng / Ars Technica:
Walmart's data plans painfully expensive, not meant for geeks — Walmart is getting into the wireless service business, but not in a way that will appeal to geeks or smartphone buffs. The company says that it will begin offering mobile plans, to run on T-Mobile's network, in order to …
RELATED:
Peter Svensson / Associated Press:
Wal-Mart introduces wireless plan under own brand
Wal-Mart introduces wireless plan under own brand
Discussion:
Boy Genius Report, GeekSmack, Hillicon Valley, Gizmodo, MediaPost, Engadget, Black Web 2.0, GeekSugar, MobileContentToday, Phone Arena, Phones Review, FM Blog, Thoughts from the Sidelines, Electronista, DailyTech, Switched, The Next Web, TmoNews, IntoMobile, DSLreports, mocoNews, Crave, Geek.com, Fast Company, Gearlog and Lockergnome Blog Network