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New York Times:
Apple Moves to Tighten Control of App Store — SAN FRANCISCO — Apple is further tightening its control of the App Store. — The company has told some applications developers, including Sony, that they can no longer sell content, like e-books, within their apps, or let customers have access …
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Mashable!, GigaOM, mocoNews, John Battelle's Searchblog, Ars Technica, Digital Trends, PC World, VentureBeat, Pocket-lint, Computerworld, Electronista, Electricpig.co.uk, 9 to 5 Mac, paidContent, TeleRead, TechCrunch, TUAW, Martin Kool, msnbc.com, MacStories, Appolicious Advisor, iLounge, AppleInsider, Rex Hammock's RexBlog.com, Techland, Inquirer, MacRumors, MacDailyNews, TechCrunch, FierceMobileContent, Epicenter, SlashGear, USA Today, App Advice, Fortune, CNET News, AppScout, The Apple Core Blog, Macgasm, Softpedia News, SAI, ITProPortal, TiPb, The Register, GottaBeMobile, Disruptors, The Next Web, The Loop, PadGadget, Edible Apple, Gearlog, Kindle Review and Gizmodo, more at Mediagazer »
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John Paczkowski / Digital Daily:
Apple on Sony Reader: “We Have Not Changed Our Guidelines” — Apple rejected Sony's Reader iPhone app from the App Store this week in a move that the New York Times portrays as a “further tightening its control of the App Store.” And if, as the Times claims, Apple's rejection of the Reader app meant …
Discussion:
The Loop, MacRumors, MacStories and THINQ.co.uk
Adrian Kingsley-Hughes / Hardware 2.0 Blog:
Don't believe the sensationalist headlines - Kindle unlikely to be kicked out of iTunes — The news that Sony's Reader ebook app has been rejected from Apple's App Store has caused a tsunami of sensationalist speculation predicting that Amazon's Kindle app is living on borrowed time and is destined to be dumped.
Harry McCracken / Technologizer:
Are Apple's iPhone E-Reader Rules Changing? Tough to Tell
Are Apple's iPhone E-Reader Rules Changing? Tough to Tell
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Engadget
Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Land:
Google: Bing Is Cheating, Copying Our Search Results — Google has run a sting operation that it says proves Bing has been watching what people search for on Google, the sites they select from Google's results, then uses that information to improve Bing's own search listings. Bing doesn't deny this.
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The Microsoft Blog, CNET News, Guardian, SAI, TechEye, Fortune, NewsGrange, TechFlash, eWeek, Mixed Media, Gizmodo, Adotas, Electronista, @skitzzo, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, The Next Web, The Tech Report, Engadget, Neowin.net, SlashGear, WinRumors and Big Think, Thanks:techvenkat
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Mary Jo Foley / All about Microsoft Blog:
Microsoft: 'We do not copy Google's results' — On February 1, Google went public (via SearchEngineLand.com) with claims that Microsoft is copying Google search results with Bing. — Is Microsoft copping to the claim? Here's the original response Microsoft is providing to folks who are asking:
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SAI
The Official Google Blog:
Some weekend work that will (hopefully) enable more Egyptians to be heard — Like many people we've been glued to the news unfolding in Egypt and thinking of what we could do to help people on the ground. Over the weekend we came up with the idea of a speak-to-tweet service …
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Globe and Mail, BaltTech, New York Times, Help Net Security, USA Today, Tech Daily Dose, GMSV, DailyTech, BBC, Techland, slight paranoia, techPresident, Computerworld, Mashable!, Fast Company, Dispatch, SlashGear, Gearlog, Inquirer, Guardian, Softpedia News, Switched, TechSpot, IntoMobile, ArabCrunch and Beth's Blog, more at Mediagazer »
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Paul Thurrott / Windows Phone Secrets:
Now Microsoft confirms Yahoo! as the data leak culprit — Microsoft this evening belatedly admitted that Yahoo! Mail was in fact the data leak culprit in Windows Phone, just hours after Rafael had already proven that to be the problem. Here's the note from Microsoft, which also includes information …
Discussion:
eWeek, VentureBeat, Inquirer, MediaPost, Digital Trends, Windows Phone Secrets, All about Microsoft Blog, Within Windows, LiveSide.net, Engadget, Phones Review, TG Daily, MobileTechWorld, Neowin.net, SlashGear, WinRumors, Softpedia News, IntoMobile, Download Squad, Pocket-lint and The Next Web
Jon Swartz / USA Today:
Airlines offer free in-flight Facebook — Starting today, seven major airlines are giving away the social network on their Wi-Fi networks all month, just as they would soft drinks and peanuts. It's part of a promotion with Gogo Inflight Internet. — The free Facebook service will be available …
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Computerworld, MediaPost, Gizmodo, Neowin.net, Switched, The Next Web, Between the Lines Blog, SlashGear, ClipperHouse and Fortune
Sarah Perez / ReadWriteWeb:
Mobile Data Explosion: 75 Exabytes by 2015 — Worldwide mobile data traffic is due to increase 26-fold to 75 exabytes annually, says networking giant Cisco in its latest report, the Cisco Visual Networking Index Global Mobile Data Traffic Forecast for 2010 to 2015.
Discussion:
Between the Lines Blog and Cisco
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Joshua Schnell / Macgasm:
Netgear CEO Patrick Lo apologizes via email for misspeaking — A lot of people were pretty disappointed this morning when they read the words that came out of the Netgear CEO's mouth. We ran an article today that highlighted words spoken by Patrick Lo (link) that essentially alluded to Steve Jobs …
Discussion:
Computerworld, Faster Forward, Inquirer, AppleInsider, DailyTech and TUAW
John Paczkowski / Digital Daily:
Buyer's Remorse: 16 Percent of Galaxy Tabs Are Returned — No wonder sales of Samsung's Galaxy Tab to date have haven't been what the company expected. Not only are consumers buying fewer of them than previously thought-they're also returning them more frequently.
Discussion:
eWeek, 9 to 5 Mac, SlashGear, IntoMobile, CrunchGear, Gearlog, ZDNet, Electronista, VoIP Watch, Engadget and PhoneArena
Ina Fried / Mobilized:
Exclusive: Google's Android Design Expert Outlines the Vision Behind Honeycomb — Although the immediate focus of Honeycomb was to get Android ready for tablets, the operating system is really designed to enable Google's software to power all manner of mobile devices.
Discussion:
SlashGear and Electronista
Brian Suthoff / localytics.com:
First Impressions Matter! 26% of Apps Downloaded in 2010 Were Used Just Once — The market for phone and tablet apps is very competitive, with about 400,000 iPhone/iPad apps and 200,000 Android apps. The good news is that customers seem very willing to give new apps a try …
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Internet2Go, MediaPost, GigaOM, App Advice, VentureBeat, MacGazette.net, MacStories and 9 to 5 Mac
Stephen Shankland / CNET News:
Blame me: Mozy scraps unlimited backups — Mozy, the online backup service provider and EMC subsidiary, plans to announce today that it's dumping its subscription permitting customers to store unlimited data. — The reason is not hard to guess: with ever-growing quantities of photos and videos …
Discussion:
DSLreports, Download Squad and Technologizer
Nicholas Carlson / SAI:
LEAKED: AOL's Master Plan — Two years into his tenure as AOL CEO, Tim Armstrong is stepping on the gas.By April, he wants AOL editorial to increase its stories per day from 2,000 to 15,000.He wants pageviews per story to jump from 1,500 to 7,000.He wants video stories to go from being 4% of all stories produced to 70%.
Amit Sood / The Official Google Blog:
Explore museums and great works of art in the Google Art Project — One of the things I love about working at Google is that you can come up with an idea one day and the next day start getting to work to make it a reality. That's what happened with the Art Project—a new tool we're announcing today …
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Engadget, Fast Company, USA Today, TechCrunch, Gearlog, Softpedia News, Google LatLong, Switched, Telegraph, AOL News, Reuters, Telegraph, Gizmodo, Disruptors, Pocket-lint, Black Web 2.0, TechEye and Google Maps Mania
Ross Miller / Engadget:
LG confirms Optimus 3D for MWC 2011: glasses-free screen and 3D camera — We've had a feeling that LG was going to tackle 3D smartphones heads-on sometime in February, and after a spat of rumors today purported to be showing off the Optimus 3D (pictured above, via Phandroid) …
Leena Rao / TechCrunch:
Social Application Developer Seesmic Raises $4M From SoftBank And Salesforce — Social application developer Seesmic has raised $4 million in new funding from enterprise giant Salesforce.com and Softbank Holdings, a subsidiary of Softbank. This brings Seesmic's total funding to $16 million …
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VatorNews, VentureBeat, BoomTown, SAI, The Next Web, PR Newswire, mocoNews, Mashable!, Adotas and Seesmic Blog
Horace Dediu / asymco:
The iPhone share: 17.25% of smartphones, 4.2% all phones — The mobile phone market is growing rapidly. It grew 18% in the last quarter. The smartphone market grew even faster, about 75%. — To grow share in this market means growing even faster than the market.
Discussion:
Appolicious Advisor
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
Web Video Doubter Mark Cuban Invests in Web Video Studio Revision3 — Mark Cuban, Web video skeptic? Meet Mark Cuban, Web video investor. — The voluble entrepreneur and investor, who made his fortune off Web video during the first Internet boom, is dabbling in it again …
Discussion:
VentureBeat and paidContent
Scott Gilbertson / Webmonkey:
OpenID: The Web's Most Successful Failure — First 37Signals announced it would drop support for OpenID. Then Microsoft's Dare Obasanjo called OpenID a failure (along with XML and AtomPub). Former Facebooker Yishan Wong's scathing (and sometimes wrong) rant calling OpenID a failure is one of the more popular answers on Quora.
Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
Rupert Murdoch Gives Guests a Sneak Peek of Tomorrow's “Daily” Tonight. Here's What They'll See. — The Daily makes its official debut tomorrow morning, at a press event at New York's Guggenheim Museum. — But a select crowd will get to see the iPad newspaper tonight …
Discussion:
App Advice, Poynter, Faster Forward and MacStories, more at Mediagazer »
Joanna Stern / Engadget:
Dell Streak 7 review — Let's be honest, the original Dell Streak had a bit of an identity crisis. The 5-inch device wasn't sure if it belonged in the tablet or smartphone world, and ultimately it was targeted at a pretty niche user. But its larger brother, the Streak 7, is more self-aware.
Discussion:
Computerworld, CrunchGear, GigaOM, SlashGear, The Mobile Gadgeteer Blog, Gizmodo, ITProPortal and TmoNews
Alexia Tsotsis / TechCrunch:
Egypt Shuts Down Noor, Its Last ISP — We're hearing reports on Twitter that the coverage of Noor Group's DSL service, Egypt's last standing ISP which powers the Egyptian Stock Exchange as well as sites of major brands like Coca Cola and Exxon Mobile is being shut down …
Discussion:
Techdirt, eWeek, DSLreports, Threat Level, Digits, L.A. Times Tech Blog, paidContent, TechEye and The Register
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