Top Items:
The Official Google Blog:
Hide sites to find more of what you want — Over the years we've experimented with a number of ways to help you personalize the results you find on Google, from SearchWiki to stars in search to location settings. Now there's yet another way to find more of what you want on Google by blocking the sites you don't want to see.
Discussion:
Digital Trends, Erictric, Mixed Media, PC World, paidContent, iClarified, Mashable!, BetaNews, Pulse2, gHacks Technology News, Bloomberg, Techie Buzz, Hillicon Valley, Geek.com, Search Engine Watch, WebProNews, Marketing Pilgrim, Computerworld, SAI, Between the Lines Blog, The Domains, Gizmodo, Search Engine Land, The Huffington Post, @mattcutts, silicontap.com, NBC Bay Area, GeekSugar and Voices on All Things Digital
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Frederic Lardinois / NewsGrange:
Google Now Lets You Block Sites You Don't Like Directly from Your Search Results
Google Now Lets You Block Sites You Don't Like Directly from Your Search Results
Discussion:
AdExchanger.com, Fortune, L.A. Times Tech Blog, Google Operating System, GigaOM, ReadWriteWeb, Epicenter, Bloomberg, Download Squad, Post Tech, The Next Web and WebProNews
Nick Bilton / Bits:
If You Bought Apple Stock Instead of Products — Let us pretend for a moment that the year is 1997 and you're in the market for a new laptop computer. You want the top-of-the-line product at the time, so you opt for the newly released Apple Computer PowerBook G3 250 laptop.
Discussion:
CNET News, Gizmodo, The Daily What, SAI and NBC Bay Area
Cecilia Kang / Post Tech:
Apple changes purchases policy to protect kids on iPad, iPhone games — Apple said Thursday that it changed its policy for how purchases can be made within applications on the iPhone and iPad, an attempt to protect users, particularly children, from accidentally racking up iTunes charges.
Discussion:
Ars Technica, MacRumors, GigaOM, RazorianFly, paidContent, TidBITS, iLounge, SAI, Pulse2, SlashGear, MobileWhack, Hillicon Valley, iClarified, PhoneArena, AppleInsider, MobileCrunch, 9 to 5 Mac, MacStories, TiPb, TUAW, Know Your Cell, CrunchGear, App Advice, Phone Scoop, Erictric, Gizmodo and everythingiCafe
Sam Gustin / Epicenter:
Veteran Journos Out as AOL/HuffPo Cuts 900 Jobs — It's a bloodbath. — AOL, the beleaguered internet company, is cutting as many as 900 jobs, CEO Tim Armstrong announced Thursday, including as many as 200 editorial staffers in the United States. The layoffs, which were expected …
Discussion:
mediabistro.com, Epicenter, paidContent, @bobbuch, Mixed Media, SAI, VentureBeat, CNNMoney.com, SAI, MediaFile, paidContent:UK, @ldignan, Reuters, TechCrunch, VatorNews and TechCrunch, more at Mediagazer »
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Edmund Lee / AdAge:
Amid 900 Layoffs, Just How Are AOL's Media Brands Doing? — Finance and Politics Daily Lead Declines While News and Tech Are Up — AOL laid off 900 employees, or around 15% of its work force today, the fallout from its $315 million acquisition of the Huffington Post in February.
Discussion:
Wall Street Journal, PE Hub Blog and Mixed Media
Sarah Rotman Epps / Forrester Blogs:
Why iPad 2 Won't Have Much Competition In 2011—Unless It's From Amazon — Forrester published a new report today making the call that the iPad challengers that have been announced so far—Android Honeycomb tablets from Motorola, Toshiba, and others, as well as the BlackBerry PlayBook and HP TouchPad …
Discussion:
eWeek, Fortune, SAI, GigaOM, FierceWireless, VentureBeat and Geek.com
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Andy Ihnatko / Chicago Sun Times:
iPad 2 release spells a bleak 2011 for other tablet makers — The 2011 baseball season doesn't even start for another few weeks. Even so, I'll go out on a limb and say that this isn't going to be the San Diego Padres' year. — That's fine. They're working hard.
Discussion:
SAI
Liz Reaves Walker / The LinkedIn Blog:
Introducing LinkedIn Today — Staying on top of industry news is something we think matters for any professional whose success depends on being well informed. With all the news websites, blogs, tweets and newsletters out there, staying in-the-know can be time consuming and it's increasingly hard …
Discussion:
ReadWriteWeb, Examiner, eWeek, HubSpot's Inbound …, WebProNews, Pulse2, paidContent, Bloggers Blog, @dannysullivan and The Huffington Post
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Jacqui Cheng / Ars Technica:
WiMAX throttling lawsuit: Clearwire can't deliver the goods — Wireless operator Clearwire has had a bumpy few months, and now things are getting worse. A lawsuit has been filed by 15 users over the company's throttling practices, accusing Clearwire of not delivering advertised …
Discussion:
DSLreports, SlashGear and Electronista
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Chris Ziegler / Engadget:
Clearwire CEO Bill Morrow resigns
Clearwire CEO Bill Morrow resigns
Discussion:
Mobilized, paidContent, Computerworld, CNET News, GeekWire, Tech Trader Daily, The Seattle Times and PhoneDog.com
Andrew Orlowski / The Register:
Why Nokia failed: ‘Wasted 2,000 man years’ on UIs that didn't work — For want of a nail, the Kingdom was lost? — When Nokia CEO Stephen Elop announced that Nokia was abandoning its development of its own smartphone platforms and APIs, and betting the farm on somebody else's, many people asked why it was necessary.
Discussion:
MobileCrunch
Chris Ziegler / Engadget:
BlackBerry PlayBook hits FCC in 16GB, 32GB, and 64GB flavors — No surprises here, just the straight-up news that RIM's BlackBerry PlayBook is one small step closer to retail: it's gotten FCC clearance. Well, at least the WiFi-only version has — no sign of the WiMAX-capable version for Sprint yet …
Discussion:
wirelessgoodness.com, iGeneration Blog, Erictric, MobileWhack, Electronista, Liliputing, Know Your Cell and CrackBerry.com blogs
Farhad Manjoo / Slate:
Why we need to get rid of anonymous comments. — Once or twice a week, I get a letter taking me to task for Slate's commenting policy. The reader wants to tell me that I suck, but he doesn't want to log in to Slate's comment system using his credentials for Facebook, Google, Yahoo, or Twitter.
Discussion:
TomsTechBlog.com, more at Mediagazer »
Claire Cain Miller / Bits:
Need Advice on What to Read? Ask the Internet — Netflix uses a software algorithm to recommend movies and Zappos uses one to recommend shoes. Now Goodreads, the social network for book lovers, is introducing an algorithm to recommend books. — Goodreads was started in 2006 for people who wanted to talk about books online.
Discussion:
ReadWriteWeb, Thanks:blogfisher
Robin Wauters / TechCrunch:
Amazon.com Slammed With Lawsuit Over Instant Search Patent — When you go to Amazon.com and start typing in the top search box, you will automatically see a number of search suggestions for items on sale before you finish typing your query. The company also offers such enhanced search …
Discussion:
GeekWire, Marketing Pilgrim, TechFlash, Pulse2 and Electronista, Thanks:robinwauters
Brian Caulfield / Shiny Objects:
In A Post-PC Era, Apple Wants To Be Your IT Department — A decade ago if a computer vendor didn't have a strong relationship with corporate information technology departments they didn't get anywhere. No longer. Smart phones don't need a link to a corporate network to appeal to office workers.
Rafael Rivera / Within Windows:
Yahoo fixes their implementation of IMAP, finally — Back in January, I wrote about a Yahoo Mail issue that affected smartphones such as Windows Phone and the iPhone. To quickly summarize, whenever a smartphone checked for new Yahoo mail, the server would transmit more information than needed.
Discussion:
Engadget, pocketnow.com, ThinkMobile, Electronista, Erictric, MobileTechWorld, Neowin.net, WPCentral.com and Windows Phone Secrets, Thanks:withinrafael
Marshall Kirkpatrick / ReadWriteWeb:
New XML Standard for Super-Fast, Lightweight Applications Announced by W3C — From embedded sensors to high-frequency stock trading to everyday mobile web applications, the race is on for technologists to build the most efficient systems for quickly streaming large sets of data from one device to another.
Cade Metz / The Register:
Google contradicts own counsel in face of antitrust probe — Admits existence of search algorithm whitelists — Google has admitted that it uses whitelists to manually override its search algorithms, more than a year after its European corporate counsel denied the existence of whitelists …
Discussion:
Search Engine Watch and Search Engine Land
Ryan Naraine / Zero Day Blog:
Pwn2Own 2011: BlackBerry falls to WebKit browser attack — VANCOUVER — Research in Motion's recent decision to add a WebKit browser to BlackBerry has immediately backfired. A trio of security researchers used the spotlight of the CanSecWest Pwn2Own contest here to exploit multiple WebKit vulnerabilities …
Discussion:
eWeek and CrackBerry.com blogs
Mike Masnick / Techdirt:
NYTimes: When We Do It, It's Journalism, When HuffPo Does It, It's ‘Piracy’ — We regularly see established newspaper journalists look down on the world of sites that add value to news by assuming that aggregating, commenting on and providing context for news first reported by others is somehow a “lesser” product.
Discussion:
New York Times, New York Times, SAI, @fromedome, All Things Digital and @gaberivera, more at Mediagazer »
Parmy Olson / Forbes:
The Billionaire Who Friended the Web — Tech's titans used to wonder about Yuri Milner. Now he's the guy everyone wants to copy. — It's 8 p.m. on a winter's night in Moscow. Yuri Milner steps into an elevator for the quick, quiet ride to his penthouse apartment.
Brad McCarty / The Next Web:
Google fires a shot at Foursquare with check-in rewards and titles [Updated] — It wasn't long ago that Google pulled the trigger by offering check-ins with the Latitude service. Now, the company is stepping up the game one more notch by offering rewards for those check-ins, starting in Austin for SXSW.
Discussion:
Google LatLong, Screenwerk, Search Engine Land, Google Maps Mania and NBC Bay Area
Evelyn M. Rusli / DealBook:
Beyond Facebook, SecondMarket Opens Its Doors to Thousands — The marketplace for private Internet companies is about to get a bit more crowded. — SecondMarket, an exchange for alternative investments, will introduce a new trading platform on Friday that will integrate social media …
Robin Schriebman / Gmail Blog:
Click to call phone numbers — With the ability to call phones built right into Gmail, you no longer have to get out your phone and retype a number anytime someone send you one in an email or chat message. Starting today, you'll see that phone numbers appear as links, like this:
Discussion:
Techie Buzz
Emily Banks / Mashable!:
YouTube To Expand Staff by 30% — YouTube expects to have its biggest hiring year in 2011, with plans to grow its staff by 30%. — The Google-owned video site has dozens of open positions in all areas — although an especially high number in advertising sales and customer support — and all around the world.
Discussion:
YouTube Blog
Stacey Higginbotham / GigaOM:
Dispatch from SXSW: Have Startups Become a Fetish? — Preparing for South by Southwest Interactive every year, I'm inundated with pitches for services (now they're apps when they used to be social or merely web-based products) that are fun, sometimes useful and generally something I wouldn't pay money for.
Discussion:
Software Rants & …