Top Items:
Eric Slivka / MacRumors:
Steve Jobs on iOS Location Issue: 'We Don't Track Anyone' — There has obviously been a lot of discussion about last week's disclosure that iOS devices are maintaining an easily-accessible database tracking the movements of users dating back to the introduction of iOS 4 a year ago.
Discussion:
Network World, Marco.org, Yahoo! News, Mobile Marketing Watch, GigaOM, SAI, PC Magazine, App Advice, Guardian, 9 to 5 Mac, Electronista, CNET News, I4U News, Geek.com, Pulse2, www.thehostingnews.com, Appolicious Advisor, Know Your Cell, BGR, IntoMobile, Mashable!, PhoneArena, iClarified, Redmond Pie, Techland, Boing Boing, MacStories, The Next Web, TUAW, SlashGear, The Not-So Private Parts, FierceMobileContent, MacHackPC, everythingiCafe and The Loop
RELATED:
Jun Yang / Bloomberg:
Apple iPhone's Location Data Collection to be Investigated in South Korea
Apple iPhone's Location Data Collection to be Investigated in South Korea
Discussion:
Computerworld, Digital Trends, AppleInsider, MacStories, MobileBurn.com, ITProPortal, Electronista and iClarified
Jennifer Valentino-Devries / Wall Street Journal:
IPhone Stored Location in Test Even if Disabled
IPhone Stored Location in Test Even if Disabled
Discussion:
geothought, PC World, Gadget Lab, Network World, Alex Levinson, USA Today, 9 to 5 Mac, iPhone Buzz, Android Phone Fans, iLounge, msnbc.com, SlashGear, TechEye, WebProNews, Tech Trader Daily, Search Engine Land, MacHackPC, SocialTimes.com, The Next Web, All Points Blog and Hillicon Valley
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Yahoo Moves Fast — Real Fast — To Scoop Up IntoNow For $20 - $30 Million — This past January, upon seeing a demo of IntoNow, we noted that the media check-in game just changed. Apparently, Yahoo agreed — they've just acquired the company for something in the range of $20 to $30 million, sources with knowledge of the deal tell us.
Discussion:
Digital Trends, PC World, GigaOM, paidContent, SAI, BoomTown, The Next Web, IntoNow, Pulse2, Adotas, Lost Remote, IntoMobile, Social Markets, Mashable!, Yodel Anecdotal and PSFK, more at Mediagazer »
RELATED:
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
SurveyMonkey Buys Online Forms Start-Up Wufoo for $35 Million — SurveyMonkey, the quiet but profitable and fast-growing Web survey company, is buying online forms start-up Wufoo. — While the terms of the transaction for the Tampa, Fla.-based Infinity Box-makers of Wufoo-were not disclosed …
Discussion:
paidContent, TechCrunch, Mixergy, Pulse2, Startups Open Sourced and silicontap.com
RELATED:
Ina Fried / Mobilized:
With Update, Barnes & Noble's Nook Color Gets More Tablet-Like — Starting on Monday, Barnes & Noble is delivering a promised software update for the Nook Color that will further tilt the device from being a multi-purpose e-reader into a full-fledged Android tablet.
Discussion:
Ars Technica, BetaNews, Daring Fireball, Gartner, Macworld, Computerworld, VatorNews, dailywireless.org, Technologizer, eHomeUpgrade, IntoMobile, techeblog.com and PhoneArena
RELATED:
Rachel King / The Toybox Blog:
Barnes & Noble treats Nook Color to Froyo; unveils Nook Apps — Just as promised, Barnes & Noble rolled out a major update for the Nook Color on Monday, which has the 7-inch slate looking even more like a tablet than an e-book reader now. — There's no need to hack the Nook Color …
Discussion:
L.A. Times Tech Blog, mocoNews, Open Source Blog, PC Magazine, Digital Trends, The Mobile Gadgeteer Blog, New York Times, GigaOM, eWeek, VentureBeat, Tech Trader Daily, App Advice, Mike Cane's xBlog, ReadWriteWeb, Engadget, CrunchGear, San Francisco Chronicle, Gizmodo, LAPTOP Magazine, Liliputing, Electronista, CNET News, MobileBurn.com, The Next Web and @carnage4life, more at Mediagazer »
Peter Svensson / Associated Press:
AT&T starts selling ‘cell tower in a suitcase’ — NEW YORK - For the first time, AT&T is selling small, portable cellular antennas that will allow corporate and government customers to provide their own wireless coverage in remote or disaster-struck areas. — Usually, cellphone companies …
John Cook / GeekWire:
Ex-Microsoft and Yahoo research guru Gary Flake starts stealthy Clipboard — Gary Flake, a former technical fellow at Microsoft who up until last fall ran the company's Live Labs research group, has emerged at the helm of a new Bellevue startup company called Clipboard.
Discussion:
TechCrunch, Thanks:toddbishop
Claire Cain Miller / New York Times:
Storify Collects Strands of News on the Social Web — SAN FRANCISCO — News events as varied as the commercial jet landing in the Hudson River and the uprisings in Egypt have demonstrated that people armed with cellphones — not professional reporters — are often the first source of breaking news …
Discussion:
GigaOM, ReadWriteWeb, Off On A Tangent and Lost Remote, more at Mediagazer »
Don MacAskill / SmugMug's Don MacAskill:
How SmugMug survived the Amazonpocalypse — tl;dr: Amazon had a major outage last week, which took down some popular websites. Despite using a lot of Amazon services, SmugMug didn't go down because we spread across availability zones and designed for failure to begin with, among other things.
Discussion:
GigaOM, PC Magazine, InfoQ, Webmonkey, RightScale Blog and Software as Services Blog, Thanks:donmacaskill
RELATED:
Larry Dignan / Between the Lines Blog:
Amazon Web Services outage: ‘Detailed post mortem’ coming
Amazon Web Services outage: ‘Detailed post mortem’ coming
Discussion:
THINK IT Services and MSDN Blogs
Robert Lee Hotz / Wall Street Journal:
The Really Smart Phone — Researchers are harvesting a wealth of intimate detail from our cellphone data, uncovering the hidden patterns of our social lives, travels, risk of disease—even our political views. — ‘Phones can know,’ says an MIT researcher. 'People can get this god's-eye view of human behavior.'
Discussion:
msnbc.com, IntoMobile, I4U News and brian s hall
Matt Frost / The WebM Open Media Project Blog:
Introducing the WebM Community Cross-License Initiative — It's been almost a year since Mozilla, Opera, Xiph.Org, Matroska, Google and over 40 other partners launched the WebM Project with the goal of developing a world-class, open source media format for the web.
Catharine Smith / The Huffington Post:
Michael Dell: Tablets' Rapid Rise A Big Surprise … Michael Dell, founder and chief executive of Dell, Inc., recently sat down with the Wall Street Journal to discuss the company's big challenges as it diversifies beyond affordable consumer PCs. — Asked to name the most surprising thing …
Discussion:
eWeek, PC Magazine, CNET News, PC World, Computerworld, Wall Street Journal, MacDailyNews, Electronista, SlashGear, Andrew Lark, TechEye, The Tech Report and Fudzilla
RELATED:
Ben Worthen / Wall Street Journal:
Michael Dell Looks Beyond PC Business
Michael Dell Looks Beyond PC Business
Discussion:
TG Daily, IntoMobile and eWeek
Chris Davies / SlashGear:
Nintendo confirms Wii replacement in 2012; Preview at E3 2011 — Nintendo has announced [pdf link] it will release its next games console, the successor to the Wii, in 2012, with the first preview of the new hardware at E3 2011 in early June. Confirmed in a new investor note, the unnamed console …
Discussion:
Bloomberg, GeekWire, ComputerAndVideoGames.com, CrunchGear, Wall Street Journal, PC World, CNET News, WebProNews, Crave, Ars Technica, techblog.dallasnews.com, Product Reviews, The Tech Trade, ZDNet, PSFK, Electronista, Agence France Presse, CNNMoney.com, The Next Web, Fudzilla, TechSpot, Games blog, TechEye, Digital Trends, ITProPortal and Gadgetell, Thanks:c_davies
Mary Jo Foley / All about Microsoft Blog:
Beyond the browser: Microsoft's ‘C3’ next-gen platform for HTML-based applications — Must a traditional Web browser be the primary way to interact with and navigate a Web application? — Microsoft researchers think the answer is no. They are building another option — ‘C3,’ an extensible platform for HTML-based applications.
Discussion:
WinBeta
Claire Cain Miller / New York Times:
Google, a Giant in Mobile Search, Seeks New Ways to Make It Pay — MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — In early 2008, in the early days of the iPhone era, Google engineers began noticing something unusual in the search engine's logs. Owners of these new phones were doing a huge number of Web searches.
Discussion:
Internet2Go, Beyond Search and brian s hall
Xinhua News Agency:
China's cultural ministry punishes illegal music providers, including Baidu — China's cultural ministry announced Monday that it would hand down punishments for 14 websites that have provided illegal music downloads, including Baidu's “BaiduMP3” service. — An official from the ministry …
Discussion:
Digital Trends, Reuters, PC World, Fast Company, Electronista and Penn Olson
Todd Bishop / GeekWire:
RealNetworks plans new ‘Rinse’ clean-up tool for iTunes — RealNetworks has developed a new program called Rinse for cleaning up and organizing Apple iTunes libraries on Windows PCs and Macs — automatically adding album artwork, fixing song names, organizing music libraries by genre, and finding and removing duplicate tracks.
Discussion:
MediaMemo, Daring Fireball, @donmacaskill, Electronista, hypebot and MacStories
Richard H. Thaler / New York Times:
Show Us the Data. (It's Ours, After All.) — “NO one knows what I like better than I do.” — This statement may seem self-evident, but the revolution in information technology has created a growing list of exceptions. Your grocery store knows what you like to eat and can probably …
Discussion:
@dannysullivan, blogs.chron.com, @becomingwilliam and @timoreilly
Ramin Mostafavi / Reuters:
Iran says it has detected second cyber attack — (Reuters) - Iran has been targeted by a second computer virus in a “cyber war” waged by its enemies, its commander of civil defense said on Monday. — Gholamreza Jalali told the semi-official Mehr news agency that the new virus, called “Stars,” was being investigated by experts.
Discussion:
PC World, F-Secure Antivirus …, MehrNews.com, The Next Web and Gawker