Top Items:
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Another Airbnb Victim Tells His Story: “There Were Meth Pipes Everywhere” — This last week we've all watched in horror as the story unfolded about an Airbnb user who had her home ransacked a month ago. — Other than the sideshow of us getting dragged into the story, it seemed to be winding down yesterday.
Discussion:
CNNMoney.com, @fromedome, Examiner, Thisisgoingtobebig.com, @markson, @newsycombinator, @semilshah, GigaOM, @cookie, @dtrinh, @carnage4life, The Daily What, @allnick, @bofishback, @chirag_mehta, @indefensible and USA Today
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Robert Scoble / Google+:
What we can learn from AirBNB and #ransackgate
What we can learn from AirBNB and #ransackgate
Discussion:
Marketing Nirvana, Examiner, @carnage4life and @plusbryan
Daniel Rubino / WPCentral.com:
Windows Phone revenue “abysmal”, still better than Android — The Seattle PI has done some sleuthing in Microsoft's annual report to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and found out that by subtracting a few figures, you get a rough $600 million dollars in revenue for fiscal year 2011 for Windows Mobile and Windows Phone.
Discussion:
The Business Insider, All New Musings and Neowin.net
Sarah Perez / ReadWriteWeb:
Farewell Flash? Adobe Launches HTML5 Web Animations Tool “Adobe Edge” — Today, Adobe is launching a new tool called Adobe Edge which will allow creative professionals to design animated Web content using Web standards like HTML5, CSS and JavaScript. Not Flash.
Discussion:
Technologizer, Computerworld, Webware.com, The Register, eWeek, Gizmodo, The Loop, Fast Company, TUAW, MacNN, Ubergizmo, Peter O'Kelly's Reality Check, Pocket-lint, iClarified, thinq_, VentureBeat, Mashable!, PhoneArena, BetaNews, SlashGear, AppleInsider, About.com Web Design, ExtremeTech, 9to5Mac, Between the Lines Blog and AppleInsider
Josh Halliday / Guardian:
Google Chrome overtakes Firefox to become UK's second most popular web browser — Internet browser passes Firefox, with speed and a nationwide advertising campaign credited for the rise in popularity — Google's Chrome is Britain's second most popular browser, a sign of the internet giant's increasing grip on the UK search market.
Discussion:
Computerworld, The Register, SlashGear, The Next Web and T3.com News
Emma Barnett / Telegraph:
Facebook expands UK operation — Facebook is moving into a larger office in London as it expands its advertising business operation in the UK. — Mark Zuckerberg - Facebook's founder and chief. — However, the social networking company has shunned Silicon Roundabout …
Discussion:
ComputerWeekly.com and The Next Web
Xinhua News Agency:
Foxconn to replace workers with 1 million robots in 3 years — Taiwanese technology giant Foxconn will replace some of its workers with 1 million robots in three years to cut rising labor expenses and improve efficiency, said Terry Gou, founder and chairman of the company, late Friday.
Discussion:
PC World, Fast Company, DigiTimes, Engadget, Shiny Objects, Reuters, TechCrunch, TechEye, The Register, Guardian, Electricpig.co.uk, SlashGear, VentureBeat, Gawker, AllThingsD, IntoMobile, Examiner, I4U News, AppleInsider, Ubergizmo, Mashable!, PhoneArena, MacRumors, Pocket-lint, The Nokia Blog, TechnoBuffalo, TiPb, CNET News, 9to5Mac, Gizmodo, NevilleHobson.com, Electronista, iClarified, Bloggers Blog and Slashdot
John Paczkowski / AllThingsD:
Apple Launching New iPhone In October, Not September — So those rumors claiming the iPhone 5 will debut in late September? They're wrong. — Instead, it's going to be an October surprise — the month in which Apple will be launching its next generation iPhone.
Discussion:
Gizmodo, App Advice, MacRumors, PC World, MacPost, SlashGear, iPhone Alley, Electricpig.co.uk, PhoneArena and LAPTOP Magazine
Dean Takahashi / VentureBeat:
Best Buy moves into the connected TV business with Tivo's user interface — Internet connected TVs are becoming a lot more mainstream. The latest sign of that is that Best Buy is announcing its own house label model, dubbed the Insignia Connected TV. — Best Buy, the nation's largest …
Discussion:
TechCrunch, Engadget, Ubergizmo, GigaOM, SlashGear, eHomeUpgrade, This is my next, Gizmodo and Crave
Horace Dediu / asymco:
The end of easy growth in smartphones — At the end of last year I was saying that the smartphone boom was a tide that lifted all boats. That is no longer the case. — But the big story is that there has been a clear non-seasonal counter-cyclical decline in Nokia and RIM's smartphone performance.
Discussion:
TechCrunch, Fortune and Daring Fireball
Graham Cluley / Naked Security:
Jake Davis named as suspected hacker Topiary by UK police — British police have tonight named the teenager they arrested in Shetland last week, in relation to the LulzSec and Anonymous hacking groups. — Jake Davis, 18, will appear in court tomorrow. — Davis, reportedly …
Discussion:
BBC, @skynewts, The Next Web, @crimereporter_, PC Magazine, Pocket-lint, Examiner, Techie Buzz, The Next Web and Geek.com, Thanks:melissakester
Steve Lohr / New York Times:
With the Bing Search Engine, Microsoft Plays the Underdog — MIKE NICHOLS has a poster on his office wall. It shows the young Muhammad Ali glaring down at a fallen Sonny Liston, the bruising heavyweight who had seemed invincible — until Ali beat him, in 1964, in one of the biggest upsets …
Discussion:
InfoWorld, GeekWire, TechNet Blogs, Neowin.net and TechFlash, Thanks:theromit
John Markoff / New York Times:
Data Centers' Power Use Less Than Was Expected — SAN FRANCISCO — Data centers' unquenchable thirst for electricity has been slaked by the global recession and by a combination of new power-saving technologies, according to an independent report on data center power use from 2005 to 2010.
Discussion:
Jonathan G. Koomey, Ph.D., GigaOM, GeekWire and ZDNet