Top Items:
Kara Swisher / AllThingsD:
Exclusive: Groupon Prices at $20 a Share; More Than 10x Oversubscribed, So It Adds 5M More Shares — Groupon has priced it shares for its public offering at $20 a share, several dollars above the expected price range. — The offering for the daily deal site — which has had a controversial IPO process …
RELATED:
Shira Ovide / Deal Journal:
Groupon Is the Biggest Internet IPO Since Google
Groupon Is the Biggest Internet IPO Since Google
Discussion:
TechCrunch, Venture Capital Dispatch, reDesign, @wsjdealjournal, ReadWriteWeb, The Technology Chronicles, Betabeat and The Domains
Evelyn M. Rusli / DealBook:
In an I.P.O., a Clamor for Groupon's Deal
Darren Murph / Engadget:
B&N launching Nook Tablet for $249 on November 16th, and we've got the dirty details — Sitting down? Good. Come November 16th, Amazon's Kindle Fire will have company. We've wrapped our paws around a stash of documents confirming the impending launch of the first bona fide tablet in the Nook line …
Discussion:
AllThingsD, SlashGear, Android Central, Mashable!, PhoneArena, Android Central, Softpedia News, Pulse2, Business Insider, VentureBeat, Fudzilla, TechCrunch, 9to5Google, Digital Trends, Electronista, AndroidGuys, Liliputing, The Verge, GottaBeMobile, Gizmodo, Android Phone Fans, The Next Web, dailywireless.org, Pocketables, The Digital Reader, Gizmodo Australia and GeekSugar, more at Mediagazer »
Business Week:
Apple's Supply-Chain Secret? Hoard Lasers — The iPhone maker spends lavishly on all stages of the manufacturing process, giving it a huge operations advantage — About five years ago, Apple design guru Jony Ive decided he wanted a new feature for the next MacBook …
Discussion:
AppleInsider, Business Insider and MacRumors
DigiTimes:
Amazon next-generation Kindle Fire likely to have 8.9-inch display — Amazon is likely to change its product roadmap by shifting the display size of its next-generation Kindle Fire to 8.9-inch instead of 10.1-inch as originally planned, according to sources in Amazon's supply chain.
Discussion:
SlashGear, The Verge, Pocket-lint, 9to5Google, TG Daily, The Next Web, Softpedia News, PhoneArena, GottaBeMobile, Electronista, The Tech Herald … and Business Insider
Wall Street Journal:
Google Ponders Pay-TV Business — Pilot Project in Kansas City Would Rival Cable, Satellite — Internet giant Google Inc. is considering a plan to offer paid cable-TV services to consumers, a move that could unleash a new wave of competition within the traditional TV business.
Discussion:
Engadget, CNET News, SlashGear, FierceIPTV, parislemon, memeburn, Deadline.com, Business Insider, Mashable! and Electronista, more at Mediagazer »
Tom Cheredar / VentureBeat:
Updated: Siri goes down for iPhone 4S owners across the country — Siri, Apple's new voice assistant feature for the iPhone 4S, is apparently suffering from an outage, which has rendered it useless for many iPhone owners. The outage began at around 11 am PST today.
Discussion:
SlashGear, iSmashPhone, TechCrunch, Gizmodo, thinq_, T3 News, Technology Review, @venturebeat, Between the Lines Blog, MobileWhack.com, PC Magazine, Neowin.net, Ars Technica, MacRumors, IntoMobile, Mashable!, iDownloadBlog.com, PhoneArena, 9to5Mac, TechNewsWorld, GottaBeMobile, L.A. Times Tech Blog, Electronista, everythingiCafe and @davezatz
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Ryan Lawler / GigaOM:
CBS turned down an ad-based Apple TV deal — CBS CEO Les Moonves is known to occasionally drop pieces of information that he's not supposed to on his company's earnings calls, and this quarter was no exception. When asked about CBS's appetite for striking deals with new streaming providers …
Discussion:
Electronista, AppleInsider, Engadget, 9to5Mac, MacRumors and iClarified, more at Mediagazer »
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Kevin Rose's Oink Hits The App Store — Oink, the first app from Milk, Kevin Rose's startup lab is now available in iTunes. Oink is an app that lets you rate things at different places, and uses social reputation to help others figure out who to trust about what topics.
Discussion:
VentureBeat, Tech Cocktail, @kevinrose, GigaOM, @fredericl, AllThingsD, The Verge, 9to5Mac, Electronista and Laughing Squid
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Dana Vachon / Vanity Fair:
The Code of the Winklevii — Remember the Winklevoss twins? The golden-boy Harvard rowers who claimed that Mark Zuckerberg had stolen the idea for Facebook from them? They spent years suing him, won a settlement that is currently worth about $200 million, and now feel it should have been four times that.
Discussion:
Epicenter and Business Insider
Mark Gurman / 9to5Mac:
Exclusive: Apple Vice President of Global Security John Theriault departs company following lost iPhone 4S investigation — A sizable amount of Apple senior executives have left the company this year, with the latest being Apple's Vice President of Global Security.
Discussion:
The Next Web, Gawker, MacNN and Softpedia News
Nick Bradbury:
The Long-Term Failure of Web APIs — Years ago, when developers such as myself started the transition away from OS-specific APIs to web APIs, we believed that doing so would empower our software and save it from the confines of the desktop. — And we were right.
Thanks:dsilverman
Fortune:
Facebook vs. Google: The battle for the future of the Web — FORTUNE — Paul Adams is one of Silicon Valley's most wanted. He's an intellectually minded product designer with square-framed glasses, a thick Irish accent, and a cult following of passionate techies.
Discussion:
The Atlantic Wire, Gawker, ChasNote, Daily Dot, All Facebook, Business Insider and GigaOM Pro, Thanks:mhelft
Florian Mueller / FOSS Patents:
European Commission investigates Samsung over possible abuse of FRAND patents against Apple — Samsung's various attempts to shut down Apple products — most recently the iPhone 4S — with patents declared essential to the 3G industry standard have now given rise to an antitrust investigation by Europe's top competition “watchdog”.
Discussion:
AllThingsD, MacNN, MacDailyNews, Computerworld, The Next Web, AppleInsider and Sammy Hub
Ben Blanchard / Reuters:
China scorns U.S. cyber espionage charges — (Reuters) - China on Friday dismissed a U.S. report on online spying as “irresponsible,” rejecting the charge that China uses cyber espionage to steal lucrative U.S. trade and technology secrets. — The U.S. intelligence report said on Thursday China …
RELATED:
Ellen Nakashima / Washington Post:
U.S. cyber espionage report names China and Russia as main culprits
U.S. cyber espionage report names China and Russia as main culprits
Discussion:
Wall Street Journal, Telegraph, Voice of America, Reuters, Techland, London Calling Blog and TG Daily
Robert Scoble / Scobleizer:
Verb wall: The $40 billion Mark Zuckerberg is leaving on the table — I was on stage with Facebook advertising Product Manager Paul Adams this morning. Don't know who he is? He came up with the research that led to Google Circles before moving to Facebook.
Kimberly Dozier / Associated Press:
AP Exclusive: CIA following Twitter, Facebook — McLEAN, Virginia (AP) — In an anonymous industrial park in Virginia, in an unassuming brick building, the CIA is following tweets — up to 5 million a day. — At the agency's Open Source Center, a team known affectionately as the …
Discussion:
The Next Web
Vlad Savov / The Verge:
Nokia Lumia 800 review — Nokia's vanguard Windows Phone has arrived, all dressed up in the N9's clothing Reviewing the Lumia 800 is a hard and, dare I say, unprecedented task. Never before have we seen a phone like Nokia's N9 — a benchmark setter in some design aspects …
Discussion:
Engadget, BGR, My Nokia Blog, Softpedia News and Softpedia News
Amit Singhal / The Official Google Blog:
Giving you fresher, more recent search results — Search results, like warm cookies right out of the oven or cool refreshing fruit on a hot summer's day, are best when they're fresh. Even if you don't specify it in your search, you probably want search results that are relevant and recent.
Discussion:
Softpedia News, Gizmodo UK, Neowin.net, memeburn, L.A. Times Tech Blog, TG Daily, Computerworld, Digital Trends, Googling Google Blog, PC Magazine, Bits, The Register, ReadWriteWeb, Mashable!, SiliconFilter, VentureBeat, thinq_, VatorNews, SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog, Pulse2, Engadget, TechCrunch, MarketingVox News & Trends and msnbc.com
Leena Rao / TechCrunch:
Zynga's Newest Title CastleVille Combines Rich Storylines, Fantasy, And Social Gaming In A Medieval World — As Zynga announced at an event a few weeks ago, the newest title in the “Ville” franchise, which includes FarmVille, FrontierVille, and CityVille, is CastleVille.
Discussion:
Mashable!, Inside Social Games and AllThingsD
Felix Gillette / Business Week:
Michael Arrington's Revenge — The feud-prone blogger and founder of TechCrunch has a grand plan to nurture startups. To succeed, he'll have to overcome his own irascible nature — Noah Berger/Bloomberg — One day in January 2009, the technology blogger Michael Arrington was leaving …
Tricia Duryee / AllThingsD:
Ex-Googlers Raise $5.8 Million to Help Retailers Track Foot Traffic — Euclid Elements is hoping to be the Google Analytics of the physical retail world. — The Palo Alto, Calif.-based company helps brick-and-mortar retailers track shopping behavior by putting sensors in their stores …
Discussion:
CNET News, FM Blog, All Points Blog, VentureBeat, TechSpot and TechCrunch
Katy Bachman / Adweek:
Robert Levine on Why Copyright is Good for the Internet — With the debate over bills meant to crack down on digital piracy heating up on Capitol Hill, Adweek caught up with Robert Levine, author of Free Ride: How Digital Parasites are Destroying the Culture Business, and How the Culture Business …
Jack Purcher / Patently Apple:
Apple introduces us to the Virtual SIM Card — On November 3, 2011, the US Patent & Trademark Office published a patent application from Apple that reveals that Apple is working on a possible future iPhone that will operate using a Virtual SIM Card. Apple states that it would be desirable …
Discussion:
9to5Mac and iClarified
Ryan Paul / Ars Technica:
The sods must be crazy: OLPC to drop tablets from helicopters to isolated villages — The One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) project has devised a bizarre plan for deploying its new XO-3 tablet. The organization plans to drop the touchscreen computers from helicopters near remote villages in developing countries.
Discussion:
PC World, ExtremeTech and Techland