Top Items:
Joshua Topolsky / The Verge:
The truth about Microsoft and CES — There's been a bit of back and forth today over Microsoft's announcement that it would be ending its long-standing CES keynote role, and will no longer have a booth at the show as it's done for many years. Head of Microsoft's corporate communications …
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MG Siegler / parislemon:
F**k Me? No. F**k You. — This morning, Microsoft made waves with a big move: they're pulling out of CES. Frank Shaw, Microsoft's head of communications, made the announcement on the company blog, noting that this year's CES (which is in a few weeks) would be the last one featuring …
Discussion:
Bits, PC World, PhoneArena, Business Insider, Geek News Central, SlashGear and TechNet Blogs
Barb Darrow / GigaOM:
Mystery: Who killed the Microsoft CES keynote?
Mystery: Who killed the Microsoft CES keynote?
Discussion:
Ars Technica, PC World, Neowin.net, memeburn, eWeek, PhoneArena, Pocket-lint, Inquirer, msnbc.com, iPhone, CNNMoney.com, VentureBeat, The Next Web, The Verge, PC Magazine, Mashable!, TechSpot, VG247, @parislemon, Electronista and Business Insider
John Markoff / New York Times:
Jacob Goldman, Founder of Xerox Lab, Dies at 90 — Jacob E. Goldman, a physicist who as Xerox's chief scientist founded the company's vaunted Palo Alto Research Center, which invented the modern personal computer, died on Tuesday in Westport, Conn. He was 90. — The cause was congestive heart failure, his son Melvin said.
Discussion:
InfoWorld, Fast Company, GMSV and MacDailyNews
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David Talbot / Technology Review:
The Comeback of Xerox PARC — Infamous for failing to commercialize the technologies it invented, Xerox's R&D subsidiary has a new strategy for innovation: make money. — Last month, a small Norwegian company called Thinfilm Electronics and PARC, the storied Silicon Valley research lab …
Sam Biddle / Gizmodo:
All the Companies Supporting SOPA, the Awful Internet Censorship Law—and How to Contact Them — Who's officially on the record backing what could be the worst thing to ever happen to the internet? All of these companies listed below. Don't take our word for it—this list comes straight from Congress.
Discussion:
CNET News and Neowin.net
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Declan McCullagh / CNET News:
How SOPA's ‘circumvention’ ban could put a target on Tor
How SOPA's ‘circumvention’ ban could put a target on Tor
Discussion:
Dennis Fisher, The Firewall, The Next Web and Boing Boing
Adam Savage / Popular Mechanics:
MythBuster Adam Savage: SOPA Could Destroy the Internet as We Know It
MythBuster Adam Savage: SOPA Could Destroy the Internet as We Know It
Discussion:
A+K, @dannysullivan, Techdirt, WebProNews and TechCrunch, more at Mediagazer »
Tarmo Virki / Reuters:
New iPhone? No thanks, say cash-conscious Europeans — (Reuters) - Weakening economies and falling prices of rival smartphones are hurting sales of Apple iPhones across Europe, data from research firm Kantar Worldpanel ComTech showed on Thursday. — The October roll-out of Apple's iPhone 4S boosted …
Discussion:
GigaOM, Electronista, Fortune, PhoneArena, Marketing Pilgrim, The Next Web and Phones Review
Anton Troianovski / Wall Street Journal:
How the iPhone Zapped Carriers — Americans are glued to their mobile devices, obsessively calling, texting, emailing and downloading applications. So why is the U.S. wireless industry in such straits, as shown by AT&T Inc.'s crucial but failed plan to buy T-Mobile USA?
T.C. Sottek / The Verge:
Exclusive: a look at Kinect Fusion and Lightspace from Microsoft labs — As you might have seen in our second episode of On The Verge, our own Joshua Topolsky recently toured Microsoft's Building 99, where the company conducts a variety of wild research. Today we're pleased to share a look …
Discussion:
TechNet Blogs
Kevin C. Tofel / GigaOM:
Kindle Fire no longer blocks Android Market website — Earlier this week, I grilled Amazon for attempting to control web browsing activities on its Kindle Fire. Any attempts to browse Google's Android Market website were redirected to Amazon's own AppStore on the tablet.
Sean Hollister / The Verge:
Hasbro sues Asus over Transformer Prime tablet — Don't say we didn't tell you so: Hasbro sued Asus over the name of its Transformer Prime tablet last week, in a Los Angeles court. The toymaker is no doubt worried that the name could be confused with that of its Transformers franchise …
Tricia Duryee / AllThingsD:
Surprise — The Most Popular Facebook Game of 2011 Wasn't Made by Zynga — Facebook has released its list of the 10 most popular social games for 2011, and while the chart was dominated by Zynga titles, other companies received the top two slots. — The list revealed some other surprises, too.
Discussion:
Mashable!, Facebook, VentureBeat, @joshconstine, TechCrunch, WebProNews, Business Insider, All Facebook and Inside Social Games
Matthias Inverardi / Reuters:
Apple nears German court rebuff in row with Samsung — (Reuters) - A German court rejected Apple's claims that Samsung Electronics' reworked tablet PC still looks like a copycat version of the iPad, in a preliminary assessment. — Apple is fighting several rival makers of smartphones …
Discussion:
BGR, 9to5Mac, GigaOM and Electronista
Vlad Savov / The Verge:
Radeon HD 7970 official: 28nm, 2,048 Stream processors, and a $549 price for January 9th — AMD today launches the Radeon HD 7970, its first graphics card built at a 28nm production process and the first member of its Southern Islands family of GPUs. As its name suggests …
Discussion:
AnandTech, TechSpot, PC Gamer, Softpedia News, Engadget, VentureBeat, SlashGear, Electronista, Neowin.net, Digits, Icrontic, The Register and Gizmodo
Bloomberg:
Silver Lake Founders Said to Cut Stake — Glenn Hutchins, David Roux and Jim Davidson, who co-founded Silver Lake 13 years ago and built it into the largest technology-focused private-equity manager, will reduce their ownership as part of a broader leadership transition, according to two people briefed on the matter.
Discussion:
Deal Journal
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Actually, Searches For “Google+” Are Petering Out — Just last week, Google was promoting the fact that “Google+” was the No. 2 fastest-growing search term of the year in its annual Zeitgest list. And it did have an amazing pop when it hit “10 million members” a couple weeks after launch last summer.
Shayndi Raice / Wall Street Journal:
Facebook's Goal: To Be a Blue Chip — As Company Readies 2012 IPO, It's Getting All Grown Up: Zuckerberg Swaps Flip-Flops for Real Shoes — Mark Zuckerberg spent Facebook Inc.'s early years trying to keep it cool. But the founder and CEO of the social-networking giant has spent …
Discussion:
CNET News, the Econsultancy blog and Business Insider
Reuters:
German patent firm sues retailers to halt HTC sales — (Reuters) - Patent firm IPCom said it sued about 100 German retailers for patent infringement, saying they continued selling phones made by HTC beyond a deadline it had imposed earlier this month. — IPCom said in a statement on Thursday …
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Bloomberg
Christina Bonnington / Gadget Lab:
Study Shows AT&T's LTE Network Is Faster Than Verizon's — For Now — 4G LTE provides significantly improved download speeds over 3G, AT&T's slightly faster than Verizon's. Image: Metrico Wireless — Verizon has been touted as having the biggest, baddest, fastest 4G around.
Discussion:
Metrico Wireless, FierceBroadbandWireless, Electronista and Android Phone Fans
Chris Dixon:
The TripAdvisor IPO — Great startup story. Raised a total of $4.2m in venture capital, sold to IAC/Expedia for $210M, and had some interesting adventures and pivots along the way. They started out by trying to aggregate reviews from other websites and white label their product to Expedia and other large travel websites.
Discussion:
Business Insider and TechCrunch
Tony Hicks / Contra Costa Times:
People: Steve Jobs awarded a Grammy — Steve Jobs has won a Grammy. — Which makes sense, since he revolutionized the music industry by managing to shrink everyone's record collection into something that will fit in their pocket, among other achievements.
Discussion:
GRAMMY.com, GRAMMY.org, CNET News, Mashable!, AppleInsider, MacRumors, 9to5Mac, Silicon Republic, MacStories, SlashGear, iPodNN, The Next Web and Gawker
Jon Mitchell / ReadWriteWeb:
Evernote's ‘Clearly’ Clean-Reading Extension Comes to Firefox — Evernote has expanded its read-later browser extension, Clearly, to Firefox. The extension first launched on Chrome in November. Clearly slides in a cleaned-up view of Web articles without ads or navigation, making content more pleasant to read.
Discussion:
Evernote Blogcast and TechCrunch
Mark M. Jaycox / Electronic Frontier Foundation:
New Agreement Between the United States and Europe Will Compromise the Privacy Rights of International Travelers — The European Parliament will vote soon on an agreement to formalize US procedures for retaining and providing EU based Passenger Name Record (PNR) data of EU and US citizens traveling into …
Eric Goldman / Techdirt:
Court Indicates Facebook May Be Violating Your Publicity Rights With Sponsored Stories — Because Facebook does so many things that aren't in users' interests, their “Sponsored Stories” program barely registers. Nevertheless, Sponsored Stories demonstrates why many people are burned out on Facebook.
Emily Glazer / Digits:
A Start-Up Program for Women in Mobile Tech — When it comes to programs that nurture new start-ups, women often don't make the cut. A new “start-up accelerator” hopes to combat that gender disparity in at least one booming market: mobile technology. — Women Innovate Mobile opened …
Discussion:
TechCrunch, 451 CAOS Theory and The Next Web