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7:25 AM ET, February 11, 2009

Techmeme

 Top Items: 
Marco Bonechi / Gmail Blog:
New in Labs: Add your location to your signature  —  Sometime ago I noticed how all mail systems tell you when an email was written, but not where it was sent from.  Because I love to travel, the first question in many messages I receive is “where are you?” and by the time I answer I am often somewhere else.
RELATED:
Rick Turoczy / ReadWriteWeb:   Now Where Was I? Gmail Labs Adds Location to Signatures
BIZ / Twitter Blog:
Nothing To Report Just Yet  —  There was a sudden burst of news early this week surrounding some ideas we've shared publicly for quite some time.  We've been thinking out loud for more than a year about the growing use of Twitter by companies, brands, and other commercial organizations.
RELATED:
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
BoomTown Decodes the Twitter-Is-Really-Serious-Folks-About- Not-Making-$$ Memo  —  In a blog post that comes as the polar opposite of a complete surprise, Twitter Co-Founder Biz Stone clarified a comment he made to a U.K. magazine that sounded like Twitter might actually charge for something.
Discussion: Network World, Thanks:sampad
New York Times:
Sirius XM Prepares for Possible Bankruptcy  —  Last summer, Mel Karmazin was rattling off his trademark one-liners to talk up the future of Sirius XM Radio, the combined company he ran that had just been blessed by regulators.  —  He was planning to cut costs and expand a business …
MG Siegler / ParisLemon:
You stay classy, Engadget  —  What the f**k is wrong with Engadget?  I'm not going to go too far into this since their commenters seem to be doing a pretty decent job as is, but here's what they had to say today about our VentureBeat piece on the whole multi-touch thing with Google and Apple:
Discussion: InformationWeek and DailyTech
RELATED:
John Gruber / Daring Fireball:
Apple, Google, and Palm  —  M.G. Siegler has an intriguing report today regarding the lack of multi-touch support in the current Android OS: … This jibes with a story I heard several months ago from a source who works at Apple, which is that Google showed Apple legal a pre-release prototype of the HTC G1 …
Yury Pinsky / Google Mobile Blog:
Calling all Carriers — Introducing AdSense for mobile search  —  In September 2007, we launched Adsense for mobile content so that publishers could join our mobile content network and monetize their sites with Google text ads.  —  Today, we're happy to announce a new AdSense product …
Thom Holwerda / OSNews:
BeOS Lives: Haiku Impresses  —  Back when it was becoming clear that the time of the BeOS had come and gone, enthusiasts immediately set up the OpenBeOS project, an attempt to recreate the Be operating system from scratch, using a MIT-like license.  The project faced difficult odds, and numerous times progress seemed quite slow.
Discussion: louisgray.com
Joanna Stern / LAPTOP Mag:
Hands-On With the Dell Latitude XT2  —  Just this morning Dell unveiled its Latitude XT2, an update to the XT, which was the first tablet to have multitouch capabilities.  A few hours after the announcement we were able to spend some quality time with the new tablet.
Discussion: DisplayBlog, SlashGear and Engadget
Robin Wauters / TechCrunch:
Modu Comes Out Of The Woodwork With A Truly Innovative Mobile Offering  —  Modu, the heavily-funded Israel-based modular phone manufacturer that enables you to slip a light mobile device into a variety of so-called “jackets” (think music players, other cellphones, car stereos, digital cameras …
Discussion: Engadget and Geeky-Gadgets
Nilay Patel / Engadget:
Intel demos first-ever 32nm processors  —  Intel had a little roadmap event today to shed some light on its massive $7b fab investment, and the focus was mostly on the upcoming transition to 32nm processors — highlighted by the first-ever demo of a working 32nm Nehalem-based Westmere chip.
Marshall Kirkpatrick / ReadWriteWeb:
Comcast Property Sees 92% Success Rate With New OpenID Method  —  The most-watched geek event of the day has to be the OpenID UX (User Experience) Summit, hosted at the Facebook headquaters.  The most discussed moment of the day will surely be the presentation by Comcast's Plaxo team.
Andrew Savikas / TOC Combined Feed:
At TOC: Bookworm Online EPUB Reader Now Part of O'Reilly Labs  —  Regular readers know we're big fans of the Bookworm online EPUB reader.  With Bookworm, you upload and organize your ebooks, and can read them online as well as a variety of mobile devices (iPhone shown below).
Matt Marshall / VentureBeat:
Real estate sites like Trulia see record traffic and revenue  —  Online real estate sites like Trulia.com, are reporting record traffic and revenues — even as most of the rest of the real estate industry is in the doldrums.  —  The San Francisco company Trulia says it hit record traffic levels in January …
Discussion: TechFlash
Network World:
Angry shareholders say Microsoft squanders billions on pointless R&D projects  —  Welcome to the second article in a series on Microsoft shareholder activism.  These posts examine why investors, through the power of the stock price, aren't buying the idea that Microsoft has a great future.
Discussion: Slashdot
Connie Loizos / PE Hub Blog:
Remember That Company You Sold Last Year?  Riiight.  Its Buyer Wants Its Money Back  —  It's no surprise that in a crummy market, money disputes tend to surface more than when everyone is feeling flush.  But it may surprise you to learn that those disputes are taking place over startups sold as long ago as in mid 2007.
Fast Company:
Forget Kindle 2: Fujitsu's E-Reader Screen is Bigger, and It's in Color  —  In all the fuss about the new Amazon Kindle 2 yesterday, it was easy to forget that the “upgraded” device still has a relatively small paperback-sized screen and can only cope with greyscale imagery.
Carol Huang / Christian Science Monitor:
China aims for its own Silicon Valley  —  Like the ‘Asian tigers’ before it, China is pushing into higher-end manufacturing and innovation.  — E-mail a friend - Print this - Letter to the Editor - Republish - - Get e-mail alerts - RSS  —  SHENZHEN, CHINA
Room for Debate:
Battle Plans for Newspapers  —  Virtually every newspaper in America has gone through waves of staff layoffs and budget cuts as advertisers and subscribers have marched out the door, driven by the move to the Web and, more recently, the economic crisis.  —  In some cities, midsized metropolitan papers may not survive to year's end.
Discussion: MediaFile
RELATED:
Ashlee Vance / New York Times:
Intel's Chief Calls for Investments in U.S.  —  SAN FRANCISCO — Paul S. Otellini, the chief executive of Intel, made an uncharacteristic lunge toward the limelight on Tuesday, holding up his company's $7 billion investment in new computer chip factories as a patriotic gesture for other businesses to follow.
Discussion: Tech Daily Dose
Nicholas Reville / Miro - Internet TV Blog:
Miro 2.0 is here!  —  I am thrilled to announce the release of Miro 2.0!  This is a huge update of Miro, the Miro Guide, and the GetMiro website.  —  Download Miro 2.0 Now  —  Miro 2 has an all-new interface and lots of new features- but for me it's less of a collection of new stuff …
Microsoft:
Microsoft Security Bulletin MS09-002 - Critical  —  Cumulative Security Update for Internet Explorer (961260)  —  Version: 1.0  —  General Information  —  Executive Summary  —  This security update resolves two privately reported vulnerabilities.  The vulnerabilities …
Jason Lee Miller / WebProNews:
Blogging Hits Crossroads: A-Listers Giving Up  —  Is blogging doomed, or just in need of new blood?  —  An old colleague of mine used to joke he was one of millions whose job it was to “feed the internet.”  This past November, an alumnus of a prestigious writing program in Louisville …
Zusha Elinson / LAW.com:
Quinn Spills Value of Facebook Deal  —  SAN FRANCISCO — Facebook paid the founders of ConnectU $65 million to settle lawsuits accusing Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg of stealing the idea for the wildly successful social-networking Web site, according to a law firm's marketing brochure.
Dan Frommer / Silicon Alley Insider:
$99 iPhone Coming This Summer: RBC (AAPL)  —  Apple will start selling a cheaper, ‘entry-level’ iPhone sometime this summer, for around $99 after subsidy, according to “checks,” RBC analyst Mike Abramsky said in a note this morning.  — The main cost reductions would come from fewer features …
Microsoft:
Microsoft Appoints Simon Sproule as Corporate Vice President of Corporate Communications  —  Sproule brings 17 years of broad communications experience to Microsoft.  —  Microsoft Corp. today announced that Simon Sproule will join the company as corporate vice president of Corporate Communications.
 
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 More Items: 
Rosalind S. Helderman / Washington Post:
Legislators Log Back On To Facebook
Ellen Miller / Sunlight Foundation Transparency …:
White House: Where is the CTO?
Staska / Unwired View:
LG Arena KM900 UI has multi-touch, dedicated multimedia chip …
Discussion: Engadget and Electronista
Kim Dixon / Reuters:
Many local TV stations to go ahead with DTV switch
Discussion: Wall Street Journal and CNET News
Jack Davis / SiliconBeat:
Sirf agrees to merge into British company
Discussion: The Register, CNET News and VentureBeat
Engineering Windows 7:
Recognizing Improvements in Windows 7 Handwriting
 Earlier Items: 
Lenore Skenazy / AdAge:
Smartphone Apps Great for Marketing, Bad for Social Skills
Eric Eldon / VentureBeat:
It will be good for the web, Google, when Feedburner finally works right
Claire Cain Miller / Bits:
The Secret to Start-Up Success: Save Customers Money
Robin Goad / Hitwise Intelligence:
Twitter enters top 100 sites; UK traffic has trebled already in 2009
Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Apple 2.0:
Apple's “sticky” iPhone
Discussion: MacNN
Ina Fried / Beyond Binary:
Door shutting on Windows 7 beta
Discussion: InfoWorld and AppScout
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Sara Fischer / Axios:
Puck hires veteran journalist and TV commentator John Heilemann as its chief political columnist and partner, as the outlet expands its presence in Washington

Jennifer Schuessler / New York Times:
PEN America cancels its 2024 literary awards ceremony, set for April 29, after months of protests over the organization's response to the war in Gaza

Kate Lyons / The Guardian:
Australia's ABC South Asia correspondent Avani Dias says India refused her a standard visa renewal, after issuing a takedown notice to YouTube for her stories

 
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