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7:35 PM ET, August 30, 2010

Techmeme

 Top Items: 
Andy Chu / Search Blog:
Bing for Mobile comes to your Verizon Android  —  Today we are happy to announce the first official Bing for Mobile Android App available to Verizon customers.  You can now download the free Bing App from your Verizon Wireless Android phones' Marketplace.  —  The app homepage features …
RELATED:
Todd Bishop / TechFlash:
Bing debuts its Android app, as Microsoft moves onto Google turf
Discussion: Bits
Greg Sandoval / CNET News:
iTunes song samples may double in length  —  Apple's iTunes, the largest music retailer, will boost the amount of time users are allowed to sample a song, sources told CNET on Monday.  —  On Wednesday, when Apple CEO Steve Jobs takes the stage at the company's annual September media event …
New York Times:
Technology Aside, Most People Still Decline to Be Located  —  Internet companies have appropriated the real estate business's mantra — it's all about location, location, location.  —  But while a home on the beach will always be an easy sell, it may be more difficult to persuade people to start using location-based Web services.
RELATED:
Sara Jerome / The Hill:   People born after 1981 have lower privacy standards, Loopt CEO says
Eliot Van Buskirk / Wired News:
Google and Arcade Fire Team for HTML5 ‘Experience’  —  We don't know exactly what to call the online collaboration between Arcade Fire and Google that launched Monday morning, but it sure is neat.  —  This “Chrome Experience,” as Google calls it, unfolds in multiple browser windows to the tune …
Chris Morrison / Inside Social Games:
Google Buys Mobile Social Game Developer SocialDeck  —  In its latest social acquisition, Google has bought mobile game developer SocialDeck, according to a letter posted by the company.  SocialDeck is located in Waterloo, Ontario, close to a regional Google office.
John Boitnott / VentureBeat:
Digg freezes manual story submissions as user anger mounts  —  Popular social news aggregator Digg prevented individual users and publishers alike from manually submitting new content Monday morning.  —  The site's block on manual submissions has since been lifted, but Digg users I've spoken …
RELATED:
Dick Craddock / The Windows Blog:
Hotmail now supports push email, calendar, and contacts with Exchange ActiveSync  —  Hotmail is making it easier for you to stay up-to-date and be productive on your phone.  Starting today, you can get your email, calendar, and contacts pushed automatically to your phone using Exchange ActiveSync (EAS).
Nick Saint / Silicon Alley Insider:
Facebook “Like Farms” Are Spamming Up Your News Feed  —  One of the bigger announcements to come out of Facebook's controversial keynote at its developer conference last spring was the introduction of “Like buttons” that can be placed anywhere on the web, allowing people to register their approval …
RELATED:
bingocardcreator.com:   Facebook “Like” Buttons Sign You Up For Messages
Carolyn Penner / Twitter Blog:
Twitter Applications and OAuth  —  If you are like most Twitter users, you have used use a third-party Twitter application to read or send Tweets.  As of August 31, Twitter applications will all use OAuth, an authentication method that lets you use apps without them storing your password.
Inc.com:
How Google Cost Me $4 Million  —  Being penalized by Google made Ryan Abood's company stronger.  When Ryan Abood looked at the books for his parents' New Hampshire flower shop, one number popped out.  Without a bit of advertising, sales of gift baskets had grown 400 percent.
Discussion: Gawker
Jesus Diaz / Gizmodo:
Microsoft: Android Hidden Costs Are Expensive  —  According to Business Insider, Microsoft says that Android has hidden costs for cellphone manufacturers much higher than their own $15-per-unit Windows Phone 7 license.  They have some very good points, but others are not so good.  These are their arguments:
Jim / craigslist blog:
For Amber Lyon, CNN  —  I see you've now gotten around to requesting an interview with me or a company spokesperson, 90 days after you ambushed our namesake and founder, Craig Newmark, following his May 20th talk on veteran's affairs and other issues unrelated to craigslist, at a conference in Washington.
Discussion: cnewmark
Alexia Tsotsis / TechCrunch:
Chatroulette Gets It Up: V.2 Is Now Live  —  The transformation is now complete.  Our favorite random video chat site Chatroulette has gone through a redesign over the past week and is now back up, in what founder Andrei Ternovskiy and those who believe in second chances hope will be a more nudity-free i.e. more monetizable version.
RELATED:
Jennifer Valentino-DeVries / Digits:
The Decline and Fall of Chatroulette
Discussion: NewTeeVee and SelectStart
Dean Takahashi / VentureBeat:
Intel's CEO explains his multibillion-dollar acquisition spree  —  Intel chief executive Paul Otellini just appeared on the Fox Business TV Network.  In the interview with Fox's Liz Claman, he explained why Intel is buying the wireless business of Infineon for $1.4 billion and McAfee for $7.68 billion …
New York Times:
Retargeting Ads Follow Surfers to Other Sites  —  The shoes that Julie Matlin recently saw on Zappos.com were kind of cute, or so she thought.  But Ms. Matlin wasn't ready to buy and left the site.  —  Then the shoes started to follow her everywhere she went online.
Seth Weintraub / Fortune:
Samsung: 1 million Galaxy S smartphones in 45 days in the US  —  The Android-based smartphones sold across the aisle from the iPhone 4 on AT&T and on T-Mobile, the nation's smallest major carrier.  —  Samsung's Galaxy S smartphone is a blockbuster globally and recent numbers show it is poised for similar success in the US.
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Since October 7, 2005, I've Read 219,651 Stories Via RSS.  You?  —  Google Reader has been my go-to RSS reader since October 7, 2005.  How do I know?  A new update to the service today tells me that and a few other interesting tidbits about my reading habits.
Jennifer Ruffner / MySpace:
MySpace Introduces Sync with Facebook  —  By Jennifer Ruffner, Director of Product, Stream  —  Today, we're introducing Sync with Facebook, which allows MySpace users, musicians, and celebrities around the world to sync their status updates with their Facebook profile or Page …
Chris O'Brien / Mercury News:
Considering The PayPal Mafia's place in Silicon Valley history  —  Google's purchase of social media company Slide for a reported $182 million earlier this month marked the latest triumph of a remarkable group of entrepreneurs and investors whose impact on Silicon Valley in the Web 2.0 era is unrivaled:
Thanks:atul
Adrian Chen / Gawker:
Introducing Wikileakileaks.org: Your Source for Wikileaks-Related Leaks … 03:47 PM  —  5,279  —  33  —  By Gene Delsener … The Best Military Recruitment Commercials From Around The World  —  Advertising about enlisting in the military is tricky business; a balance between agitprop and national pride.
Discussion: ReadWriteWeb
Mike Masnick / Techdirt:
Hulu: We Know That Hulu Plus Sucks, But It's Not Our Fault  —  We were among many, many folks who were completely underwhelmed by Hulu's subscription plan for Hulu Plus.  It was $10 for... not much.  In fact, new reports are showing that 88% of Hulu Plus content is available via regular Hulu.
Rich Miller / Data Center Knowledge:
Microsoft Picks Virginia for Major Data Center  —  A recent version of the Microsoft IT-PAC container, which will be a key component of the new Microsoft data center.  —  Microsoft has selected a site near Boydton, Virginia for a major new data center project, with plans to invest …
Discussion: TechFlash and Beyond Binary, Thanks:rawmeet
Andy Greenberg / The Firewall:
Wikileaks Servers Move To Underground Nuclear Bunker  —  Internet service providers often tell their clients that they offer “bullet-proof hosting.”  Whistle-blower organization Wikileaks, it seems, will settle for nothing less than “bomb-proof.”  —  Some portion of Wikileaks' servers …
Discussion: The Next Web, Thanks:forbestech
Agence France Presse:
HP to pay 55 million dollars in kickbacks case  —  WASHINGTON — Hewlett-Packard has agreed to pay 55 million dollars to settle claims the US computer giant defrauded the US government, the Justice Department announced Monday.  —  The settlement resolves allegations that HP paid kickbacks …
Discussion: Reuters and DailyFinance
 
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 More Items: 
Jim Louderback / AdAge:
There, I Said It: Screw Viral Videos
Damian Kulash / Washington Post:
OK Go on net neutrality: A lesson from the music industry
Discussion: hypebot and Engadget
Stephen Shankland / CNET News:
EmotionML: Will computers tap into your feelings?
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Rate Limits Continue To Die: Twitter Opens Site Streams Beta
Tim Conneally / BetaNews:
DRM company acquires technology from music search engine killed by copyright suits
Discussion: TechCrunch
Frederic Lardinois / ReadWriteWeb:
NASA Teams Up With Flickr to Share Historic Image Collection (Photos)
Jason Hiner / Tech Sanity Check:
Is the U.S. tech industry oiling its own guillotine?
Thanks:jasonhiner
Leena Rao / TechCrunch:
Google Invests $86 Million In Low-Income Housing
Discussion: WebProNews
 Earlier Items: 
Nicholas Deleon / CrunchGear:
Exclusive Hands-On With Plex/Nine For Mac OS X & Plex App For iOS Devices
Discussion: TUAW and 9 to 5 Mac
Ross Dawson / Trends in the Living Networks:
Flipboard and Paper.li: Social news curation hits the tipping point
Discussion: NevilleHobson.com
Matt Brian / The Next Web:
Apple confirms iPhone 4 proximity sensor glitch still not patched
Anand Lal Shimpi / AnandTech:
Farewell to ATI, AMD to Retire the ATI Brand Later this Year
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Cisco May Be Making A Run For Skype