| Chris Ziegler / The Verge: |
Live from Microsoft's Windows 8 Consumer Preview event — 7:36 pm Windows head Steven Sinofsky just cruised through and worked the crowd a little. He's looking happy. 7:35 pm 7:35 pm They're all loaded to the max with Metro icons — a far cry from the more spare Metro homescreens Microsoft's been showing off up until now.| Mary Jo Foley / All about Microsoft Blog: |
It's Windows 8 download day: Here's what we know — Summary: Here's my ‘live’ FAQ with all the Windows 8 Consumer Preview, Windows Server 8 beta and Visual Studio “11″ tidbits from my contacts and around the Web. — I'm not in Barcelona — where Microsoft is launching the Consumer Preview (beta) of Windows 8 today.| Tom Krazit / GigaOM: |
Why Windows 8 is Microsoft's most vital launch in years — Microsoft Windows was a fact of life for an entire generation raised on the PC. But we live in a different world now, and perhaps nothing underscores how much that world has changed more than the fact that the version of Windows … | Matt Rosoff / Business Insider: |
MEET THE NEXT CEO OF MICROSOFT: Steven Sinofsky Is The Heir Apparent — It was summer 2009. — Microsoft had just shipped the final code for Windows 7 to PC manufacturers, who had begun burning it onto the tens of millions of new computers that would ship that Christmas.| Mark Gurman / 9to5Mac: |
Sources: New Apple TV launching in March, near-immediate availability hinted for new iPads — iPads and Apple TVs work together for innovative AirPlay features — Reliable sources familiar with Apple's upcoming product release have said that the company is in fact launching a new Apple TV alongside the next-generation iPad.| Jim Dalrymple / The Loop: |
| Michael Arrington / Uncrunched: |
Helpful Tips For Keeping Your Job As Editor Of Techcrunch — I rarely get writers block, but I've aborted multiple attempts to write about the leadership change at TechCrunch yesterday. So I'm going to keep it simple. — I'm exceptionally bummed that so many people have left TechCrunch.| Richard Lawler / Engadget: |
Raspberry Pi credit-card sized Linux PCs are on sale now, $25 Model A gets a RAM bump — The good news is that Raspberry Pi's highly anticipated teeny-tiny Linux computers are on sale now, just barely making the promised February launch window (good thing it's a leap year).| Nick Bilton / Bits: |
Apple Loophole Gives Developers Access to Photos — Developers of applications for Apple's mobile devices, and Apple itself, came under scrutiny this month after reports that some apps were taking people's address book information without their knowledge. — As it turns out, address books are not the only things up for grabs.| Joshua Topolsky / The Verge: |
| Joshua Topolsky / The Verge: |
HP lays off 275 employees from webOS division — We've just received word that HP has laid off more than 270 employees from its webOS division as it “no longer needs many of the engineering and other related positions that it required before.” This follows just behind the departure … | Austin Carr / Fast Company: |
Spotify Exec Ken Parks On “Windowing”: Mind-Boggling, Very Bad, Hostile — The biggest threat right now to subscription-based music services isn't coming from consumers or record labels—with millions of customers paying for monthly plans to Spotify and Rhapsody, all four majors see the services as major new sources of revenue.| Josh Lowensohn / CNET: |
eBay's iPad trade-ins up 10-fold from same time last year — eBay says 10 times the number of people traded in their iPads during February than did during the same time year. — Stack of iPads are piled up at the San Francisco Apple Store at the 2010 launch.| David Saleh Rauf / Politico: |
More feds ditch BlackBerrys — The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is planning to start the process of ditching Research in Motion's signature BlackBerry wireless phone largely in favor of the iPhone, the agency's top tech official told POLITICO.| Nancy Gohring / ITworld.com: |
| Frederic Lardinois / SiliconFilter: |
| Jon Brodkin / Ars Technica: |
Feature: How Red Hat killed its core product—and became a billion-dollar business — A decade ago, Linux developer Red Hat faced a decision that would make or break the company: whether to stop producing the very product that gave Red Hat its name. The company was built on Red Hat Linux … | Seth Weintraub / 9to5Mac: |
SprintTV comes to iPhone bringing ABC, CBS, NBC, ESPN, Disney, MTV and Comedy Central with it — Click to view slideshow. — Lucky iPhone owners on Sprint's network (yeah we tried others) can now download Sprint TV and watch some pretty awesome programming. … The app is free. — Sprint via SprintFeed| Janko Roettgers / GigaOM: |
Scoop: Less than 1M Google TV devices in use — It's widely known Google TV hasn't exactly been a success story. Early CE partner Logitech lost millions on the device, and consumer feedback was mostly negative after the first devices reached the market in late 2010.| Enigmax / TorrentFreak: |
Megaupload Founder Defeats US Govt Attempts To Put Him Back In Prison — On February 22nd, Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom was released on bail by North Shore District Court Judge Nevin Dawson. — Dotcom had been held in custody since an anti-terrorist police squad raided his Coatesville mansion … | Emil Protalinski / Friending Facebook Blog: |
Facebook claims you're playing games you aren't playing — Summary: Facebook recommends games to you based on what your friends are playing. Unfortunately, the Discover New Games module is lying: it often claims your friends are playing games they aren't. — Facebook's “Discover New Games” algorithm is broken.| Peter Kafka / AllThingsD: |
Facebook Pitches Advertisers on a New Ad Model — Facebook sold $3 billion worth of ads last year, but it's still feeling its way around the ad business. — And the ad business still isn't sure what to make of Facebook: Grand new marketing paradigm, or a collection of 800 million people … | Adam Ostrow / Mashable!: |
Track Who's Tracking You With Mozilla Collusion — LONG BEACH, Calif. — Mozilla CEO Gary Kovacs took the TED stage Tuesday morning to introduce Collusion, a Firefox browser add-on that lets you track who's tracking you across the web for behavioral targeting purposes.| Jim Dalrymple / The Loop: |
Marvel graphic novels available on Apple's iBookstore — Marvel graphic novels available on Apple's iBookstore — Marvel on Tuesday announced that more than 80 of its graphic novels are now available on Apple's iBookstore. — According to Marvel, Civil War, Avengers, Stephen King's Dark Tower … | Bing: |
Bing Maps and Nokia Release Unified Map Design — Last year, we entered into a strategic partnership with Nokia which included plans to offer a unique and compelling mapping experience for our customers. Since then we've been working with Nokia and Windows Phone to deliver a unified map style based … | Eric Knorr / InfoWorld: |
| Ellen Messmer / Network World: |
| Ernesto / TorrentFreak: |
The Pirate Bay, Now Without Torrents — As announced a few weeks ago, The Pirate Bay has now largely stopped serving torrents. — Today, all torrent files being shared by more than 10 people have been replaced by so-called magnet links. — This means that instead of downloading …
Fast, affordable law for startups — Soxton automates startup legal so founders can move faster and sleep better. We handle incorporation, advisor, employment and commercial contracts. Join the waitlist for early access!
Accelerate AI Adoption at F5's AI Virtual Summit — Learn how to architect, secure, and scale AI for production with real-world insights from industry leaders on June 23. Register now to save your spot.
Website traffic analytics: How to read your data and take action — Traffic is up. Sessions look healthy. The dashboard is full of green arrows and yet — conversions are flat, revenue targets are slipping, and the leads coming through aren't closing.
Protecting your Cloud Applications Data — Backing up Office 365, Google Workspace, Dropbox & Salesforce data is critical to preventing data loss or corruption, complying with laws and avoiding critical downtime in case of a disaster.
This is a Techmeme archive page. It shows how the site appeared at 9:25 AM ET, February 29, 2012.
The most current version of the site as always is available at our home page. To view an earlier snapshot click here and then modify the date indicated.
| JP Mangalindan / Fortune: |
| Dan Levine / Reuters: |
| Burt Helm / Inc.com: |
| Jay Greene / CNET: |
| Jeff Blagdon / The Verge: |
| Dante D'Orazio / The Verge: |
| Leena Rao / TechCrunch: |
| Dean Takahashi / VentureBeat: |
| Joe Stagner / Mozilla Hacks: |
| Dirk Dougherty / Android Developers Blog: |
| Jack Purcher / Patently Apple: |