| Peter Kafka / AllThingsD: |
Apple Fires Back at the Feds, Amazon — Nearly two days after the Department of Justice filed antitrust charges against Apple and major book publishers, Apple is responding. Here's comment from Apple spokesman Tom Neumayr: … Apple's response is similar to ones made by Penguin Group and MacMillan … | Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg / Wall Street Journal: |
Barnes & Noble Hit Hard — Barnes & Noble Inc. bore the brunt of Wednesday's antitrust settlement between the U.S. government and three major book publishers, losing 6.4% of its market value on Thursday alone and tumbling 17% this month. — Those market worries reflected the broad sentiment … | Alastair Sharp / Reuters: |
Exclusive: Former RIM boss sought strategy shift before he quit — (Reuters) - Former Research In Motion co-chief executive Jim Balsillie sought to reinvent the BlackBerry smartphone maker with a radical shift in strategy before he stepped down, two sources with knowledge of his plans said.| Brooke Crothers / CNET: |
Intel's Windows 8 tablet: Checklist goes public — Intel ‘Clover Trail’ Atom Z2760-based Windows 8 tablet. — (Credit: Brooke Crothers) — Intel is offering more specifics on the features of future Windows 8 tablet at a conference in Beijing. It's a laudable goal, but can Intel make it happen this year?| Jamie Keene / The Verge: |
Google Drive integration leaked by Lucidchart — Google's widely rumored cloud storage service might be closer than we thought, with online diagramming tool Lucidchart adding (and then swiftly removing) a link to a Google Drive integration page to its user control panel.| Ingrid Lunden / TechCrunch: |
Facebook One-Ups Google With A Kind Of ‘Facebook+’: Your FB Email, Timeline Names Are Now Linked Up — Facebook today announced a change for how people can find you on its network — a move for more consistency, but also another route to getting people to use more email in Facebook, and secure its place as the center of your web life.| Dow Jones Newswires: |
| Austin Carr / Fast Company: |
Amazon Massively Inflates Its Streaming Library Size — Amazon counts individual episodes, not whole series, as “TV shows,” which makes its Prime streaming catalog seem 10 times bigger than it actually is. — Amazon boasts that it has “more than 17,000 movies and television shows” … | Rachel King / Between the Lines Blog: |
| Tom Krazit / GigaOM: |
| Nicholas Carlson / Business Insider: |
| Ingrid Lunden / TechCrunch: |
Despite $889M In Revenue This Year, No IPO In Spotify's Cards, But Ek Wouldn't Say No To More Funding — Spotify's storming of the U.S. market last year has seen the company rack up a total of 13 million active users of its music streaming services — three million of them paying.| Matt Macari / The Verge: |
Oracle thinks you can copyright a programming language, Google disagrees — Oracle's case against Google has evolved primarily into a copyright infringement suit over the past several months, and with the full trial scheduled to begin this coming Monday, the court is making an effort to get down to the nuts and bolts of copyright law.| Neil Hughes / AppleInsider: |
Apple looking to build ‘unibody’ earbuds through ultrasonic bonding — By using a process known as ultrasonic bonding, Apple could create new iPhone and iPod earbuds that would have a seamless, more aesthetically pleasing “unibody” appearance. — Headsets and earbuds include a number … | Bobbie Johnson / GigaOM: |
Marc Samwer out as Groupon's international boss — After enduring a torrid few months, Groupon has confirmed a shakeup of its international business, bringing in a new chief to oversee operations outside America. — Out goes Marc Samwer, the oldest of the three notorious Samwer brothers … | Jeff John Roberts / paidContent: |
Plot thickens in Apple “bait apps” case — Apple came under fire last year from parents whose children had racked up credit card charges on apps that were supposed to be “free.” Apple tried to throw out a law suit over the apps but has come up short after a judge found the parents suffered sufficient harm to pursue the case.| Jamie Keene / The Verge: |
Facebook Offers rollout begins, delivers local deals direct to your news feed — Facebook has announced that its offers system has begun to roll out, having first been revealed at its marketing conference at the beginning of March. The system allows local businesses to use their Facebook pages … | Greg Sandoval / CNET: |
U.S. tries to silence MegaUpload lawyers on issue of user data — The U.S. government says that some of MegaUpload's lawyers have a conflict that should exclude them from representing the cyberlocker service. — (Credit: Greg Sandoval/CNET) — ALEXANDRIA, Va.—The struggle for control … | Larry Dignan / Between the Lines Blog: |
SAP sees Q1 stumble on North America execution issues — Summary: SAP indicated that its sales problems in North America “have been resolved” and reiterated its outlook for the year. — SAP said that its first quarter will be below its initial expectations amid “sales execution issues in North America.”| Krystal Peak / VatorNews: |
Ooyala launches personalized video discovery platform — From mobile to desktop, Ooyala's new content discovery system aims to keep viewers glued longer — As the world of online video rockets in popularity, content producers and brands are searching for the best way to deliver … | Paul Sawers / The Next Web: |
Now everyone can make money from their videos, as YouTube opens its Partner Program to all — You may or may not already know this, but YouTube's Partner Program is an initiative by the Google-owned video-streaming platform to help creators develop skills, build audiences and - crucially - earn some bucks.| Caroline Winter / Business Week: |
Berlin Cracks the Startup Code — On a rainy day in March 2011, Ciarán O'Leary and two colleagues crammed into a Berlin taxi and raced for the station to catch a train back to Hamburg. While snaking through the city streets, it hit him: Leaving Berlin was a bad idea.| Seth Weintraub / 9to5Mac: |
French Designer Philippe Starck says he's working on a ‘revolutionary’ project with Apple due in 8 months — Le Figaro reports that renowned designer Philippe Starck (pictured, right) is working with Apple on a “revolutionary” product due in eight months.| Janko Roettgers / GigaOM: |
Did Boxee only sell 200,000 boxes? — The total number of Boxee Box users is around 200,000, according to a tweet sent out by the company Wednesday. The tweet also revealed that Boxee now has a total of 2 million users, if you include users of the discontinued PC client.| Hana Stewart-Smith / Unboxing Asia Blog: |
China's mysterious Internet outage; speculation over a ‘kill switch’ — At approximately 11am local time yesterday, Internet users around China reported significant Internet blackouts. Not only were they unable to access some Chinese sites, but also many foreign Web sites that had not previously been blocked.| Barb Darrow / GigaOm: |
IBM adds more analytics with Varicent buy — The desire for more, better, and increasingly specific analytics continues with IBM's acquisition of Varicent Software. Banks, insurance companies, and retailers use Varicent software to look at data across finance, sales, human resources … | Audrey Watters / Inside Higher Ed: |
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 2:15 PM ET, April 13, 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.
| Jon Bruner / Mobile: |
| Scott Gilbertson / Ars Technica: |
| Alex Wilhelm / The Next Web: |
| Ina Fried / AllThingsD: |
| Emily Parkhurst / TechFlash: |
| Jeremy C. Owens / Mercury News: |
| Ellis Hamburger / The Verge: |
| Tim Carmody / Wired: |
| Richard Sale / ISSSource: |
| Stephen Marche / The Atlantic Online: |
| Florian Mueller / FOSS Patents: |