| Charles Arthur / Guardian: |
Google halts new orders for 16GB Nexus 7, surprised by demand — Heavy demand for the 16GB version of the new Nexus 7 tablet has caught Google out after it expected more customers ordering through Google Play to want the 8GB version — Sources close to Google say the search giant seriously underestimated … | Reuters: |
What's up dock? Apple to shrink connector for iPhone 5 — (Reuters) - Apple Inc's new iPhone will drop the wide dock connector used in the company's gadgets for the best part of a decade in favor of a smaller one, a change likely to annoy the Apple faithful but which could be a boon for accessory makers.| David Carr / New York Times: |
| Michael Arrington / Uncrunched: |
| Nick Bilton / Bits: |
| Ryan Gallagher / Slate: |
Skype Won't Say Whether It Can Eavesdrop on Your Conversations — Since Microsoft bought Skype, has the chat client started working more with law enforcement? — New surveillance laws being proposed in countries from the United States to Australia would force makers of online chat software to build in backdoors for wiretapping.| Dana Mattioli / Wall Street Journal: |
For Kodak, New Risks In Auction Of Patents — Bids for patents being auctioned by Eastman Kodak Co. could become less generous now that the company has lost a key intellectual-property case against Apple Inc. and Research In Motion Ltd. — The International Trade Commission dismissed … | Dana Mattioli / AllThingsD: |
| John Leland / New York Times: |
Stuyvesant Town Sleuths Keep Vigil Against Illegal Hoteliers in Their Midst — IN her apartment in Stuyvesant Town the other day, Janey Donnelly was on a hunt for a hotel room. At the Web site airbnb.com, she narrowed her search to the East Village, and scrolled down until a thumbnail photograph caught her eye.| Shira Ovide / Wall Street Journal: |
For the Olympics, Twitter and NBC Form Partnership — As athletes parade into London's Olympic Stadium this Friday, Twitter Inc.'s Olympic hopes will play out in a spartan office in Boulder, Colo. — There, a handful of people will spend 20 hours a day to help corral millions of Twitter messages … | Matt Brian / The Next Web: |
Samsung's Galaxy S III surpasses 10 million sales in less than two months — Samsung's newest Android flagship smartphone — the Galaxy S III — has surpassed 10 million sales in less than two months after going on sale, selling at a rate predicted by the company just last month, Samsung president Shin Jong-kyun (JK Shin) has revealed.| Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Land: |
Insanity: Google Sends New Link Warnings, Then Says You Can Ignore Them — Google's war on bad links officially became insane today. For months, Google's sending out warnings about bad links and telling publishers they should act on those, lest they get penalized.| Natasha Singer / New York Times: |
Acxiom Consumer Data, Often Unavailable to Consumers — BUPKIS. Zilch. Zip. Niente. Zero. Nada. — I recently asked to see the information held about me by the Acxiom Corporation, a database marketing company that collects and sells details about consumers' financial status … | Matt Gemmell: |
| David Meyer / ZDNet: |
Windows 8 Tips — Tips and tricks for Windows 8 users.
Want to Contribute to Cloud Foundry? Come on in! — Cloud Foundry is an Open Platform-as-a-Service, and an Open Source project. It has attracted phenomenal interest from the community - including partners …
How ImgPage Uploads 25 MB Photos to Cloud Files Using the Mailgun API — The team over at Mailgun just posted a Python tutorial written by Mailgun customer Paul Finn about how to use Python and the Mailgun API to upload large images to Cloud Files.
Week in Review: SQL IN Hadoop and Hive, Beyond Batch with YARN, NFS access to HDFS and HBase MTTR — Or as it's more commonly being called: Week-ish in Review. Let's recap on the latest - there's some juicy technology goodness here.
“Yammer sucks” — Not to be mean to Yammer, or anything — it's a very good tool for some use cases — but that's what a customer told me recently (and others feel the same way).This is a Techmeme archive page. It shows how the site appeared at 4:25 AM ET, July 23, 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.
| Jeff Blagdon / The Verge: |
| Sam Biddle / Gizmodo: |