| Bloomberg: |
| Nick Wingfield / New York Times: |
Verdict in Apple-Samsung Trial May Echo Through Tech Industry — SAN JOSE, Calif. — This week, nine jurors are expected to hunker down in a federal courthouse here to decide a case that could change how the world's smartphones and tablet computers look and work.| Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Fortune: |
Samsung's deleted Apple e-mail problem goes poof — Judge neutralizes a potentially damaging jury instruction — FORTUNE — The text at right is what Judge Judy Koh was prepared to tell the jury about the Samsung's policy of automatically deleting e-mails that might have been relevant to its patent battle with Apple (AAPL).| Jessica E. Vascellaro / Wall Street Journal: |
Jury's Turn in Apple-Samsung Trial — SAN JOSE, CALIF.—A federal court jury this week is set to begin tackling a question that has consumed the mobile-device market: Did Samsung Electronics Co. rip off features of Apple Inc.'s iPhone and iPad? But there are actually many questions.| Jessica E. Vascellaro / Digits: |
Apple-Samsung Trial: The Jurors' Final Exam — This week, the high-profile patent brawl between Apple and Samsung gets handed to the nine men and women on the jury. — If you have ever wondered what it actually is that jurors get called to do, check out the complicated worksheets below from Samsung and Apple.| Michael Kan / PC World: |
HTC Loses US$40 Million From OnLive Restructuring — Taiwanese smartphone maker HTC said on Monday it will have to book a US$40 million loss from its investment in U.S. cloud gaming service OnLive, which is restructuring after nearly going bankrupt. — HTC announced the investment loss … | Dean Takahashi / VentureBeat: |
| Eric Slivka / MacRumors: |
Apple Becomes Most Valuable Publicly-Traded Stock Ever — Milestones for Apple's stock are falling rapidly in recent days, with another strong performance today pushing Apple past Microsoft for the title of most valuable publicly-trade stock ever, a distinction Microsoft has held since December 1999.| Andrew Wallenstein / Variety: |
Hulu CEO faces big changes — Jason Kilar set for mega payday; owners to alter content deals — “Outline transition plan for new CEO. Discuss potential candidates and process.” — These sentences are the topmost bullet points of a confidential internal memo regarding the business of Hulu obtained by Variety.| Wall Street Journal: |
Groupon Investors Give Up — Backers Retreat From Young Internet Firms That Haven't Lived Up to Hopes — Some of the early backers of Groupon Inc., including Silicon Valley veteran Marc Andreessen, are heading for the exits, joining investors who have lost faith in companies that had been expected to drive a new Internet boom.| Wall Street Journal: |
Best Buy Names Former Carlson Chief as New CEO — Best Buy Co. has chosen a new chief executive to lead the company as it struggles with falling sales and manages a public back-and-forth with founder Richard Schulze, who proposed to take the retailer private earlier this month.| Michael de la Merced / DealBook: |
| Alexia Tsotsis / TechCrunch: |
One Month After Selling To Microsoft For $1.2B, Yammer CEO Predicts End Of Silicon Valley — There is a pretty fascinating debate happening right now on David Sacks' Facebook page. Exactly one month after the Yammer sale to Microsoft closed, Sacks is feeling pretty bearish about the startup ecosystem.| Surur / WMPoweruser: |
StatCounter data shows Windows Phone overtaking Blackberry in US by November 2012 — More by virtue of Blackberry's plummeting market share than amazing Windows Phone growth, it seems the installed base of Windows Phone is set to overtake that of Blackberry in US by the end of November 2012 (around week 47).| iFixit: |
Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 Teardown — Join us as we dissect Samsung's newest tablet and attempt to find anything noteworthy inside. EditStep 1 — Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 Teardown We've got our hands on a brand new Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1. Before we tear it open to reveal its secrets … | Nick Bilton / NYT Bits: |
Disruptions: The Next Wave for the Wristwatch — Cellphones have already muscled onto watches' turf as a time-telling tool. Now, some of the biggest technology companies are eyeing your wrist, too. — Companies like Apple, Nike and Sony, along with dozens of start-ups, hope to strap a device on your wrist.| Larry Dignan / ZDNet: |
| Jack Marshall / Digiday: |
How Eduardo Saverin Sold Facebook Ads in 2004 — The knock on Facebook is often that it doesn't have its ad strategy figured out. That might be, but the company courted advertisers pretty much from the get-go. — As captured in “The Social Network,” Facebook's then-CFO Eduardo Saverin …
Windows Store Weekly — This week we take a look at: Star Trek App, Box, Fling Theory, StumbleUpon, and wordBrush.
Static.com Adds Hadoop Support for Cloud Foundry — In this guest post, Jake Farrell, CTO for Static.com, explains how the major shift in the hosting industry towards platforms for high developer productivity …
DevOps: Improved Productivity, Higher Value — Those of us who have been aligned with DevOps for some time already know that the greater agility and closer collaboration it enables deliver real business value for our organizations.
Get Started with Hadoop on Hortonworks Data Platform 1.1 for Windows — We are excited to release the Hortonworks Data Platform 1.1 for Windows as a Generally Available product.
Skype in the browser — Whether you like the Skype app or not, until now, you've had no choice but to download something to make voice and video calls — either an app like Skype, or a Flash plugin (yikes) for your browser.This is a Techmeme archive page. It shows how the site appeared at 1:30 PM ET, August 20, 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.
| James Allworth / HBR.org: |
| Peter Kafka / AllThingsD: |
| Antti Vilpponen / ArcticStartup: |
| David Perry / Coding In My Sleep: |
| Matt Brian / The Next Web: |
| Matthew Wong / Venture Capital Dispatch: |
| Matthew Green / A Few Thoughts …: |
| Amy Feldman / Reuters: |
| Dante D'Orazio / The Verge: |