| Wayne Chang / Crashlytics Blog: |
Crashlytics is joining forces with Twitter — What an incredible journey this past year has been — today, we're excited to announce: we're merging with Twitter to take our platform to an entirely new level! — Our Product — We started Crashlytics a little over a year ago to address a huge hole in mobile app development.| Owen Thomas / Business Insider: |
Twitter Is Buying A Startup, Crashlytics, And Not Killing It Off For A Change — Twitter, the global network for short bursts of information, is buying a startup, Crashlytics, that tracks when bad code causes apps to fail abruptly. — Notably, it appears to be leaving Crashlytics alone.| Mark Gurman / 9to5Mac: |
Apple releases iOS 6.1 with more LTE carrier support, Fandango movie ticket purchasing via Siri, iTunes Match individual song downloading — Apple has released iOS 6.1 to iPad, iPhone, iPod touch, and Apple TV users. This public release follows five beta seeds to developers.| Matthew Panzarino / The Next Web: |
| Vy Phan / Oh, How Pinteresting!: |
We're Testing Out A New Look! — We're excited to announce that we'll be testing an update to Pinterest.com with a small group of people soon. With this update, we've tried to take your feedback into account. We're eager to learn even more from some of you during this test.| Thomson Reuters / The Knowledge Effect: |
New Windows fails to boost Microsoft stock - graphic of the day — Back in the 1990s, Microsoft was the unchallenged king of computing and the release of a new Windows operating system would supercharge sales, generate excitement and generally boost its stock. Not anymore.| Dante D'Orazio / The Verge: |
BlackBerry Z10 available on January 30th in the UK? — RIM let us know months ago that BlackBerry 10's coming out party would be this Wednesday in New York City, but we haven't known when the heavily-leaked BlackBerry Z10, the first device to run the company's new operating system, would be going on sale.| AJ Kohn / Blind Five Year Old: |
Google's evil plan is simple and not so evil. — Don't Be Evil — Any successful company is going to draw criticism. Google probably gets more of it than others because of their 'Don't Be Evil' motto. Algorithm changes shuffle branded sites higher and people shout ‘evil!’| Colleen Taylor / TechCrunch: |
Yahoo Ends 2012 With A Solid Q4: $1.22 Billion Revenue, Non-GAAP EPS 32 Cents — Yahoo today released its financial results for the fourth quarter of 2012, marking the end of a key year for the long-running web portal. Q4 2012 was Yahoo's second full quarter with Marissa Mayer at the helm as CEO … | Nilay Patel / The Verge: |
Pebble smartwatch review — Can Pebble make the first smartwatch for regular people? — The Pebble smartwatch is a lot more than just a watch — it's the latest attempt to turn your wrist into the launchpad for a wearable computing revolution. It's also the preeminent symbol of the Kickstarter hardware revolution.| Jon Russell / The Next Web: |
Facebook recovers from outage affecting US users, says issue was DNS-related [Updated] — Facebook is suffering from an extended outage that is causing downtime for users based in North America. The site has been offline for many in the US this evening — including Texas, New York and others … | Nathan Ingraham / The Verge: |
Vine begins censoring searches, weeds out #porn and more — In the latest development in today's pornography on Vine saga, Twitter's video-sharing app now blocks many searches for pornographic terms. Trying to search for the #porn hashtag and other similar terms brings up no results at this time.| Ken Yeung / The Next Web: |
Rdio launches free music streaming internationally, unlimited listening for 6 months in 15 countries — Music subscription service Rdio has launched its free music streaming service internationally, giving listeners in 15 of the 17 countries it services access to over 18 million songs in its library.| Ernesto / TorrentFreak: |
Antigua's Legal “Pirate Site” Authorized by the World Trade Organization — Last week we broke the news that the island nation Antigua and Barbuda wants to start a Government run “pirate” site. — Today, this plan came a step closer to reality when the Caribbean country received authorization … | Mitch Stoltz / Electronic Frontier Foundation: |
| Jon Brodkin / Ars Technica: |
Ubuntu phones to come with a terminal—prepare your command line skills — The Ubuntu phone operating system will come with a terminal application. That's right: experienced users will have access to the full power of the Linux system running underneath the phone's shiny graphical user interface.| Natasha Lomas / TechCrunch: |
Nokia Growth Partners Launches Third Fund Backed By $250M From Nokia, Expands In China — Nokia's venture capital arm Nokia Growth Partners (NGP), which was founded back in 2005 and invests in mobile-related ventures in the U.S., Europe and Asia, has launched its third fund … | Nathan Ingraham / The Verge: |
HP's first Chromebook revealed in leaked spec sheet — HP is preparing to launch its first entry into the Chromebook marketplace, if a PDF found on its site can be believed. According to this listing, HP's currently-unannounced Pavilion Chromebook will feature a 1.1GHz Celeron processor … | Jeremy Horwitz / iLounge: |
New Details On Apple's Budget iPhone 5 — Backstage Categories: — Rumors of a budget “ready for China” iPhone have been circulating for some time, but apart from a possible price point ("low") and assumptions about its components ("plastic," “low-end"), no concrete details as to its look or feel have leaked out.| Alex Wilhelm / The Next Web: |
House panel demands briefing from Department of Justice concerning its prosecution of Aaron Swartz — Two members of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee today sent a letter to Eric Holder, Attorney General of the United States, requesting answers to a number … | Brendan Sasso / Hillicon Valley: |
| Peter Kafka / AllThingsD: |
Sales Talks Fell Through, So Ad Exchange AdBrite Shuts Down — Advertising exchange AdBrite is shutting down, after an attempt to find a buyer for the company failed. — CEO Hardeep Bindra is telling partners that the company, which has 26 employees, will close by the end of the month, and is selling off its assets.| Alyson Shontell / Business Insider: |
Nick Denton Is Resurrecting Valleywag — Valleywag, a Silicon Valley gossip blog Gawker killed off in 2009, is making a comeback. — Nick Denton, Gawker's CEO and founder, says he'll be bringing the site back to life, and he's currently hunting for an editor or two to run it.| Cyrus Farivar / Ars Technica: |
The EU-funded plan to stick a “flag this as terrorism” button in your browser — Under CleanIT's rules, the Irish ultra-nationalist “32 County Sovereignty Movement” site (an alias of the terrorist group the “Real IRA") couldn't be touched, as it's hosted in the US. — 32 County Sovereignty Movement
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 6:20 AM ET, January 29, 2013.
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.
| Somini Sengupta / New York Times: |
| Drew Olanoff / TechCrunch: |
| Drew Fitzgerald / Wall Street Journal: |
| Larry Dignan / ZDNet: |
| JP Mangalindan / Fortune: |
| Lauren Indvik / Mashable!: |
| Josh Constine / TechCrunch: |
| Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg / Wall Street Journal: |
| Alexia Tsotsis / TechCrunch: |