| David Streitfeld / New York Times: |
Amazon offers some Hachette authors 100% of ebook sales while dispute is ongoing — Amazon Tries to Woo Authors in Hachette Dispute — Amazon, awash in negative publicity in its confrontation with Hachette over e-book terms, is seeking to break the standoff by appealing directly to the publisher's authors.| Horace Dediu / asymco.com: |
As US smartphone penetration crosses 70%, trends suggest iPhone will fare well among late adopters — Late late majority — Seven years after the iPhone was launched, 70% of the US population is using smartphones. Smartphones existed before the iPhone so the category is older … | Ben Popper / The Verge: |
Uber agrees to new national policy that will limit surge pricing during emergencies — The taxi app falls in line with state laws that consider dynamic pricing during storms to be illegal price gouging — Uber is well known for using a dynamic model it calls surge pricing that adjusts the cost of a fare based on supply and demand.| Jordan Kahn / 9to5Mac: |
Bye Google Maps: Apple brings its Maps to the web for Find my iPhone — Update: Apple appears to be testing or slowly rolling out the feature as some users report still seeing Google Maps. Apple Maps are live on the iCloud.com beta site and available for some users on the main iCloud.com site as well.| Mike Isaac / New York Times: |
Lyft will launch in NYC Jul 11, cars can be hailed initially from Brooklyn and Queens but not from Manhattan — Lyft Expands Its Car Hailing Service to New York — A pink mustache grows in Brooklyn. Hundreds of them. — The colorful facial hair is not the latest Williamsburg trend.| Se Young Lee / Reuters: |
Samsung estimates a ~24.5% YOY decline in profits for Q2, missing market expectations; reports slowing smartphone, tablet sales — Smartphones weigh on Samsung Electronics as guidance disappoints — (Reuters) - Samsung Electronics Co Ltd on Tuesday issued unexpectedly weak quarterly earnings guidance … | Jessica E. Lessin / The Information: |
| Liam Tung / ZDNet: |
BlackBerry reveals why the Passport is hip to be square: It's all about the spreadsheets — Summary: BlackBerry's Passport has inspired a lot of head-scratching, but the company reckons it does have a good reason for going out on a square limb. — Liam Tung| Stacey Higginbotham / Gigaom: |
Spark Labs raises $4.9M to make an OS for the internet of things — Spark Labs, the company that last year built a development board that lets people make connected devices that could connect to a cloud service, has raised $4.9 million to take its business to the next step.| Jonathan Shieber / TechCrunch: |
Cloudian Raises $29 Million Because Not Everything Needs To Live In “The Cloud” — As the cloud storage provider Box continues to slouch toward its public offering (staggering under the weight of new invested capital), a number of startups continue to raise cash on the premise that sometimes sensitive data needs to remain grounded.| JP Mangalindan / Fortune: |
How John Arrillaga Sr. turned orchards into office parks for Silicon Valley's tech giants — The secretive billionaire who built Silicon Valley — How John Arrillaga Sr. transformed California fruit orchards into high-priced office space for the likes of Google, Apple, Hewlett-Packard, and Cisco.| Mario Aguilar / Gizmodo: |
Popcorn Time's “Netflix for Torrents” Is Coming to Chromecast — Popcorn Time is a miracle: It lets you stream torrents of movies and TV shows as though they were on Netflix or Hulu. Is it illegal? Probably! But it's also awesome, hard to trace, and soon, it'll work with your Chromecast.| Russell Brandom / The Verge: |
Facebook likely better than the FBI at facial recognition due to its larger photo database — Why Facebook is beating the FBI at facial recognition — If you're worried about Big Brother and computerized facial recognition, this summer has given you plenty of reason to be scared.| Brian Fung / Washington Post: |
The government has asked Verizon for customer data 149,000 times this year. And it's only July. — Verizon v. F.C.C. arguments begin today. (Justin Sullivan/GETTY IMAGES) — Verizon's just published its second-ever transparency report, showing that in the first six months of 2014 … | John Biggs / TechCrunch: |
Bitcoin Vault Xapo Raises $20 Million From Greylock, Index And Announces BTC Debit Cards Are Shipping This Month — Secure BTC vault Xapo has announced it's raised $20 million from Greylock Partners and Index Ventures, bringing its total investment capital to $40 million.| Roger Cheng / CNET: |
Scoop: Sprint tests out family data plan, other discounted offers — The wireless carrier is testing a cheaper version of plans offered by AT&T and Verizon Wireless, underscoring the notion that it's moving away from being simply the “unlimited data” carrier. — Sprint CEO Dan Hesse at a company event in June.
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This is a Techmeme archive page. It shows how the site appeared at 5:45 PM ET, July 8, 2014.
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.
| Kif Leswing / Gigaom: |
| JC Torres / SlashGear: |
| Andrea Peterson / Washington Post: |
| Noel Randewich / Reuters: |
| Philip Guo / Communications of the ACM: |
| Mark Gurman / 9to5Mac: |
| Stan Higgins / CoinDesk: |
| Alex Wilhelm / TechCrunch: |
| Juli Clover / MacRumors: |
| Kim-Mai Cutler / TechCrunch: |