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12:25 AM ET, March 5, 2008

Techmeme

 Top Items: 
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
Sheryl Sandberg Will Become COO of Facebook  —  Facebook will announce that it will hire top Google executive Sheryl Sandberg as COO this afternoon, in a major hire that is sure to shake up the company and also deliver a blow to rival Google.  —  At Google (GOOG), Sandberg is the vice president …
RELATED:
Eric Eldon / VentureBeat:
Q&A with Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg, on hiring, growth, and its platform  —  Facebook has just hired a new COO, Sheryl Sandberg of Google (our coverage).  So I talked with Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg today, to get some more context on her hire and how it fits in with the company's larger plans.
Peter Elkind / Fortune:
The trouble with Steve Jobs  —  Jobs likes to make his own rules, whether the topic is computers, stock options, or even pancreatic cancer.  The same traits that make him a great CEO drive him to put his company, and his investors, at risk.  —  (Fortune Magazine) — In October 2003 …
RELATED:
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Love Him or Hate Him, Fortune Cannot Make Up Its Mind About Steve Jobs
Barry Schwartz / Search Engine Land:
Google Tests Additional Search Box Within Search Results  —  Tamar tipped me off to people seeing secondary search boxes in the Google search results.  I see them myself now.  For example a search on amazon returns this search box directly under the snippet but above the URL, here is a picture:
RELATED:
Duncan Riley / TechCrunch:
Google Offers Secondary Search Boxes  —  Google has started offering search boxes within their search results.  In the example above, a search box is offered for Amazon.  The new service seems to be restricted to larger sites with a slant towards retails sites.
Sarah Perez / ReadWriteWeb:
Office Live Workspace vs Google Docs: Feature-by-Feature Comparison  —  Today, Microsoft announced that the Office Live Workspace beta is publicly available for everyone to access.  The site, a free web-based extension of Microsoft Office, lets you access your documents online and share your work with others.
Nancy Gohring / PC World:
Microsoft Develops New Operating System From Scratch  —  Microsoft Research unveiled the new operating system, Singularity, as a prototype aimed at academics and researchers.  —  Microsoft showed off a new operating system on Tuesday, but don't get too excited.
Discussion: Microsoft Research and TGDaily.com
RELATED:
Ryan Paul / Ars Technica:   Singularity: Microsoft's research OS available for download
The Technium:
1,000 True Fans  —  The long tail is famously good news for two classes of people; a few lucky aggregators, such as Amazon and Netflix, and 6 billion consumers.  Of those two, I think consumers earn the greater reward from the wealth hidden in infinite niches.  —  But the long tail is a decidedly mixed blessing for creators.
Discussion: BUZZYEAH
Matt / Photo Matt:
Backing BuddyPress  —  Some of you may remember when I wrote about Chickspeak, a WordPress MU-based social network.  Andy Peatling, the fellow behind it, later decided to recreate the work he had done as an Open Source effort he called BuddyPress.  And it was good.
RELATED:
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
WordPress: The Social Network
Discussion: ReadWriteWeb
Jessica E. Vascellaro / Wall Street Journal:
IAC's Ask.com to Cut 8% of Staff  —  Ask.com announced an internal restructuring that eliminates 40 jobs as well as plans to turn back the search engine's focus to better answering search queries posed as questions.  —  The job cuts, which amount to roughly 8% of the company's existing work force …
RELATED:
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Demand Media Buys Pluck for $75 million  —  Demand Media, a big buyer and operator of Internet domain name companies, completed negotiations to acquire Austin-based Pluck last night after about two months of negotiations.  The price is not being disclosed but is rumored to be in the $50 million range.
Erica Ogg / CNET News.com:
Samsung: HDD and SSD will continue to coexist  —  SAN JOSE, Calif.—Samsung will immediately begin shipping two new high-capacity hard drives Tuesday, but it also is betting heavily on solid-state drives.  —  The company gave details regarding its storage business at a press event here …
Discussion: GigaOM, PC World and Electronista
RELATED:
InfoWorld:
Samsung's new drives can give laptops 1TB of storage
Discussion: PC World and Engadget
Elinor Mills / CNET News.com:
Warning: Your iPod may get you mugged  —  A friend of mine got her throat sliced in a daytime iPod mugging a year and a half ago.  Even the police were amazed at the violent nature of the attack.  Fortunately, the cut didn't go too deep and she is fine except for the scar and possibly some lingering post-traumatic-stress symptoms.
RELATED:
Brian Bergstein / Associated Press:   Did IPods Cause a Crime Wave?
Underwire / Wired:
Gary Gygax, ‘Father of D&D,’ Dies at 69  —  Gary Gygax, one of the co-creators of the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game, died Tuesday morning at his home in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, according to Stephen Chenault, CEO of Troll Lord Games.  —  Gygax designed the original D&D game with Dave Arneson in 1974 …
RELATED:
Stuart Elliott / TV Decoder:
Firebrand Burns Out  —  The fire has been banked in an experiment to transform advertising into entertainment.  —  Firebrand, a television and online service that since October has been presenting commercials as content, is being shut down as its major investors decided to stop providing more money.
Ryan Singel / Epicenter:
ETech: Google Prediction Market Datamining Shows Meatspace Matters  —  For the past two and half years, Google employees have bet on internal company projects — a tool known as a prediction market -, providing plenty of data for the company to mine to figure out how information flows internally.
Discussion: Laughing Squid and Pimm
Bobby White / Wall Street Journal:
The New Workplace Rules: No Video-Watching  —  Carriage Services Inc., a Houston funeral-services company, recently discovered that 70% of the workers in its 125-person headquarters watched videos on Web sites like Google Inc.'s YouTube and News Corp.'s MySpace for about an hour a day.
Andrew Orlowski / The Register:
When the music costs nothing, why do freetards prefer to leech?  —  As we reported yesterday, Nine Inch Nails has followed the Radiohead example and is giving the music away for free.  Not all of it, but nine of the thirty six tracks from Trent Reznor's instrumental LP Ghosts I-IV are available for free, with a PDF thrown in.
 
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 More Items: 
Andrew Ross Sorkin / New York Times:
Yahoo Looks at New Way to Survive
Flight Global:
DARPA pushes limits of unmanned aircraft capability to extremes
Discussion: CNET News.com, DVICE and Gizmodo
Jon Udell:
Ward Cunningham's Visible Workings
InfoWorld:
Microsoft's cutting edge on display at TechFest
Jacqui Cheng / Ars Technica:
Good times cost X-rated spammer $413,000 in FTC fines
Dell:
Dell Goes Extreme With IT-Friendly Rugged Laptop
Antony Bruno / Billboard.Biz:
Facebook To Launch Music Service?
Discussion: paidContent.org and Coolfer
Pitchfork:
Pitchfork to Launch Online Music TV Channel April 7
 Earlier Items: 
Hal Varian / Official Google Blog:
Why data matters  —  We often use this space to discuss …
Discussion: Clickety Clack
Kelly Fiveash / The Register:
Windows Vista Ultimate SP1 delayed
Darryl K. Taft / Application Development:
Adobe Floating on AIR
Discussion: Ryan Stewart, JD on EP and Ajaxian
Nick Heath / CNET News.com:
Windows-based cash machines ‘easily hacked’
The Age:
Hack into a Windows PC - no password needed
Sony Ericsson:
Sony Ericsson targets a style-conscious audience with a small and neat slider phone
Josh Catone / ReadWriteWeb:
How the Barack Obama Campaign Uses Wikis to Organize Volunteers
Discussion: Wired News and Threat Level
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Benjamin Mullin / New York Times:
BuzzFeed reaches a deal to sell Hot Ones owner First We Feast for $82.5M in cash to a consortium of investors led by an affiliate of Soros Fund Management

Katie Robertson / New York Times:
Sources: Patrick Soon-Shiong told LA Times opinion leaders not to publish an editorial critical of Trump's cabinet picks without publishing an opposing view

Brian Steinberg / Variety:
Warner Bros. Discovery announces a restructuring to create two separate units: one for linear TV networks and one for production studios and streaming platforms

 
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