tech.memeorandum

Tech Web, page A1 … for 4:55 PM ET, October 17, 2005
Current Tech Page     Also:   Politics

Top Items:

Dsifry / Sifry's Alerts:
State of the Blogosphere, October 2005 Part 1: On Blogosphere Growth  —  It is that time of the year again, and I've got some new information on the continued growth of the blogosphere.  I made this presentation as part of my 10 minute talk at Web 2.0 on October 6, 2005.
RELATED ITEM:
Mark Cuban / Blog Maverick:
Get Your Blogspot S**t Together Google  —  It was exactly two months ago I wrote about problems that Icerocket.com and really, the entire blogosphere was having with Splogs created and maintained on Blogger.com, with a blogspot.com URL.  —  Well the S**t hit the fan today.
useit.com:
Weblog Usability: The Top Ten Design Mistakes … Weblogs are a form of website.  The thousands of normal website usability guidelines therefore apply to them, as do this year's top ten design mistakes.  But weblogs are also a special genre of website; they have unique characteristics and thus distinct usability problems.
Laurie J. Flynn / New York Times:
Palm Inc. and BlackBerry Maker Will Sign a Licensing Agreement  —  SAN FRANCISO, Oct. 16 - Palm Inc., maker of the Treo smartphone, and its rival Research In Motion, the maker of the wireless BlackBerry device, are expected to announce on Monday a licensing agreement that could alter competition …
RELATED ITEMS:
Michael Singer / CNET News.com:
Palm, RIM ink licensing deal  —  Handheld computer makers Palm and Research In Motion inked a deal on Monday to let Treo 650 owners to connect with BlackBerry e-mail and calendar software.  —  The option will be available for new and existing Treo 650 users as well as future Treo products …
Discussion: Gizmodo
Cliff Edwards / Business Week:
RIM's Helping Hand from Palm
Discussion: Techdirt
Ken Belson / New York Times:
Power Companies Enter the High-Speed Internet Market  —  CINCINNATI - The idea has been around for years.  In Spain and elsewhere in Europe, utility companies have long offered high-speed Internet service to consumers over their power lines.  —  But American utilities are only now beginning …
RELATED ITEM:
Sam Kennedy / mcall.com:   End of Internet over power lines?
Chris Sherman / Search Engine Watch:
Curing Medical Information Disorder  —  Healthline is a specialized medical search engine that offers high-quality, authoritative information that's easy to find, even if you don't speak medicalese.  —  According to the Pew Internet Project, more Americans search for health information on the web than make doctor visits each day.
Discussion: Tony Gentile and TechCrunch
RELATED ITEMS:
CBS News:   Want Health Info? Less Is More
Michael Bazeley / SiliconBeat:
Healthline search engine launches
Cortopolis:
Cory, wrong again  —  Update: Now: the bloggy equivalent of rolling on my back and exposing my stomach.  The low quality and low tone of my post is beneath Cory and the subject in question.  It was awfully nice of him to respond in my comments with a measured response.
RELATED ITEM:
Cory Doctorow / Boing Boing:   Norway's public broadcaster sells out taxpayers to Microsoft
Peter Rip / EarlyStageVC:
The Web 2.0 Entrepreneur Bubble  —  There has been a lot of conversation of late about how much easier it is to start a Web software companies these days.  Open source and Moore's Law are the principal drivers.  Great stuff.  —  It's springtime in the Internet and there has been a fresh rain.
RELATED ITEM:
Nick / Rough Type:
Entrepreneurs everywhere  —  Peter Rip, managing director …
Discussion: AC/OS
USA Today:
Techies: They're everywhere  —  When you think of people who are technologically savvy, you probably envision a hip young guy in Seattle or Silicon Valley or New York, sitting in a coffee shop and sending e-mail from his laptop or PDA or even his cellphone.  —  You're right, but not entirely.
Tom Coates / plasticbag.org is a weblog:
Farewell BBC - and hello Yahoo!  —  Right then!  It's time to get everything out in the open and talk about some of the stuff that's been going on behind the scenes over the last few months.  First things first - and this will probably come as a bit of a surprise to a few people …
Discussion: Guardian Unlimited
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Inform.com Doesn't  —  Employees: 55  —  Inform.com launched today with a splashy New York Times article.  —  Steve Rubel has some kind words.  Rafat Ali isn't so kind - he says "It fails miserably."  I agree.  —  I honestly can't figure out what it is, even after reading the Times fluff piece.
Discussion: NevOn and Micro Persuasion
RELATED ITEM:
Ina Fried / CNET News.com:
Microsoft updates Windows Vista test code  —  update In its first update to a new community-based preview program, Microsoft is showing off a number of new features for Windows Vista, including efforts to improve the Web browser and make the operating system more resilient.
Discussion: Andre
John Markoff / New York Times:
At Microsoft, Interlopers Sound Off on Security  —  REDMOND, Wash., Oct. 14 - In a windowless war room where Microsoft manages worldwide computer security crises, George Stathakopoulos, the general manager for security, opened a small refrigerator, revealing three bottles of Champagne.
Discussion: InfoWorld TechWatch
Lev Grossman / Time:
How Apple Does It  —  Conventional wisdom says its strategy is wrong, yet it keeps turning out great products.  TIME looks inside the world's most innovative company  —  This is partly a story about a company called Apple Computer.  It's also partly a story about a fancy new iPod …
Stephen Shankland / CNET News.com:
New hopes from Sun's idea factory  —  Scott McNealy, Sun Microsystems' sharp-tongued chief executive, isn't known as a touchy-feely sort.  —  But when Andreas Bechtolsheim, Sun's first employee and the creative force behind many of the Silicon Valley giant's early workstation computers …
Alan T. Saracevic / San Francisco Chronicle:
In the year 2050, Google seeks new life forms  —  Oct. 16, 2050 — Google Inc. announced today yet another partnership with NASA in which the Mountain View search giant will collaborate with the much smaller government agency on the search for extraterrestrial life.
Discussion: Google Blogoscoped and digg

About This Page:

This is a snapshot of tech.memeorandum at 4:55 PM ET, October 17, 2005.

View another snapshot:

About tech.memeorandum:

The Web is humming with reports and opinions on technology.  tech.memeorandum is page A1 for these discussions.  Auto-updated every 5 minutes, it uncovers the most relevant items from thousands of news sites and weblogs.

Site News:

See blog.memeorandum.com for all site news.

Subscribe:

Add tech.memeorandum to:
XML

More Items:

Mark Buchanan / newscientist.com:
How new words become part of a language
Lockergnome / Chris Pirillo:
Splogspot in the Splogosphere  —  It's been a busy Sunday in the blogosphere, indeed.
Pamela Parker / ClickZ:
AOL to take Blogs' Pulse via Intelliseek
Laura M. Holson / New York Times:
Now Playing on a Tiny Screen
Stuart Elliott / New York Times:
Madison Avenue's Full-Court Pitch to Video Gamers
ccnmatthews.com:
Nortel Announces Mike Zafirovski as President and CEO

Earlier Picks:

Joanna Glasner / Wired News:
Mapping Where You Think You Live
Dan Goodin / Wired News:
The Media Player of My Dreams
Discussion: alarm:clock
sonyericsson.com:
Music transfer and download
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
My Thoughts on Reading Lists
Steven Levy / Newsweek:
The Next Movie Show
Vladimir Cole / Joystiq:
Nintendo DS Wi-Fi uses obsolete WEP security
 
© 2005 Memeorandum   —   Questions? Comments?