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The Ups & Downs of a Successful Service — As many of you have noticed, during the last couple of weeks TypePad performance has not been what we aspire to and you pay for. While I am as displeased as you, at the current time I can do nothing more than apologize — a weak sentiment without action to back it up.

Anil wants Flickr to pay — Interesting little debate going on the blogs this morning. Anil Dash wants Flickr to pay its users, particularly the ones who put the most popular content onto the service. Caterina, co-founder of Flickr, answers back, says more to life than money.
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Spreading the Flickr Wealth — Anil Dash points out a potentially unfair aspect of Flickr's (i.e. Yahoo's) business model. Flickr makes the traditional website's bargain with its users, trading free hosting of their content for the right to splatter it with ads.

TITANS COLUMN: OMID KORDESTANI — I interviewed Omid a couple of months ago for my B2.0 column, here it is in full. — TITANS OF TECH — The Wizard of Ads — Google's Omid Kordestani conjured a formula that took its sales to $3 billion. Now he's rethinking the world of advertising again.

The Whole Kit & Kaboodle — It is only October, but you hear the jingle bells. This is expected to be a break out year for the online retailers. US online retails sales for this holiday season are predicted to top $26.2 billion, up nearly 21.9% from last year.
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Terri Stone: Will Aperture replace Photoshop? — Joe Schorr: Depending on your workflow, there may be a need to use tools that go beyond Aperture. One of the things pros do is launch Photoshop, so we integrate with Photoshop. — Aperture was developed with photographers looking over our shoulders, literally.

First Screen Shots of Riya — Riya (formerly Ojos) will be opening its doors to 10 or so lucky alpha testers tomorrow morning. — Riya leverages potent facial and text recognition technology with an intelligent interface to help people make sense of the thousands of untitled and untagged photos …

Producing Open Source Software — Open Source Software is more than just software that has an Open Source Initiative (OSI) approved license. It's a whole development style and culture. Karl Fogel is one of the developers of the Subversion project, and has been involved with a number of open source projects.
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Rip and Burn and Download on a Stereo — JUST because a bunch of individual ingredients are delicious doesn't mean they'll taste good when they're all cooked up together. Ask anyone who's ever sampled a 5-year-old chef's rendition of chocolate chip spaghetti with meat sauce and grape jelly.

Sounds great. Where do I upload eBay's business plan? — So how did Google become the world's single largest marketplace? Paul Ford posed that question back in 2002 in a seminal essay entitled "August 2009: How Google beat Amazon and Ebay to the Semantic Web," and answered …

How Einstein managed his inbox — Study suggests modern e-mail habits similar to older, letter-writing ones — If you're like Einstein, you respond to some e-mails immediately and let others wait. And, of course, some you never answer. — And every now and then …

Plan a Trip in a Single Search with Yahoo! Travel Trip Planner — For most people, trip planning begins with a search box. But a single search is just the start of what often becomes hours, even months of intensive online searching, sharing with friends, planning, and logistical details.

Cinematical Seven: Videogame Movies — Yeah, so we all know by now that DOOM is a terrible movie. Reviews have hit it fast and hard, and nobody seems to like it. Is anybody really surprised by this? With very few exceptions, video games simply have not translated into good movies - or even mediocre movies, for that matter.

US Supreme Court denies RIM request to postpone action in Blackberry patent case — WASHINGTON (AFX) - The US Supreme Court has refused a request by Canadian firm Research in Motion to suspend a potentially devastating injunction in a patent dispute over its Blackberry handheld computer.

Red Hat CEO decries open source pretenders — Red Hat is shying away from taking "control" of its relationship with customers and instead hopes to become a thought leader that champions innovation through freedom of the community. — Matthew Szulik, Red Hat chief executive, chairman and president …
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Web 2.0 Cracks Start to Show — Spam, scams and scatterbrains — the same problems that plagued the old internet are cropping up again in a new wave of technologies known collectively as Web 2.0. — But this time around, proponents say Web 2. has been better engineered to withstand …