tech.memeorandum

Tech Web, page A1 … for 6:30 PM ET, November 17, 2005
Current Tech Page     Also:   Politics

Top Items:

Stuart Miles / pocket-lint.co.uk:
MIT unveils $100 laptop to the world - PLUS IMAGES  —  17 November 2005 - MIT has unveiled its $100 hand-cranked laptop computer to the United Nations technology summit in Tunisia and said that it hopes to make millions of the devices to give to the poorest people in the world.
RELATED ITEMS:
David Richards / smarthouse.com.au:
$125 Laptop To Be Launched This Month
Om Malik / On Broadband, VoIP …:
Google's Riya Designs?  —  Exclusive: To paraphrase a popular Bollywood ditty, Is Google singing O Riya!  O Riya!  —  Since this past Thursday, I have heard whispers that Riya, a Redwood City, California-based photo service is being courted by Google.  Now this rumor has been repeated …
RELATED ITEM:
Paul Kedrosky's Infectious Greed:
Seeya Riya  —  It has been all the buzz over the last couple of days — and today in my meetings in the Valley it was whispered so many times you could have turned it into a drinking game — but I didn't want to post anything without someone giving confirmation.
Thomas Hawk / Thomas Hawk's Digital Connection:
Netflix Presents at Lehman Brothers Small Cap Conference  —  This post should not be construed as financial advice.  Davis Freeberg is both a shareholder and current customer of Netflix.  —  Barry McCarthy, the Chief Financial Officer of Netflix gave one of the best investor presentations I've ever heard …
RELATED ITEMS:
Sue Zeidler / Reuters:
Blu-ray, HP at odds over high-def DVD launch plan
Discussion: Gizmodo, Joystiq and HD Beat
Ken Belson / New York Times:
New Dispute in Technology for Next Generation of DVD's
CNN:
Xbox 360: Good, but not great  —  The first of the next gen video game machines hits store shelves next week.  Should you get one?  —  Game Over is a weekly column by Chris Morris  —  NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - For gaming's most enthusiastic fans, the question of whether to get an Xbox 360 was answered long ago.
Discussion: Joystiq and Kotaku
RELATED ITEM:
Maxine Shen / Yahoo! News:
DON'T BUY THE XBOX 360  —  THE buzz started six months ago.  There's Bill Gates on the cover of Time magazine in May, with a glowing green-and-white machine.  "Inside Bill's New Xbox" it screamed.  —  Since then, the Xbox 360 - a sequel to Microsoft's Xbox video-game unit …
Discussion: Kotaku
Bruce Schneier / Wired News:
Real Story of the Rogue Rootkit  —  It's a David and Goliath story of the tech blogs defeating a mega-corporation.  —  On Oct. 31, Mark Russinovich broke the story in his blog: Sony BMG Music Entertainment distributed a copy-protection scheme with music CDs that secretly installed a rootkit on computers.
RELATED ITEM:
Thomas Claburn / InformationWeek:
Sony made an unpopular product decision and got …
David Pogue / New York Times:
The Pen Gets a Whole Lot Mightier  —  THE holiday season may be a time for love, hope and all that jazz.  But let's face it: for millions of Americans, a big part of it is getting new toys.  —  Sometimes, "toys" means playthings for grownups, like iPods and flat-screen TV sets.
J. Alex Halderman / Freedom to Tinker:
Not Again!  Uninstaller for Other Sony DRM Also Opens Huge Security Hole  —  I have good news and bad news about Sony's other CD DRM technology, the SunnComm MediaMax system.  (For those keeping score at home, Ed and I have written a lot recently about Sony's XCP copy protection technology …
Elinor Mills / CNET News.com:
Mapping a revolution with 'mashups'  —  Even before Google gave its blessing, Paul Rademacher was hacking away at the code behind its mapping application so he could mix it with outside real estate data and see exactly where homes listed for sale were located in the San Francisco area.
Google Blogoscoped:
Matt Cutts, Google's Gadgets Guy  —  Matt Cutts works at the Googleplex and at his blog writes about Google, search engine optimization traps and whatever comes to his mind that won't "waste people's time."  Of all the Googlers around who have blogs, Matt might be the most outspoken when it comes …
Ryan Katz / Think Secret:
EXCLUSIVE: Apple Planning Intel-Ready iBook Debut for January  —  November 17, 2005 - Apple is planning to release its first entry-level iBook laptops with Intel processors next January at Macworld Expo in San Francisco, highly reliable sources have confirmed to Think Secret.
Discussion: Engadget, MacSlash and OSNews.com
Kasper Jade / appleinsider.com:
Even smaller iPod shuffle may debut in January  —  A second-generation iPod shuffle digital music player from Apple Computer will be noticeably smaller than the existing model and could see an introduction as early as January, says one Wall Street analyst.  —  "We are hearing …
Discussion: Engadget and digg
Elizabeth Montalbano / InfoWorld:
Microsoft strikes deal for cable-ready Media Center PCs  —  Software giant partnered with Cable Television Laboratories, a cable-research consortium  —  Microsoft (Profile, Products, Articles) Corp. Wednesday edged one step closer to its vision of offering a complete home digital entertainment …

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More Items:

Peter Kafka / Forbes:
EMI Says Apple's Jobs Will Change ITunes Pricing
Discussion: broadband
Vladimir Cole / Joystiq:
Unpacking the Xbox 360; hot unboxing action
Discussion: Weblogs, Inc. and HD Beat
Jan Libbenga / The Register:
Toilet-disposed mobiles menace Helsinki's sewers
Discussion: The Gadgets Blog and Engadget
Dawn Kawamoto / CNET News.com:
Bots slim down to get tough
Discussion: Vitalsecurity.org
three.co.uk:
Madonna video single "Hung UP" premieres exclusively on 3
Discussion: Techdirt
Reinhardt Krause / Investor's Business Daily:
New Cingular Service Puts Scrolling News Onto Phone Screens
Discussion: MocoNews.net and Engadget
Eric J. Sinrod / CNET News.com:
Perspective: iPod porn pains parents, employers
Robert Roy Britt / livescience.com:
Attractive Virtual Professors Draw Student Attention

Earlier Picks:

Nicholas Colyer / NewTech Inc.:
ColdHeat - Worst Soldering Iron Ever!
Discussion: Venture Chronicles
Colin Campbell / next-gen.biz:
Rare's Perfect Gamble
Discussion: Joystiq and Kotaku
IEBlog:
Genuine Windows and Browsers
Andrew Wallenstein / Hollywood Reporter:
'Lost' deal hatched for mobile
Jen Grant / Official Google Blog:
Judging Book Search by its cover
Barb Dybwad / Weblogs, Inc.:
Interview with a Blogger: Marc Orchant
Wall Street Journal:
What the In-Crowd Knows  —  From Hollywood to Wall Street,
Robert Andrews / Wired News:
Digg Just Might Bury Slashdot
Discussion: Slashdot
 
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