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Sony BMG's Costly Silence — The label was alerted to the secret, virus-vulnerable software on its CDs long before the scandal broke. Trouble is, it didn't act immediately to alert consumers — For Sony BMG Music Entertainment, it has become a public-relations nightmare — and it shows no signs of abating.
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What's the buzz? Teens can't stand it — BARRY, Wales—Though he did not know it at the time, the idea came to Howard Stapleton when he was 12 and visiting a factory with his father, a manufacturing executive in London. — Opening the door to a room where workers were using high-frequency …

Newsmaker: Banking on a virtual economy — Late last month, Jon Jacobs, an independent filmmaker from Miami, became the first person in the history of online gaming to spend $100,000 on a single virtual item when he bought a space station in the game "Project Entropia."
Discussion:
Second Life Future Salon

New Orleans's New Connection — City-Owned WiFi System To Be Announced Today — Hurricane-ravaged New Orleans will deploy the nation's first municipally owned wireless Internet system that will be free for all users, part of an effort to jump-start recovery by making living and doing business in the city as attractive as possible.

Grand Central turning to Swivel — After co-founding and leading CNET (from which this blog issues forth) from obscurity to Web stardom, Halsey Minor started 12 Entrepreneuring, raising over $130 million to incubate Web services companies before flaming out during the 2001 bubble bursting.

Googlephobia — Google may be the giant asteroid that is going to make the old-media dinosaurs extinct—but the publishing industry is trying to head it off. — Pat Schroeder, the former Colorado congresswoman who's now the head of the Association of American Publishers …
Discussion:
John Battelle's Searchblog

Dead Media Everywhere — I've had thoughts on dead media before but I never thought about a real solution. I've decided paper tape is the way to go. Everything needs to be transferred to paper tape. Can you image the piles of paper tape that a 500GB hard drive would create?
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Motion LE 1600 Tablet — I've long had a certain amount of lust for the Motion slate Tablet PC's. They are well balanced, have an incredible screen (if you go for the pricey view anywhere option). In fact, if computer manufacturers can be compared to car manufacturers, Motion to me always seems like the BMW of PC builders.
Discussion:
Life On the Wicked Stage

PSP Update 2.6: Podcasting (RSS) and WMA Music Support! — Sony just released a new firmware update v2.6 for the PSP with RSS(!) and Windows Music support. I'm downloading it to try now, but I think this is a pretty cool update. I have to say, besides Sony's insistence on hammering the homebrew scene …

ANIME EXPLOSION — It's... Profitmón! — From Pokémon to Full Metal Panic, the anime industry is doing everything the rest of show biz isn't: embracing technology, coddling fans—and making a killing. — It was 2 a.m. when John Ledford heard the banging at his door.

Blogging With a Wooden Tongue — The French call it la langue de bois, the "wooden tongue." It's the language of officialdom; of politics, power and propaganda. It's usually spoken by someone whose job is to speak, but whose real mission is to end speech.

Firefox 1.5 released on Mozilla's FTP site — The much-anticipated release of Firefox 1.5 has finally been posted on Mozilla's FTP site. This is the full release, unlike the Release Candidates 1, 2 and 3 that were posted on the Mozilla.org website on November 1, November 10 and November 17, respectively.

Picking the cable channel you want — Report: FCC is expected to back 'a la carte' pricing in the industry, instead of bundled channels. — NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Federal Communications Commission is expected to suggest that cable companies could best serve their customers by allowing …
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michael parekh on IT, Techdirt, Good Morning Silicon Valley, HD Beat, Geek News Central … and Techdirt

Surprise! Computer scientists model the exclamation point — Two Southern California engineers have created a mathematical theory of surprise, working from first principles of probability theory applied to a digital environment — and the results of experiments recording eye movements of volunteers watching video seem to confirm it.