Top Items:
Dick / Burning Questions:
No Feed is an Island: Introducing FeedFlare — We started with a cookie recipe and a dream, but we don't bake well, so we restarted with the notion that publishers should be able to tether interesting services to their content anywhere it travels. In a recent Feed for Thought post …
Discussion:
Conversion Rater, ClickZ Internet Marketing …, PodTech Comments … and Ross Mayfield's Weblog
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Richard MacManus / Read/WriteWeb:
FeedBurner makes RSS interactive, with FeedFlare
FeedBurner makes RSS interactive, with FeedFlare
Discussion:
A View from the Isle
Danny Sullivan / Search Engine Watch Blog:
Alexa Offers Fee-Based Vertical Search Services — I guess I get to be the underwhelmed one about Alexa announcing a new Alexa Web Search Platform that's available to anyone willing to pay a fee. — Pay a fee for what? You can create your own search engine by tapping into the 4 billion web pages Alexa has indexed over time.
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John Battelle / John Battelle's Searchblog:
ALEXA (MAKE THAT AMAZON) LOOKS TO CHANGE THE GAME
ALEXA (MAKE THAT AMAZON) LOOKS TO CHANGE THE GAME
Discussion:
Rough Type, Google Blogoscoped, Good Morning Silicon Valley, IP Democracy, Due Diligence, Lorcan Dempsey's weblog, A VC, Web 2.0 Explorer, pc4media, elliptical, Boing Boing, The Stalwart, michael parekh on IT, The Glass is Too Big, Frédérick Giasson's Weblog, Conversion Rater, Ho John Lee's Weblog, Wall Street Journal, Things That, Read/WriteWeb, Techdirt, Oliver Thylmann, Om Malik on Broadband, Guardian Unlimited, Marketing Pilgrim, Incremental Blogger, TechBeat, business2blog, Susan Mernit's Blog, PaidContent.org, rexblog.com, Between the Lines, John Cook's Venture Blog, TechCrunch, Toni Schneider's Blog, Mashable* and Lost Remote TV Blog
Hiawatha Bray / Boston Globe:
Telecoms want their products to travel on a faster Internet — Major site owners oppose 2-tier system — AT&T Inc. and BellSouth Corp. are lobbying Capitol Hill for the right to create a two-tiered Internet, where the telecom carriers' own Internet services would be transmitted faster …
Business Week:
Apple May Be Holding Back The Music Biz — Critics say iTunes-only downloads and inflexible pricing are hurting song sales — Once again, Apple's iPod is expected to be the hottest gift of the holiday season. That should be great news for the recording industry, right?
Bloomberg:
Microsoft Sells 39% of Xbox 360s in 1st Two Days of Japan Debut — Dec. 13 (Bloomberg) — Microsoft Corp. sold 39 percent of its new Xbox 360 game console in the first two days it was available in Japan, the world's second-biggest market for video games, according to market researcher Enterbrain Inc.
RELATED ITEM:
Michael / WeaKnees Blog:
WeaKnees Offers up to $25,000 for DIRECTV DVR Plus (R15) Upgrade Solution — With the release of the DIRECTV DVR Plus, we are looking to develop a stable, reliable upgrade solution for DIRECTV's latest DVR. In addition to working on the problem in-house, we have decided to open the search …
Mark Landler / New York Times:
Hot Technology for Chilly Streets in Estonia — TALLINN, Estonia, Dec. 8 - Visiting the offices of Skype feels like stumbling on to a secret laboratory in a James Bond movie, where mad scientists are hatching plots for world domination. — The two-year-old company, which offers free calls …
Chris Kohler / Wired News:
Star Wars Fans Flee Net Galaxy — Players of the massively multiplayer online game Star Wars Galaxies are feeling a bit like the films' besieged rebel army these days. To them, LucasArts is the evil Empire, raining down terror in their alternate universe.
Discussion:
Kotaku
Reuters:
HarperCollins to begin digitizing books — U.S. publisher HarperCollins said Monday that it plans to convert some 20,000 books in its catalog into digital form in a bid to rein in potential copyright violations on the Internet. — The move comes as the U.S. publishing industry …
Discussion:
business2blog, Techdirt, Shore Communications Inc., The Technology Liberation …, ResourceShelf and larry borsato
Doc / Doc Searls' IT Garage:
Opening remarks — The Syndicate conference starts at 8am here in San Francisco. I'm giving the opening remarks. In the spirit of syndication itself, I decided I'd rather blog what I'm going to say, rather than prepare slides about it. — After the opening wisecracks …
Discussion:
Between the Lines, down the avenue, The Doc Searls Weblog, PaidContent.org, Software Only and Sandhill Trek
Pete Blackshaw / ClickZ:
The Pocket Guide to the 2005 Blogosphere — Type the word "blog" into Google's search box, and you'll receive a whopping 515 million search results, nearly twice as many as you receive for "sex." — Love 'em or hate 'em, blogs are the real deal. Even if we deflate the hype and ignore …
Marguerite Reardon / CNET News.com:
Can Wi-Fi make it in Manhattan? — If Wi-Fi can make it in New York, it can make it anywhere. — New York City lawmakers are taking a long, hard look at using 802.11-based Wi-Fi or some other technology to get the city's roughly 8 million citizens access to broadband.
Discussion:
Daily Wireless
Steve Hamm / Business Week:
Java? It's So Nineties — Sun's groundbreaking programming language vaulted to popularity with Web developers. But now it's losing ground to a raft of upstarts — Peter Yared, CEO of software maker ActiveGrid, spent a critical chapter of his career steeped in Java, the programming language developed by Sun Microsystems (SUNW).
USA Today:
Cellphone technology rings in pornography in USA — Quickly developing into big business overseas, cellphone pornography is a step closer to taking off in the USA. — Cingular Wireless, the nation's largest cellphone service provider, quietly has launched filtering devices …
Discussion:
The Pondering Primate
Matt Cutts:
Text link follow-up — At this point, it shouldn't be a surprise what I have to say about any particular site (Hi Jeremy!) selling links. Danny gives a good recap here, and I'm happy that Danny can channel me and say what I would say at this point. Let's see how succinctly I can say it.