Top Items:
John Markoff / New York Times:
New Focus for Intel: The Home — Intel, the world's biggest chip maker, is breaking away from its longstanding love affair with pure computing power to remake itself as a consumer-friendly brand that will seek to dominate the digital home. — Intel's strategy, based on a new generation …
RELATED ITEMS:
Ian King / Bloomberg:
Intel Drops Logo After 37 Years; Seeks to Take Image Beyond PCs — Dec. 30 (Bloomberg) — Intel Corp., whose marketing made its computer chips a household name, is changing its logo for the first time in 37 years. — The dropped ``e'' in Intel will be shed in favor of a swoop around …
Business Week:
Inside Intel — Paul Otellini's plan will send the chipmaker into uncharted territory. And founder Andy Grove applauds the shift — Even the gentle clinking of silverware stopped dead. Andrew S. Grove, the revered former Intel Corp. (INTC ) chief executive and now a senior adviser …
Brian Krebs / Washington Post:
Windows Security Flaw Is 'Severe' — A previously unknown flaw in Microsoft Corp.'s Windows operating system is leaving computer users vulnerable to spyware, viruses and other programs that could overtake their machines and has sent the company scrambling to come up with a fix.
Discussion:
Get Real
RELATED ITEMS:
Charles C. Mann / Wired News:
How Click Fraud Could Swallow the Internet … Stuart Cauff launched a charter-jet service in Miami Beach back in 2002. Being a 21st-century business, JetNetwork advertised on the Internet, especially on search engines. Anyone who Googled, say, "air charter Miami" would be greeted …
RELATED ITEMS:
Ars Technica:
Google Talk targeted in patent lawsuit — The fledging Google instant messaging service known as Google Talk has come under fire from a Delaware corporation that claims that Google is infringing on two of its patents. Rates Technology Inc. claims that Google has violated their patents …
RELATED ITEMS:
Lorraine Woellert / Business Week:
Sony BMG Ends a Legal Nightmare — The label has quickly settled the class action over its "secret" copy-protection software. That's good for all parties — including the future of digital music — As peace treaties go, it might be one of history's swiftest negotiations.
Discussion:
Lost Remote TV Blog
RELATED ITEM:
Dave Winer / Dave's Wordpress Blog:
Why I'm working on an aggregator — Background — The first RSS aggregator developed at UserLand was called My.UserLand.Com. It was a centralized application, like Bloglines or My.Yahoo. It first shipped in 1999, alongside My.Netscape.Com, which took a different approach.
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Web 2.0 Companies I Couldn't Live Without — There have been numerous 2005 "best of" and 2006 "predictions" posts over the last few weeks as the year comes to an end. I'm not going to write one of those. Giving out "best of" awards seems presumptuous to me, given that I've been blogging all of six months.
Chris Anderson / The Long Tail:
ANNOUNCING THE FORTUNE 500 BUSINESS BLOG INDEX — Short form: In collaboration with Socialtext, we've created a wiki that tracks which of the Fortune 500 is blogging. We found that only 4% of the F500 are doing so. Check it out here. — Long form: Earlier this year I was at a dinner …
RELATED ITEM:
Michael Barbaro / New York Times:
Internet Sales Show Big Gains Over Holidays — Online retailers, whose growth was expected to level off after a decade of dizzying gains, experienced a stellar holiday season, according to two preliminary reports released yesterday, as traditional stores like Wal-Mart and Target cemented their place on the Web.
Robert Strohmeyer / Wired News:
Best (and Worst) Gadgets of 2005 — 2005 has been a banner year for gearheads, with more hot gadget launches than you could shake a USB cable at. But there's a great chasm separating pre-launch buzz from real-world performance, and not all gizmos live up to the hype.
Discussion:
Xbox 360 Fanboy
David Kesmodel / Wall Street Journal:
Microsoft Places Big Bet On Multiplayer Gaming — Microsoft Corp.'s new Xbox 360 videogame console comes bundled with lots of bells and whistles, such as movielike graphics. But Microsoft's bid to reshape the videogame industry largely is tied up in one feature: the machine's emphasis on online play.
Khoi Vinh / Subtraction 7.0:
Breaking News — This is going to be a hard post to write, so I'm going to keep it as short as I can, but forgive me if I run long. After pouring so much of my blood, sweat and tears into Behavior, I've decided that the time has come for me to leave this terrific company that …
Discussion:
Susan Mernit's Blog