Y2K7 bug causes isolated glitches
Clockwatch We may have been little premature yesterday in declaring that America survived Sunday’s Daylight Saving Time switch unscathed.Comment Original post by The Register
Google Adsense and Competing Pay-per-click Ad Networks
Clockwatch We may have been little premature yesterday in declaring that America survived Sunday’s Daylight Saving Time switch unscathed.Comment Original post by The Register
Google and Microsoft want the federal government to approve a device that would make the Internet available over your TV.Comment Original post by APM’s Marketplace
Why won’t the current boom have as big a bust as the dot.com bubble? Sifting through this wide-ranging conversation at SXSW Interactive results in 5 key reasons that ‘Bust 2.0′ should be less painful to the …Comment Original post by …
Google ran this Doodle over the weekend, portraying the sport of Cricket. What was the occasion? I can’t find anything. (via Threadwatch) UPDATE (like four seconds later): Oh. Just read this. Apparently the Cricket World Cup is starting. Original post …
Viacom Inc. said Tuesday it has filed a $1 billion lawsuit against Google Inc. and its YouTube unit alleging that more than 160,000 of its videos have appeared without permission on their free video-sharing Web …Comment Original post by SmartMoney
Google Video’s homepage now has a sidebar showing off the videos that are getting the most traction in the blogosphere, both inbound links from Google Blog Search and embeds. Due to the popularity of YouTube, and the fact that YouTube …
(more…) Original post by Chris Gilmer
There is a common notion — sharply illustrated in the “Mac vs. PC” ads — that the computer world is divided into two camps: one dorky and utilitarian, the other hip and artistic.Comment Original post by E-Commerce Times
Internet, online and on the air Microsoft, Google, Dell, HP, Intel and Philips say they can deliver Internet over TV airwaves – and they’re pushing the FCC to give them the green light, says the Washington …Comment Original post by …
3.13.07 MSFT, GOOG in coalition to deliver Internet over TV airwaves Read more »
Viacom Inc., owner of MTV Networks, sued Google Inc. and its YouTube online video-sharing business, seeking more than $1 billion in damages for copyright violations.Comment Original post by KVUE.com
Could a new Microsoft competitor be sprouting in the backyard of the software giant? Xcerion , a Swedish startup that is developing a free Internet-based operating system that allows people to access their …Comment Original post by SeattlePI.com Microsoft Blog
UPDATED: Viacom is suing Google and its video-sharing platform YouTube for “massive intentional copyright infringement” of Viacom’s entertainment properties.Comment Original post by Internet News
Bobbie Johnson, technology correspondent Tuesday March 13, 2007 Guardian Unlimited Media conglomerate Viacom has broken cover against Google by suing the internet giant and its YouTube video sharing website for …Comment Original post by Guardian Unlimited
Viacom alleges that about 160,000 unauthorised clips of its programmes have been loaded onto YouTube’s site and viewed more than 1.5 billion times.Comment Original post by BBC
Xcerion works from within a browser, which developers can use to build Web-based versions of existing software or new applications quickly A venture capital firm has given a $10 million boost to a Swedish …Comment Original post by Infoworld
Web portal Yahoo! offers the mobile web experience, according to research published by the Strategy Analytics Wireless Media Lab on Monday.Comment Original post by Telecoms.com
(more…) Original post by Chris Gilmer
Viacom sued Google and its online video subsidiary YouTube for $1 billion Tuesday, the first big lawsuit against the online video site and its parent for copyright infringement.Comment Original post by CNN
When Google Inc. unveiled its $1.65 billion acquisition of video-sharing Web site YouTube in October, investors and Wall Street analysts generally cheered.Comment Original post by MarketWatch
Viacom, the entertainment giant that owns MTV Networks and Comedy Central, sued Google this morning for copyright infringement.Comment Original post by San Jose Mercury News on Topix.net