NYT claims Apple has dallied with investing ‘hundreds of millions’ in Twitter

Twitter expanded tweets on iPhone with New York Times

Apple has been on a social networking kick lately, what with Twitter’s footings in iOS 5 and OS X Mountain Lion as well as Facebook’s upcoming presence in iOS 6. From what the New York Times hears, that fascination could become more of a fixation. The company has reportedly chatted with Twitter in past months about the possibility of investing money on the scale you’d normally expect from a later-stage venture capitalist: the newspaper is talking “hundreds of millions” of dollars based on Twitter being valued at more than $10 billion. Any such deal would be less about funding (Twitter purportedly has $600 million-plus in the bank) and more about getting cozy in a social world where Apple still has some learning to do. Apple might equally want to dissuade competitors from getting any ideas, we’d add. Neither side will comment, and the negotiations aren’t even supposed to be active at present. Regardless, that Apple might have even toyed with a social networking investment could represent a major change in tack for a company that’s not always known for playing well with others.

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NYT claims Apple has dallied with investing ‘hundreds of millions’ in Twitter originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Jul 2012 23:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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3 Million Suckers Still Pay For AOL Dial-Up [Factoid]

Remember the whimsical sounds your 56k modem made as it connected to AOL? BADONG-BADONG! Then a semi-officious voice announced you were online, “Welcome!” Yeah, that was in the 90’s. Well according to the company’s latest earnings report there are three million fools who are still paying for AOL dial-up Internet. WHHHHHHY? More »

Google confirms it still has a ‘small portion’ of Street View WiFi data, apologizes

Google confirms it still has a 'small portion' of controversial Street View data, apologizes

It has seemed like Google was close to putting its Street View snooping controversy behind it a few times now, but one thing or another keeps bringing it back to the forefront. Today, it’s an admission from Google that it hasn’t deleted all of the so-called payload data in question after all. That revelation comes in a letter from Google Global Privacy Counsel Peter Fleisher to Steve Eckersley, head of enforcement at the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office (or ICO), in which Fleisher says that Google is still in possession of a “small portion of payload data collected by our Street View vehicles in the UK.” Fleisher adds that Google “apologizes for this error,” and says that the data was discovered after an extensive review of its Street View data that it has been conducting in recent months. For its part, the ICO has acknowledged that it received the letter, and notes that the data was supposed to have been deleted in December of 2010, adding that “the fact that some of this information still exists appears to breach the undertaking to the ICO signed by Google in November 2010.” You can find both statements in full at the ICO link below.

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Google confirms it still has a ‘small portion’ of Street View WiFi data, apologizes originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Jul 2012 13:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Telegraph  |  sourceICO  | Email this | Comments

TweetDeck updates web-based client with sleeker profiles, enhanced mentions and hashtags

TweetDeck updates webbased client with sleeker profiles, enhanced mentions and hashtags

Now that yesterday’s sudden Twitter outage is behind us, it’s now time to focus on the blue bird’s own, and very popular client, TweetDeck. The all-you-can-tweet service has quietly updated its internet-based client with some minor, but rather eye-pleasing tweaks. For starters, users profiles have received a slight design improvement for an overall “cleaner” look, while hashtags and mentions are now #clickable throughout TweetDeck’s web offering. These changes are now live, so head over to the TD site, enter your microblogging credentials and you should be all set to give ’em a whirl.

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TweetDeck updates web-based client with sleeker profiles, enhanced mentions and hashtags originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Jul 2012 13:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink The Next Web  |  sourceTweetDeck  | Email this | Comments

Vizify offers free infographics all about you, makes you feel like a big shot

Vizify offers free infographics all about you, makes you feel like a big shot

Infographics. The stuff of high turnover websites and news channels, right? Well, yes, but now you can bring the same white space and pastel shades to your own internet footprint, courtesy of free infographic web app Vizify. It’s still in its trial period for now, which means you’ll have to wait for an entry code to tap into the breezy visualization generator, but we managed to plug in as many social networks as we could to see how it all works. The service is definitely centered around those that are very connected to the internet. Vizify will draw information from Facebook, Twitter, FourSquare, LinkedIn and also connect through work-based websites you add yourself. It will then populate a clickable front page with circles including images, quotes and links to your profile elsewhere. The service, which is geared at recruitment, crafts a convenient short link to offer up on resumes or job emails. Edit options include a choice of color palettes, and the ability to tweak the layout of the information circles [seen above] and the larger pages that follow it, bringing either more career-centric (or interesting) content to the forefront. Sign up for an access code at the source to give it a try for yourself, or take a stalker-esque trip down an Engadget editor’s social network tracks at the second link below.

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Vizify offers free infographics all about you, makes you feel like a big shot originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Jul 2012 13:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Mashable  |  sourceVizify (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments

Intel SMARTi UE2p enables low-cost 3G

Intel has clearly been busy behind the scenes, announcing a new solution that integrates 3G power amplifiers directly onto radio frequency circuits. The resulting SoC is smaller in size, is more power efficient, and is less complex for developers to work with. Dubbed the SMARTi UE2p, Intel believes the chip will help enable lower cost 3G handsets and spur development for the Internet of Things, allowing devices to be constantly connected thanks to the low-power 3G solution.

Intel says that the SMARTi compromises of a 65nm die that incorporates a multi-band HSPA radio transceiver and power amplifiers. Power management and sensor duties are also integrated into the solution, allowing for a direct connection to the battery. Most important, it’s compact and cost efficient enough to fit into devices such as fridges, lights, and other home appliances, further enabling the creation of an Internet of Things.

The company also hopes the chips will find their way into low-cost 3G handsets in developing markets. Any interested parties will be able to get their hands on samples towards the end of the year, and Intel says that it’ll continue to work with certain power amplifier vendors top equip smartphones and tablets with even more efficient solutions.


Intel SMARTi UE2p enables low-cost 3G is written by Ben Kersey & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Facebook’s new Recommendations Bar pops up, just wants to be liked

Facebook's new Recommendations Bar pops up, just wants to be liked

Facebook’s Recommendations Box sits passively on many websites, allowing us to engage or ignore as we see fit. But too much of the latter option has led to something slightly different: the new Recommendations Bar — a pop-up variant which, when integrated by your favorite page, plugs site-specific links based on your friends’ thumbs and shares. The Bar is similar to the in-house recommendation pop-ups we’re all familiar with, but adds a like button for posting the current page to your timeline. It shouts much louder than the Box, so it’s no surprise that in early tests the new plug-in produced a three-fold increase in click-throughs. In this case, privacy wasn’t an afterthought — Bar integration, like the Box, is at the site’s discretion and sharing pages is very much on your terms. Just try not to accidently hit that like button during your daily scan of Bieber’s homepage.

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Facebook’s new Recommendations Bar pops up, just wants to be liked originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Jul 2012 09:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceCNET  | Email this | Comments

Twitter outage blamed on data center failure

In case you haven’t already heard, Twitter was down for a little bit today. Twitter users trying to access the service got nothing for a short while earlier this morning, and while many suspected it had something to do with Twitter’s current Olympics push, the truth is that the outage was actually caused by a problem at Twitter’s data centers. Normally this wouldn’t be that big of a deal, but this case is unique because, as VP of engineering Mazen Rawashdeh says, Twitter was hit with an “infrastructural double-whammy.”


Normally when Twitter‘s data centers falls over, there’s a parallel system running and ready to pick up the slack. This time, however, both the main data center and the backup system went down at nearly the same time, wiping Twitter from the Internet until the company’s engineers could restore one of the systems. “I wish I could say that today’s outage could be explained by the Olympics or even a cascading bug,” Rawashdeh wrote in a blog post. “Instead, it was due to this infrastructural double-whammy. We are investing aggressively in our systems to avoid this situation in the future.”

That cascading bug Rawashdeh mentions was responsible for the last Twitter outage, which happened just over a month ago. The timing of this crash was pretty bad too, as Twitter had been gearing up for tomorrow’s kickoff of the 2012 Olympics. Despite today’s hiccups however, things seem to be running just fine at the moment (and have been for a few hours now), so the world’s millions and millions of Twitter users can feel free to take a collective sigh of relief.


Twitter outage blamed on data center failure is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


ARM forms UK group to foster an Internet of Things, put 50 billion devices online by 2020

ARM forms UK group to foster an Internet of Things, put 50 billion devices online by 2020

ARM isn’t content with dominating the mobile space. It’s been by the far the most vocal about an Internet of Things where everything is connected — and to make that happen, it just established an industry forum in the UK that it hopes will establish common ground for all those internet-linked light bulbs, refrigerators and thermostats. Home energy firm Alertme, cloud-aware sensing outfit AquaMW, lighting maker EnLight and white space wireless guru Neul will start meeting with ARM from August 24th onwards to hash out our automated, eco-friendly future. There’s a certain urgency in this for the chip designer: it expects 50 billion devices on the grid by 2020. With IDC estimating a billion new connected devices just in 2011, the clock on that connected device transition is ticking very loudly.

Continue reading ARM forms UK group to foster an Internet of Things, put 50 billion devices online by 2020

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ARM forms UK group to foster an Internet of Things, put 50 billion devices online by 2020 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Jul 2012 19:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceThe Next Web  | Email this | Comments

The Internet Was Really Shitty Today (But I Still Love It) [Rant]

What the hell happened to the Internet today? Google Talk? Down. Twitter? Crashed. Messages? Completely awful. Chrome? Blowing up my laptop. The weather? Shitty. My hangover? Slight but smelly. That all made me very grumpy. More »