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  • HTC Droid Incredible (Verizon): Noah’s Quick Take

    In case you don’t have the time or desire to read or watch full-length reviews, I’ve summarized my take on the recent wave of smartphones for you. 

     

    Click here for the index of my latest smartphone Quick Takes.

     

    HTC Droid Incredible (Verizon) – $199, Available Now (Back-Ordered)

     

    If Sprint’s Evo 4G is too big and heavy for you, or if you just want to be on Verizon’s network, Incredible is the best smartphone on the market right now. Packing a large 3.7″ display into a remarkably slim and light body, Incredible lives up to its name with smooth performance and solid voice and data performance. While Aaron complained of horrible battery life in his review, my Incredible has been on par with other smartphones in that regard. The 8MP camera isn’t anything to write home about, but Android 2.1 plus HTC Sense backed by a Snapdragon processor delivers an excellent mobile experience.

     

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  • Move Over Miss USA, Paris Hilton Wants Doug Reinhardt Back

    Paris Hilton has been bombarding ex-boyfriend Doug Reinhardt with phone calls after learning that the former slugger may be dating Miss USA Rima Fakih.

    Snoops tell HollywoodLife.com that the blonde socialite is distraught over reports Doug Reinhardt – who she dated for 14 months before calling it quits in April – is now cozying up to the beauty queen.

    While the former Hills star, 25, wants nothing to do with Hilton — and has been dodging her calls left and right — she’s determined to win him back.

    “Paris is furious. She was absolutely freaking out at the Cannes Film Festival when she heard Doug was talking to Rima. She’s been constantly contacting him and wants him back! Her mom Kathy has been consoling her. Doug is just over it.”


  • The Mass Effect Movie Gets One Step Closer To Reality [Entertainment]

    According to Heat Vision Blog, the Mass Effect movie (we reviewed Mass Effect 2 here) is in talks to get a writer. This is probably the number one game-to-movie translation we want to see right now. More »







  • ts(s) – Fall/Winter 2010 Lookbook

    ts(s) comes from Takuji Suzuki, whom some might know is Daiki Suzuki’s (of Engineered Garments, Woolrich Woolen Mills) brother. What Takuji brings to the table are elements of his brother’s style but in a more modern and detailed approach. Construction wise, the nuances of Takuji’s designs are more projected, which contrasts his brother’s more subtle and simple style. For Fall/Winter 2010, expect a lot of layering, soft fabric oversized jackets, and relaxed wool type suits.

    Continue reading for more images.







    Source: Denimaniac


  • Motorola i1 headed to Boost Mobile for $349.99

    Motorola i1 Best Buy

    So you want an Android phone but don’t want to be stuck in a long contract or pay an outrageous retail price for a DROID or EVO.  What’s an Android lover to do?  Head over to Boost Mobile and grab yourself a Motorola i1.  The iDEN device, the first pre-paid Android phone available, will be sold exclusively at Best Buy for $349.99.  From the look of things, Boost will be offering their standard $50 per month pre-paid option for unlimited talk/text/web on the i1, which seems like a great deal for a ruggedized Android phone, especially considering that the next best option on Boost is the aging BlackBerry Curve 8330.  As of now, there’s still no release date for the i1, but we’ll keep you updated as news continues to trickle in.  So, are any of you planning on going the increasingly popular pre-paid route and picking up a Motorola i1?  Share your thoughts with us!


  • IBM Wants To Control Your Car

    Via Prison Planet.com » Prison Planet

    Jalopnik
    May 25, 2010

    IBM Wants To Control Your Car

    A patent application filed by IBM engineers reveals the company’s developing technology that will allow governments to shut down the engines of private automobiles via traffic signals. It’s like Skynet… only much worse.

    Engineers from IBM, suddenly free from the burden of making computers, are hoping to ruin the driving experience by handing over the ability to stop and start car engines over to traffic lights, railroad crossing gates and other transportation signals. Here’s the abstract:

    The present disclosure is directed to a method for managing engines in response to a traffic signal. The method may comprise establishing communications with a plurality of participating vehicles; responding to a stop status indicated by the traffic signal, further comprising: receiving a position data from each participating vehicles; determining a queue comprising a list of participating vehicles stopped at the traffic signal; determining a remaining duration of the stop status; sending a stop-engine notification to the list of participating vehicles stopped at the traffic signal when the remaining duration is greater than a threshold of time; responding to a proceed status indicated by the traffic signal, further comprising: sending a start-engine notification to a first vehicle in the queue; calculating an optimal time for an engine of a second vehicle in the queue to start when the first vehicle starts moving; and sending the start-engine notification to the second vehicle in the queue at the optimal time.

    The goal of the system is to lower fuel usage and optimize the movement of vehicles through intersections by controlling engine operations remotely via traffic signals. A railroad crossing could sense the vehicles in the general vicinity were going to be stuck for a while and would then cut the power to save gas. It’s similar to the start/stop systems on a few modern cars but taken to perverse extremes.

    The patent just covers the method and steps for a system, not the actual communications technology, but it’s still scary and impractical in places where someone needs to use their A/C.

    [US Patent Office via TransportGooru]

    IBM Wants To Control Your Car 100210banner1

  • What does webOS need to be Tablet-ready?

     

    webOS tablet rumors have come in several flavors since the big HP buyout announcement: tantalizing hints from HP execs, dubious rumors, and winks from chipmakers to name just a few. It has us thinking: webOS clearly needs a few more features and functionality before it can be tablet-ready. Sure, webOS apps that are mostly built in HTML, CSS, and Javascipt may scale quite nicely, but some of the can and should be rewritten to take advantage of the extra screen real estate. There’s also the virtual keyboard issue – webOS will need one in order to work on a tablet. 

    There’s plenty more to think about once you start thinking about the iPad: should a webOS tablet auto-rotate so you can use it at any angle? If so, what do you do about the gesture area? Put it on all 4 sides? Plus, although we’re hesitant to mention it given the history here, it seems crazy for a webOS tablet to ship without a proper document editor.

    What other tweaks, changes, or additions do you think webOS needs before it’s tablet-ready?

  • Istanbul’s gigantic Autopia Europia to have track on the roof [w/video]

    Filed under: , , ,

    Turkey’s Autopia Europa – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Istanbul, Turkey will reportedly be home to the world’s largest auto dealership, called Autopia Europia. The space is so big it’s probably more convenient to think of it as an industrial complex, rather than an auto dealer: more than two million square feet, each of the five floors almost 20 feet high, 200 auto sales outlets hawking new and used metal, shot through with 56 eateries, 48 repair shops, 24 banks and 42 insurance companies. And that’s just a taste of the options.

    Perhaps the most unusual feature of Autopia Europia is the test-drive track on the roof of the building. The building’s developers expect six million visitors per year, and we can only imagine they’re including a lot of foot traffic in that estimate. With a 900-car parking garage, even with three people in every car, it would take nearly seven years to accommodate that many guests. Construction has just begun so they’ve probably got a couple of years to crunch those numbers again.

    You can have a look at it in the gallery of high-res renderings below, or in the video after the jump. Hat tip to Brian!

    [Source: GAD Architecture via dvice]

    Continue reading Istanbul’s gigantic Autopia Europia to have track on the roof [w/video]

    Istanbul’s gigantic Autopia Europia to have track on the roof [w/video] originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 25 May 2010 12:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Hutch Nabs $10M Computing Grant

    Luke Timmerman wrote:

    The Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center said today it has received two grants worth a total of $10.1 million to set up a high-performance computing cluster and center to safeguard research data. The money comes from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, aka “the stimulus,” via the National Institutes of Health. The plan is to create an energy efficient facility that will safely store “irreplaceable research data,” and to buy high-powered instruments, the center said in an e-mailed statement.







  • Nokia con Yahoo para completar la pila de servicios sobre el móvil

    YahooProbablemente hay pocas alianzas menos “sexys”, pero tampoco las hay con mejores cifras de usuarios sobre la mesa. Hablo del acuerdo entre Yahoo y Nokia: el primero se lleva a la web al segundo como porveedor de mapas, mientras que en los móviles Nokia estará el servicio de correo y de chat de Yahoo. Adicionalmente “federarán sus usuarios”, cruzando servicios de identificación.

    Hay varias lecturas, una es el posicionamiento de cara a los mercados emergentes donde la posición de Nokia es muy dominante en telefonía móvil. Luego tenemos la necesidad de Nokia de crecer en Estados Unidos y el empujón que supone la marca Yahoo en este país. Pero para mí lo más interesante es la necesidad de ambos de ofrecer una experiencia completa de la pila de servicios en el móvil. Yahoo se ha quedado fuera de las principales plataformas (Google, Android, RIM) en smartphones y no controla ninguna de ellas; Nokia por su parte sí que tiene su propia plataforma y además es fabricante, pero en servicios necesita empujar OVI y ahí es donde entra el valor de esta alianza para ellos.

    En cualquier caso, Symbian 3 y el Nokia N8 son la prueba de fuego para Nokia este año.

  • Fat vs. Lean Startups: What Works on the Web Is Different

    The trendy philosophy for today’s web entrepreneurs is the idea of the “lean startup,” where young companies make use of readily available tools and quick iteration to figure out their business without spending much money. That idea, popularized by entrepreneurs Eric Ries and Steve Blank and endorsed by VC Fred Wilson, also has its detractors, such as VC Ben Horowitz, who argue that startups should best position themselves to win without running out of money.  So today at the TechCrunch Disrupt conference in New York City, Wilson and Horowitz debated each other.

    VCs Fred Wilson (left) and Ben Horowitz flank moderator Erick Schonfeld at TechCrunch Disrupt

    “Building a company is really hard so you might as well build something important,” said Horowitz, of the new and influential firm Andreessen Horowitz. He said he’s disappointed to see smart entrepreneurs pitching him on small ideas like ad targeting optimization and avoiding expensive things like hiring a sales force, all because they’re holding themselves to bare minimum expenses.

    But Wilson argued that the best outcomes for both entrepreneurs and investors result from investing small amounts of money in risky ideas, and increasing the commitment as risk decreases. This ensures that founders are minimally diluted, as they can hold onto their significant stakes in the company if they don’t get desperate for funding because they’re running out of money. Even Zynga, which has raised something like $220 million in funding, isn’t exactly a fat startup, contended Wilson, as it hasn’t lost money following CEO Mark Pincus’ initial investment. Rather, those hundreds of millions have been the “insurance money” to allow Pincus and Zynga to make large risky bets without putting the company on the line.

    Horowitz, besotted with the promise of dreaming big, responded by saying: “I have to pause because Fred has removed all the joy out of being an entrepreneur.” He pointed to big-thinking companies such as the electric car maker Tesla, which has raised hundreds of millions in private and government funding. “As an entrepreneur you really don’t have a choice. Often the idea and the market dictate the amount of money you need to build.” Wilson never really countered this point.

    After Horowitz shot down Wilson’s self-described “fairly rigorous mathematical analysis” because it ignores the serendipity of startup opportunities, Wilson pointed out that Horowitz’ examples weren’t web companies. Sure, markets like automobiles and chips and biotech might need lots of money, but “in this sector, the web sector, I would argue there are very few ideas where the fat startup model makes sense.” This was his most salient point. Wilson also noted that managing large-scale companies takes experience, saying the first-time entrepreneurs he funded at Etsy, Twitter and Tumblr just weren’t ready. “I would not advise anybody to go fat startup if they don’t have that experience and that capability at day one.”

    Asked by moderator Erick Schonfeld who made a more cogent argument, the crowd sided with Wilson. I found it surprising that the cite-the-spreadsheet argument was more compelling than advice to think big — but this was an audience of web startups, after all, where lean is the new black.

    Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d):

    Why Startups Aren’t Changing the World



    Atimi: Software Development, On Time. Learn more about Atimi »

  • Shippers Are Blowing Off European Problems And Rushing Vessels Back Into Action

    Despite the concerns about Europe, global trade continues to show signs of a continued rebound. For example, average freight rates and volume reported by the container shipping company NOL (a leading player) have both continued to rise thanks to strength between North America and Asia.

    Chart

    Moreover, ship owners are bringing vessels back into action based on demand growth expectations.

    Fearnly Fonds:

    The idle container fleet fell to 4.1% or 549,000 TEUs (263 ships) from 5.3% or 306 ships two weeks ago…The rapid depletion of idle tonnage over the past six months has been due to two primary drivers, the large scale adoption of Extra Slow Steaming (ESS) on long haul routes and increased demand for vessels.

    Chart

    (Via Fearnly Fonds, Shipping Morning Report)

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Phi Beta Kappa elects 99

    Ninety-nine seniors from the Class of 2010 were recently elected to the Harvard College chapter of Phi Beta Kappa (PBK), Alpha Iota of Massachusetts, in the senior final election on May 11. Other members of the graduating class were inducted in two previous elections.

    The following seniors, including their Houses and concentrations, were inducted:

    Adams House

    Joseph Jiazong Lee, applied mathematics
    Tracey Chen Shi, economics
    James MacLeod Sterne, history

    Cabot House

    Max Joseph Kornblith, social studies
    Veronica Rey Koven-Matasy, classics
    Joshua James Nuni, social studies
    Hann-Shuin Yew, molecular and cellular biology

    Currier House

    Sara Avery Bartolino, government
    Christopher Tsung-jer Chen, molecular and cellular biology
    Victoria Jeannette Crutchfield, literature
    Jiashuo Feng, applied mathematics
    Jonathan Shulman Greenstein, economics
    Karen Aline McKinnon, Earth and planetary sciences
    Anjali Motgi, social studies
    Bradley Edward Oppenheimer, history and literature

    Dunster House

    Marino Felipe Auffant, history
    Allison Sarah Brandt, anthropology
    Alyce Michelle DeCarteret, anthropology
    Hannah Elyse Hausauer, psychology
    Joseph Matthew Stujenske, neurobiology

    Eliot House

    Samuel James Bjork, chemistry
    Kelly Ngoc-Nhu Diep, history of science
    Jessica Lindsay Fleischer, history and literature
    Jonathan Sidney Gould, social studies
    Laurence Henry Moses Holland, philosophy
    Natasa Kovacevic, economics
    Sondra Hope Lavigne, organismic and evolutionary biology
    Tracy Lingchen Meng, economics
    Sarah Wang, economics
    Elizabeth Jianing Zhang, neurobiology

    Kirkland House

    Kiran Narayan Bhat, government
    Matthew Hagop Ghazarian, government
    Amrita Goyal, organismic and evolutionary biology
    Shaun Patrick Hughes, German
    Robert Cameron Parker, economics
    Laura Paul Starkston, mathematics
    Hannah Sarina Yohalem, history of art and architecture

    Leverett House

    Caroline Anne Bleeke, English
    Samuel Keller Bonsey, history and literature
    Warakorn Kulalert, molecular and cellular biology
    Joseph John Michalakes, social studies
    Sarah Nazpari Schwartz Moshary, economics
    Grace Kathryn Ryan, anthropology
    Charlotte Allen Seid, chemical and physical biology
    Anna Shabalov, history
    Nafees Asiya Syed, government
    George Jing Xu, engineering sciences
    Chen Yan, chemical and physical biology
    Linda Yao, applied mathematics
    Anna Yuan-Yuan Zhang, economics
    Yifang Zhang, East Asian studies

    Lowell House

    Sophie Margaret Alexander, literature
    Maria Igorevna Baryakhtar, physics
    Philip Jad Daniel, economics
    Susan E. DeWolf, neurobiology
    Caitlin Leigh Lewarch, human evolutionary biology
    Linda Yang Liu, English
    Jessica Marie Luna, sociology
    Stephanie Nicole Miller, sociology
    Manisha Pandita, economics
    Rachel Sophie Storch, folklore and mythology
    Yongtian Tan, molecular and cellular biology
    Hannah Rose Trachtman, economics
    Jenny Yuan-Xing Wang, chemistry and physics

    Mather House

    Ekaterina Botchkina, philosophy
    David Tomas Escamilla, economics
    Liza Danielle Cork Flum, English
    Dan Ang Gong, neurobiology
    Men Young Lee, physics
    Caitriona Loretta Jennings McGovern, special concentrations
    Johanna Sarah Rodda, English
    Aliza Laura Stone, visual and environmental studies
    Christopher Tsong-Kai Wu, economics

    Pforzheimer House

    Michael James Buckley, applied mathematics
    Kledin Dobi, mathematics
    Robert Vincent Fitzsimmons, history of science
    Katherine Clark Harris, history
    John Samuel Riley, history
    Katherine Christine Wilson, history of science
    Sarah Yun, government

    Quincy House

    Melissa Rose Alpert, government
    Melissa Suzel Deas, sociology
    Daniel William Deighton, Romance languages and literatures
    Lillian Meili Fang, visual and environmental studies
    Jane Su Jiang, English
    Matthew Daniel Klayman, history
    Elijah Forrest O’Connor, special concentrations
    Charles Emerson Riggs, history
    William Marc Ruben, economics
    Meicheng Shi, economics
    Molly Riordan Siegel, history of science
    Benjamin James Tuyp, engineering sciences

    Winthrop House

    Elena Decatur Butler, applied mathematics
    Lee Hilton Dietterich, organismic and evolutionary biology
    Samantha Tsai-Wei Fang, economics
    William Veta Leiter, social studies
    Jennifer Alys Lo, molecular and cellular biology
    Kevin Zhou, government
    Olga Igorevna Zverovich, mathematics

  • Concrete USB drives weigh as much as they hold


    I think these are great, but to be honest I kind of question their practicality. I mean, they’re big — and that’s the point — but I think the novelty would wear off after a bit. 256 grams isn’t really that much, but it’s a hell of a lot more grams than one of these things. I like that they’re stackable, though.

    [via HardOCP]


  • Nvidia CEO: webOS needs a faster processor

    Nvidia CEO

    Released at CES 2009, the Palm Pre (and Pre Plus, for that matter) are a bit long in the tooth.  What’s more, the Pre and Pixi have a notorious reputation for being somewhat slow.  I love webOS, but am concerned that if they don’t get their act together, it’s going to become obsolete.

    Apparently, Nvidia CEO Jen-Hsun Huang believes the same.  In an interview with Laptop Magazine, he went to bat for webOS:

    “But it sure would be an honor to work on webOS. It’s a great operating system. If you look at the first generation of webOS phones, the Palm Pre, the UI is just brilliant. It’s just too slow. So it needs a faster processor. Otherwise, it’s a great operating system.”

    A fast processor, combined with a great operating system?  Sounds good to me.  Come up with a revised form factor, and I’m all ears.

    Via PreCentral


  • Dramatic bill sets out plans to restore UK civil liberties

    Via Prison Planet.com » World News

    PA
    May 25, 2010

    A dramatic bill to roll back the power of the State and abolish unnecessary laws was at the centre of the Government’s legislative programme today.

     The Freedom (Great Repeal) Bill sets out ambitious plans to restore freedoms and civil liberties lost in recent years.

    The coalition administration has DNA retention, identity cards, anti-terror laws, databases and the use of CCTV in its sights.

     Many critics accused New Labour of excessive legislation and eroding civil liberties during its 13 years in power.

     At its heart are pledges by senior ministers to “reduce the weight of government imposition” on citizens through laws and Whitehall policy.

    Full article here

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  • Greenpeace: This Arctic Drill Ship Owned By Shell Is The Next Deepwater (BP, RDSA)

    shell frontier discoverer

    Shell executives sent a 12-page letter to the MMS assuring that planned operations in Alaska would be vastly more safe than the BP’s Deepwater Horizon.

    Greenpeace seized on the letter and released a point-by-point rebuttal.

    Greenpeace cites past documents from Shell that discount the possibility of a faulty blowout preventer. Also, Shell’s Frontier Discoverer is 44 years old:

    Shell is scrambling to show that its plans are nothing like BP’s, but it cannot paper over the information contained in its 2010 Exploration Plan for the Chukchi Sea, which states, “a large oil spill, such as a crude oil release from a blowout, is extremely rare and not considered a reasonably foreseeable impact.” Shell dismissed the risk of a blowout, just as BP’s 2009 Exploration Plan downplayed the possibility of a catastrophic accident with the Deepwater Horizon, suggesting that it was unlikely, or virtually impossible, for an accident to occur. Shell claims that a Deepwater Horizon-type blowout would not occur in the Arctic Ocean because the exploration wells will be drilled in shallow water. However, on May 11 the former head of regulatory affairs at the U.S. Minerals Management Service – the agency with oversight for offshore drilling—testified before the U.S. Senate on blowout occurrence rates and causes, saying that “well control performance for deepwater drilling was significantly better than for shallow water operations.” Despite what Shell says, the risk of a blowout is higher in the shallow waters of the Beaufort and Chukchi seas. BP’s Deepwater Horizon rig was built in 2001, was state-of the-art and heralded as ushering in a new era of exploratory drilling. In contrast, Shell will use the drillship Frontier Discoverer for exploratory drilling in Alaska this summer. The ship was built in 1966, when Lyndon Johnson was President.

    In case you forgot, Alaska drilling is the real long-standing energy controversy.

    The Frontier Discoverer was cleared to drilling as soon as July, before Ken Salazar suspended all drilling for a month.

    Don’t Miss: Pictures Of A Louisiana Town Covered In Oil

    Disclosure: The author owns shares in BP and Transocean.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • HTC Evo 4G (Sprint): Noah’s Quick Take

    In case you don’t have the time or desire to read or watch full-length reviews, I’ve summarized my take on the recent wave of smartphones for you. 

     

    Click here for the index of my latest smartphone Quick Takes.

     

    HTC Evo 4G (Sprint) – $199, June 4 

    So long as you don’t find it too large or too heavy, which some of you will, Evo 4G is the best smartphone on the market right now. Android 2.1 and HTC Sense are smooth as butter on Evo, and the massive 4.3″ display looks great and makes for the roomiest virtual QWERTY board imaginable. Sprint’s $10/month “Premium Data” surcharge is incredibly annoying, though, considering that 4G isn’t yet available in most of the country.

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  • Local Governments Warn of Devastating Job Cuts

    The National League of Cities, a nonprofit that represents 19,000 towns and cities with a combined population of 220 million, released a report indicating devastating local-government job and service cuts. In the 2010 State of America’s Cities survey, 63 percent of city officials say poverty has worsened in the past year — the highest proportion since 1992. Additionally, 75 percent of officials think overall conditions have gotten worse, 84 percent say unemployment has gotten worse and 90 percent cite joblessness as a problem.

    Seven in ten respondents are cutting staff and delaying projects, and more than half say that service levels will decrease in 2011 if tax revenue does not go up. But tax revenue is not going up, the report notes:

    Despite a broad range of sentiments about the future of the country, local officials agree that the state of America’s cities continues to worsen, threatening long term national economic recovery. City budget shortfalls will become more severe over the next two years as tax collections catch up with economic conditions. These will inevitably result in new rounds of layoffs, service cuts, and cancelled projects and contracts. With local and state sectors comprising about one-eighth of GDP, and cities making up a significant portion of this sector, the services and employment offered by local governments are critical to the health of local and regional economies that drive national economic performance.

    Local governments directly employ more than 14 million people and indirectly many more than that — slight, but across-the-board, budget and staff cutting could mean hundreds of thousands of jobs lost.

    Rep. George Miller’s (D-Calif.) Local Jobs for America Act, currently in committee, would provide $75 billion to local governments to keep employees on the payroll and is the measure the National League of Cities is pushing for. But any deficit-spending programs — even to keep people employed — will have a lot of trouble passing a very debt-conscious Congress.

    Take, for instance, Sen. Tom Harkin’s (D-Iowa) proposal to grant $23 billion to keep public-school teachers in their classrooms, the Keep Our Educators Working Act, which is supported by Education Secretary Arne Duncan and the White House. Rep. John Boehner (R-Ohio), the House minority leader, responded:

    The American people recognize that Washington’s out-of-control spending is hurting our economy and stifling job creation, and they’re asking their elected leaders to make tough choices on fiscal responsibility. Unfortunately, the administration’s call for another $23 billion to pad the education bureaucracy will only make state governments more dependent on the federal government and more vulnerable when the federal funding explosion disappears. This latest state bailout proposal promotes the same flawed logic as the failed ‘stimulus’ bill that has contributed to a record $1.5 trillion deficit and left one in every 10 Americans from our workforce out of work.”

  • Murdoch Blocks Google From Indexing London Times Articles

    Via Prison Planet.com » Sci Tech

    Joe Pompeo
    Business Insider
    May 25, 2010

    Rupert Murdoch appears to be finally putting his money where his mouth is with respect to Google News.

    When Rupert Murdoch’s Times of London and Sunday Times switch to paid web sites sometime in the next month, only their homepages, not individual articles, will appear in search engines, reports paidContent’s Robert Andrews, who got a preview of the new sites on Monday night.

    Andrews writes:

    It’s all a more conservative strategy than News Corp (NYSE: NWS) stablemate WSJ.com, but: “When we showed it to people, that was the model they preferred,” said Times executive editor Danny Finkelstein. “We’re completely unashamed about this. We’re trying to get people to pay for the journalism and we wanted to do it in a very simple way.”

    Assistant editor Tom Whitwell added on the search issue: “The clarity is something that was very important. If you’re asking someone to pay for something, it has to be very clear what they’re paying for.”

    And only last week it seemed like Murdoch and Google were starting to get along!

    You can check out what the new sites look like here.

    Murdoch Blocks Google From Indexing London Times Articles 260310banner2