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Friday, November 6, 2009

Jimmy Wales on Wikipedia Quality and Tips for Contributors

Andrew LaVallee

Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales said Friday that the online encyclopedia aspires to be a higher-quality source of information but added that mainstream publications could learn from its disclaimers and community features.

“Our goal is to make Wikipedia as high-quality as possible. Britannica or better quality is the goal,” he said during a question-and-answer session at the ad:tech conference in New York.

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Using Online Tools to Save Time During the Search

Jon Gray

My productivity lapses don’t come from Facebook. My problem is a combination of world news sites and Twitter. Using RescueTime, an online time management tool, I’ve named two productivity goals for myself. One goal sets my unproductive time at less than 90 minutes per day. The other sets my highly productive time at greater than five hours per day.

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High Hopes for Tackling Terror

Yukari Iwatani Kane

Blowing away terrorists, apparently, never gets old.

The new videogame Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, set to hit stores Tuesday, is a sequel spawned by sequels. But rather than following the frequent pattern of franchises fading as they age, Modern Warfare 2 is the most highly anticipated game of the season.

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E-Commerce Health Is in the Eye of the Beholder

Geoffrey A. Fowler

Depending on whom you ask, U.S. online shopping is either in unprecedented decline–or one of the only bright spots in American retail.

On Thursday, comScore reported that U.S. online spending in the third quarter slipped two percent to $29.6 billion versus last year.

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The Sluggish Pace Toward an IPO

Scott Austin

In light of Ancestry.com’s IPO today, tech site Vator.tv calculated the average age of the venture-backed tech companies that have gone public this year.

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Thursday, November 5, 2009

A View of Atherton From Real-Estate Agents

Pui-Wing Tam

Atherton, Calif., is the mansion Mecca for many of Silicon Valley’s tech multi-millionaires. And so far in 2009, even though home sales and median property sale prices in the town have slowed from a year ago, The Wall Street Journal found that there hasn’t been as little activity as some techie buyers might think.

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Facebook “What People Are Up To,” MySpace “What People Are Into,” News Corp. Exec Says

Andrew LaVallee

News Corp.’s digital chief said Thursday that the company’s social-networking property MySpace is going in a different direction than rival Facebook, based on how its members socialize and share interests.

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Google CEO Eric Schmidt’s Take on Silicon Valley Wannabes

Jessica E. Vascellaro

Eric Schmidt is brimming with Bay Area pride.

In the 33 years that the Google CEO has lived in the Bay Area, Schmidt says he has watched a long list of regions try–and fail–to create technology capitals of Silicon Valley’s scale.

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EMI Sues Site Over Beatles Songs

Ethan Smith

The Beatles catalog finally became available for paid digital downloading, but not the way the band’s record label, EMI Group Ltd., intended.

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Litl Introduces Its Web-Based Netbook

William M. Bulkeley

Is a computer with no disk drive and no applications software still a computer?

Litl LLC, a small Boston company, says its eponymous Litl device is the future of personal computing. Litl is a Web computer with a full keyboard and an operating system designed for people who use online software like Google Docs and store their photos on Flickr or Shutterfly.

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Disney Plans Get a Cold Reception Online

James T. Areddy and Ellen Zhu

Walt Disney won’t make Shanghai the happiest place in the world.

That’s the early reaction from a surprising number of netizens, or Chinese Internet users, to confirmation early Wednesday that plans for Shanghai Disneyland have the green light to proceed. Of the posts streaming into tianya.cn, a major portal, early Wednesday, the negative views were solidly outweighing positive views.

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The Greatest Generation (of Networkers)

Jeffrey Zaslow

A 17-year-old boy, caught sending text messages in class, was recently sent to the vice principal’s office at Millwood High School in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

The vice principal, Steve Gallagher, told the boy he needed to focus on the teacher, not his cellphone.

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Psychoanalyzing Twitter

Marisa Taylor

Jack Dorsey, the chairman and co-founder of the popular microblogging service Twitter, shared far more than his site’s 140-character message limit when he offered himself up to a public psychoanalysis.

As part of an exhibition at the Rubin Museum of Art in New York City, Mr. Dorsey subjected himself to a Jungian analyst.

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Peek’s Twitter-Only Device Goes on Sale

Andrew LaVallee

Peek, a New York mobile start-up, has begun selling TwitterPeek, a new device for posting and reading Twitter updates.

TwitterPeek became available on Amazon and Peek’s Web site Tuesday. Its $100 price includes a full keyboard, always-on tweet delivery and nationwide Internet coverage, plus six months of service.

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Tuesday, November 3, 2009

AT&T to Verizon: There’s a Lawsuit for That

Andrew LaVallee

Verizon Wireless’s “There’s a Map For That” ads are already a fading memory for those eyeing the newer Droid campaign, but AT&T hasn’t forgotten them.

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