Gmail Creator "Email Will Last Forever!" Has he tried Gwave?
techcrunch.com — Gmail Creator Thinks Email Will Last Forever. And Hasn’t Tried Google Wave. “Email is not going to disappear. Possibly ever. Until the robots kill us all.” – Paul Buchheit, creator of Gmail, co-founder of FriendFeed, currently doing vague infrastructure things at Facebook. (Submitted by SirPopper) More...
Want To Try Out Google Chrome OS For Yourself? Here's How
techcrunch.com — The public debut of Google Chrome OS today has the press abuzz over the potential of the new web-based operating system. And now that it’s open sourced, you have the chance to try it out for yourself. (Submitted by angrytortilla) More...
The Google Phone Is Very Real. And It's Coming Soon
techcrunch.com — The debate over Droid v. iPhone rages on, but lots more Android surprises are on the way. Get ready for the Google Phone. It’s no longer a myth, it’s real. Like the iPhone for Apple, this phone will be Google’s pure vision of what a phone should be. (Submitted by Chelackchy) More...
Digg CEO Adelson:I Don’t Think People Expect To Pay For News
techcrunch.com — This afternoon Digg CEO Jay Adelson was interviewed on Fox Business News, where he spoke about the future of Digg and the ways it could potentially cooperate with strugging news organizations. (Submitted by braveheart007) More...
Adobe Releases Flash Beta w/ GPU Acceleration & Multitouch
techcrunch.com — Today Adobe is releasing betas of both Flash 10.1 and Air 2.0. Among the many new features the biggest ones include hardware decoding of H.264 video to make playback on YouTube and other HD video sites faster as well as Multi-touch support. Betas are available for Windows, Mac and Linux. Phone support not available until later this year/early 2010. (Submitted by FirstDigg) More...
Bit.ly Now Summarizes Your Link Data For Even Better Metrics
techcrunch.com — Perhaps the top reason to use Bit.ly (beyond obviously shortening links) is for its analytics. The service makes it easy to see all sorts of data about your short URL links going out to services like Twitter. But sometimes looking at the bigger picture is more interesting than individual data. Now you can see that too. (Submitted by SirPopper) More...
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