Alex / Neatorama:
The Evolution of Tech Companies’ Logos — You’ve seen these tech logos everywhere, but have you ever wondered how they came to be? Did you know that Apple’s original logo was Isaac Newton under an apple tree? Or that Nokia’s original logo was a fish? — Let’s take a look at the […]
Archive for February 7th, 2008
The Evolution of Tech Companies’ Logos (Alex/Neatorama)
Thursday, February 7th, 2008
The Evolution of Tech Companies Logos (Alex/Neatorama)
Thursday, February 7th, 2008
Alex / Neatorama:
The Evolution of Tech Companies Logos — You’ve seen these tech logos everywhere, but have you ever wondered how they came to be? Did you know that Apple’s original logo was Isaac Newton under an apple tree? Or that Nokia’s original logo was a fish? — Let’s take a look at the […]
Expertise Knows No Bounds (Fred/A VC)
Thursday, February 7th, 2008
Fred / A VC:
Expertise Knows No Bounds — I opened an email this morning that started like this: … That’s as far as I got. I replied with incredulity and moved on. — I am the first to admit that Silicon Valley has the largest concentration of web entrepreneurs, web developers, and web financiers […]
Silicon Valley Arrogance (Fred/A VC)
Thursday, February 7th, 2008
Fred / A VC:
Silicon Valley Arrogance — I opened an email this morning that started like this: … That’s as far as I got. I replied with incredulity and moved on. — I am the first to admit that Silicon Valley has the largest concentration of web entrepreneurs, web developers, and web financiers of […]
RIAA boss: Move copyright filtering from ISPs to users’ PCs (Nate Anderson/Ars Technica)
Thursday, February 7th, 2008
Nate Anderson / Ars Technica:
RIAA boss: Move copyright filtering from ISPs to users’ PCs — Filtering sounds so wholesome. As with filtered water, Internet filtering backers suggest that their products simply keep the sludge from passing through, and who wants to drink unfiltered sludge?
Why Google’s unstoppable - Microsoft is trying to buy Yahoo … (Owen Thomas/Valleywag)
Thursday, February 7th, 2008
Owen Thomas / Valleywag:
Why Google’s unstoppable — Microsoft is trying to buy Yahoo because it believes online advertising will be a much bigger business than it is today, and it wants to have a piece of the pie. Yahoo has a massive number of users, and the second-largest share of Internet searches.
IBM shrinks Cell to 45nm. Cheaper PS3s will follow (Jon Stokes/Ars Technica)
Thursday, February 7th, 2008
Jon Stokes / Ars Technica:
IBM shrinks Cell to 45nm. Cheaper PS3s will follow — SAN FRANCISCO — At an ISSCC session yesterday afternoon, IBM announced details of a smaller, lower-power version of the Cell BE processor that powers Sony’s PlayStation 3. The Cell BE is currently fabricated on IBM’s 65nm SOI process …
OpenID Welcomes Microsoft, Google, Verisign and IBM (Michael Arrington/TechCrunch)
Thursday, February 7th, 2008
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
OpenID Welcomes Microsoft, Google, Verisign and IBM — As anticipated by TechCrunch UK in early January, OpenID is welcoming some big new partners to the club - Microsoft, Google, Verisign and IBM (TechCrunch UK anticipated all but Microsoft). — Google has been dabbling with OpenID …
Evolving the OpenID Foundation Board (The Shared Admin/OpenID)
Thursday, February 7th, 2008
The Shared Admin / OpenID:
Evolving the OpenID Foundation Board — This morning the OpenID Foundation announced that Google, IBM, Microsoft, VeriSign, and Yahoo! have joined the board. The OpenID Foundation was formed in early 2006 by seven community members with the goal of helping promote, protect and enabling the OpenID technologies and community.
Technology Leaders Join OpenID Foundation to Promote Open Identity … (Bill Washburn/The Earth Times …)
Thursday, February 7th, 2008
Bill Washburn / The Earth Times Online Newspaper:
Technology Leaders Join OpenID Foundation to Promote Open Identity Management on the Web — The OpenID Foundation today announced that Google (NASDAQ: GOOG), IBM (NYSE: IBM), Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT), VeriSign (NASDAQ: VRSN) and Yahoo! (NASDAQ: YHOO) have joined as its first corporate board members.