News to know: Red Hat, Amazon; Net neutrality; Malware with your news
Notable headlines:
Robin Harris: The governmental-communications complex: net neutrality now.
Dana Gardner: Red Hat partners with Amazon for Enterprise Linux fabric in Elastic Compute Cloud. Larry Dignan: Red Hat puts Enterprise Linux in Amazon’s cloud. Dana Blankenhorn: Can Red Hat ever make open source advocates happy? Paula Rooney: Red Hat, Sun deal reflects power shift driven by open source. Roland Piquepaille: 800,000 computers to fight cancer.
David Morgenstern: What Mac hardware do you need for Leopard's "good, better or best" iChat conferencing?
Leopard file move bug zaps data.
Adrian Kingsley-Hughes: Is the iPod/iTunes link monopolistic?
Gallery: Turning a profit in Second Life (above).
Valleywag: Digg close to $300 million sale? Heather Clancy: IBM: Energy concerns are translating into green-tech action among smaller businesses. Ryan Naraine: MSNBC Turkish site caught serving malware.
Dan Farber: True Knowledge enters the semantic search ring. Wink creates 'Winkipedia' for people profiles.
Some sites back online after NaviSite goof.
In Finland shooting, fallout for YouTube?
Web ad spending expected to double by 2011.
Mary Jo Foley: Windows 7 Server and other new Microsoft server releases in the pipeline. Microsoft moving closer to Centro.
AOL: Let’s become an ad network before this really unravels. Techmeme.
Larry Dignan: HP wants out of digital camera manufacturing. Cisco bests estimates in first quarter.
Matthew Miller: Opera Mini 4 delivers the Web to your mobile phone. Dana Gardner: Enterprise mobile remains up for grabs despite Google, Android and OHA.
Gallery: FogScreen features breakthrough projection technology (right).
Computerworld: 'America's Most Wired College' dives in to 802.11n wireless networking.
Dana Blankenhorn: Chip makers get serious about medical technology. Corporate or personal models in open source.
Adrian Kingsley-Hughes: Is the update burden getting to be too much? When it comes to releasing operating systems, Ubuntu have it figured out.
Caroline McCarthy: Eisner's advice to striking writers: Blame Steve Jobs, not the studios.
Microsoft aims to make Xbox more family-friendly. Sony to pull out of 32-nano research.Images: MIT's stackable electric car.
Dan Kusnetzky: Active Response - Cassatt's Take on Green Computing.
Larry Dignan: Maybe Google should fear Facebook's ad system. Bits: Log off and get to work.