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• Courier: First Details of Microsoft’s Secret Tablet – It looks like a book, with dual screens. I want one. Also Courier tablet one of many Microsoft prototypes • Windows 7 launch party finalist e-mails sent out – Did you get picked in Houston to host a party? • Microsoft DRM Patent Could Revive Peer-to-Peer Music Nets – Digital Rights Management would be built in to peer-to-peer networks, breathing new life into them. • Best Buy and Verizon Jump Into E-Reader Fray – With a $399 e-reader called iRex. • AT&T notifies iPhone users of impending MMS launch – Coming Friday. • Starbucks Unveils Its First iPhone Apps – Check your Starbucks Card balance, find stores, and in a handful of West Coast markets, use the phone to pay for your order. • Friday’s Avalanche of Apps – More than 1,300 apps were approved in one day. Is the backlog cleared out? • USB-IF Sides With Apple, Spanks Palm in iTunes Sync Spat – Group that oversees USB implementation says Apple is not "hampering competition" by making sure that only iPods can connect to iTunes. • Google Sync: Now with push Gmail support – Now sync your Gmail using push, Exchange-style, with your iPhone or Windows Mobile device. • Google Chrome Injects Itself Into Internet Explorer With Chrome Frame – It’s an extension for Internet Explorer that displays pages in Chrome’s renderer. • Picasa Gets Face Recognition, Built-in Google Maps • A Year Later, H.P.’s Bet on E.D.S. Looks Like a Winner – Its acquisition of the services company is paying off. • HP unveils Skyroom video collaboration tool – Combines video calling with document sharing. • Real-time Web keeps social networkers connected – Four out of five adults use social networking at least once a month. Many rely on it to keep them connected to their friends most of the day. • Yahoo Goes Live With New Search Format – Check out the left nav, which makes it easier to organize searches. • Twitter’s Stone says no ads in 2009 – But there’s still pressure for Twitter to make money. • Amazon.com to Sell Groceries to All of Seattle While Heeding Webvan Lesson • ATI Radeon HD 5870 blazes onto the scene, receives approving nods – ATI’s DirectX 11-capable card arrives just in time for Windows 7. Reviews are good. The price is $380.
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