Solid or striped? Woman blogs about Williams' ties (AP) AP - Each night after watching Brian Williams deliver the "NBC Nightly News," an English teacher in Ohio is moved to go to her computer and write — about what Williams wore around his neck. The Brian Williams Tie Report Archive isn't the weirdest thing you'll find online, but it's up there. It's a snarky, occasionally appreciative and flat-out funny read that will have you looking at Williams as never before. Publ.Date: Wed, 26 Nov 2008 20:26:34 GMT Source: Yahoo.com
Flame war: The great Windows 7 debate (InfoWorld) InfoWorld - Not a day goes by in which InfoWorld fails to receive a flaming comment or e-mail attacking InfoWorld's Enterprise Desktop blogger Randall C. Kennedy and his recent analysis of the pre-beta version of Windows 7. As time goes on, it gets more personal. Recently, I received this little gem: "Randall C. Kennedy is a jaded, personally hurt, pathological liar who only does a disservice to your Web site." Publ.Date: Tue, 02 Dec 2008 11:00:00 GMT Source: Yahoo.com
Bloggers provide raw view of Mumbai attacks (AP) AP - When gunmen started spraying Mumbai with bullets and seizing the city's landmarks, countless people around the globe turned not to the television or the radio for news, but to each other. Publ.Date: Mon, 01 Dec 2008 12:05:33 GMT Source: Yahoo.com
Technorati cuts six jobs, pay (AFP) AFP - Technorati announced on Tuesday that it was laying off six employees and cutting pay for the remaining members of the blog search engine company. Publ.Date: Wed, 26 Nov 2008 00:03:21 GMT Source: Yahoo.com
Blogs feed information frenzy on Mumbai attacks (Reuters) Reuters - Bloggers across Mumbai fed live updates of the action after Islamist gunmen launched waves of attacks in the heart of India's financial capital, highlighting the emergence of citizen journalism in news coverage. Publ.Date: Thu, 27 Nov 2008 15:18:27 GMT Source: Yahoo.com
Twitter, blogs provide riveting accounts of Mumbai attacks (AFP) AFP - As heavily armed militants rampaged through Mumbai, bloggers, citizen journalists and users of Twitter, the short-messaging service, provided riveting, if sometimes erroneous, accounts of the bloodshed in India's largest city. Publ.Date: Fri, 28 Nov 2008 18:49:42 GMT Source: Yahoo.com
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