by Jason Clarke on February 9, 2010 at 10:00 AM

Who do you think of when you want to search for what's happening now? Increasingly people are searching social networks like Twitter and Facebook, and Google has increased the speed of its index to offer more up-to-date real-time information. In the realm of technology, Techmeme has had a lock on live news for a few years now.
But there's a site I recently learned about that you might not be aware ...
by Christina Warren on February 9, 2009 at 08:30 AM

Back in June, we covered OneSpot -- a subscription service that allows publishers and businesses to deliver relevant content from across the web to a targeted audience. As I described the service then, think of OneSpot as a white-label Techmeme/Sphere/Digg solution for small and large publishers. OneSpot is a really great concept, because not only do publishers have the ability to supplement ...
by Christina Warren on June 17, 2008 at 12:01 AM

Today, OneSpot has formally announced the commerical availability of its OneSpot publishing-as-a-service™ platform. This subscription service allows publishers and businesses to deliver relevant content from across the web to a targeted audience. Think of OneSpot as a white-label Techmeme, Sphere Netvibes and Digg solution.
For instance, if you publish a site about social media, OneSpot ...
by Brad Linder on May 20, 2008 at 04:30 PM

Over the last few years, technology news site Techmeme has gotten a lot of attention in the technology blogosphere. That's because it's a tool for tracking conversations and hot topics in the tech blogosphere. Yes, part of the reason we as tech bloggers pay so much attention to Techmeme is because we're self absorbed. But the site has also been a great source of news. Want to know what today's ...
by Brad Linder on April 14, 2008 at 10:00 AM

Over the past year, Twitter has become an increasingly important source of news and communication for technology bloggers. If you sign up for a Twitter account and follow a few of your favorite tech writers, odds are you'll get links to interesting stories they've written and articles they're reading as well as a lot of back and forth discourse between writers, writers and readers, and a whole ...
by Brad Linder on November 2, 2007 at 11:00 AM

The New York Times has launched a redesigned technology news page. The old school paper has partnered with some new school content partners, adding stories from third party sources like IDG and PaidContent. But probably the most interesting feature is that little column we highlighted in red. It's called "Technology Headlines From Around the Web," and it's being labeled a Techmeme killer. ...
by Ian Smith on October 22, 2007 at 12:00 PM

Digg has a problem. What was once a haven of obscure, insightful, and breaking news has become a cesspool of dated headlines, generic brand commentary, and fan-boy-blog spam. What happened? Why do the vast majority of front page links come from "popular" websites who feature a prominent "digg it" button on every article? Is there some conspiracy afloat? Is digg rewarding websites that send them a ...
by Brad Linder on October 1, 2007 at 04:00 PM

Technology news aggregator Techmeme has launched a new feature today, the Techmeme Leaderboard. Up until now Technorati has maintained one of the most useful blog ranking services around. By no means is Technorati's Top 100 an exhaustive list of popular blogs. But by measuring web site "authority" and the number of links other bloggers make to a site, Technorati's list has long been looked to as ...
by Brad Linder on September 11, 2007 at 09:00 AM

Blog indexer Technorati has launched a redesigned front page that would serve as an intriguing news site if you had time to read each headline before it whipped past you. But since Technorati indexes millions of sites, they have a lot of blogs to choose from. So whether you pick entertainment, politics, technology, sports, business, or life, there are a ton of blogs posting updates every few ...
by Dan Lurie on July 24, 2006 at 07:30 PM

Ahh, Technorati, what would we do without you. You are the reason we obsessively tag all our posts, and you dutifully respond to our pings in mere minutes (under 5 according to Technorati Principal Engineer Kevin Marks) to crawl our data. On today, your third birthday, you provide us with even more excitement, in the form of a spiffy re-design and some interesting new features. The new design is ...
by Victor Agreda, Jr. on May 10, 2006 at 07:00 AM

Just like iTunes did for file sharing music, Warner Bros. is going to start selling movies and TV online. While this is clearly an effort to legitimize the whole download yer entertainment thing, what's interesting is the use of BitTorrent as the tech behind the downloads. I don't think it's unusual though, as BitTorrent's technological solution to moving packets around is quite clever. It's a ...