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Yahoo! Launches Buzz, a Digg Competitor

Yahoo! Launches Buzz, a Digg Competitor

Even with talks of a potential buy out from Microsoft and it's imminent demise circulating Yahoo! is continuing to roll out new services and update its products at an almost frantic pace. The company has opened up its search services to third party developers, updated it's corporate focused Zimbra mail server platform, launched a live webcam site, updated it's Yahoo! Video service, picked up the rights to the FoxyTunes Firefox extension, and launched or updated a host of mobile initiatives, including a developer platform, a new version of its Yahoo! Go service, and OneConnect which allows you to see which of your Yahoo! contacts is near by.

Now Yahoo! is entering the social news aggregation field dominated by Digg. Yahoo!'s prominence may help its new news voting service 'Digg' out a niche for itself, but the social news arena is a crowded one. In addition to the powerful Digg, which can bring a site to its knees with traffic if one of its stories makes it to the front page, there is the whimsical Stumble Upon which is like hitting shuffle on the Internet, the Wired owned Reddit, the news and politics focused NewsVine, the AOL-Netscape powered Propeller, and many smaller competitors.

Yahoo! Buzz is not with out its unique features however. In addition to user votes, Buzz will incorporate Yahoo! search traffic. The more people search for a topic, the more buzz it will generate. Yahoo has also partnered with several large publishers such as Esquire, the New York Times, and the Economist to place Buzzed stories on the Yahoo! home portal.

Only time will tell if Yahoo! Buzz can find its place in this crowded market, or if the company is wasting its time and energy, but the integration with the Yahoo! portal gives it a big leg up on other competitors.

From The New York Times

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Computers, MySpace, Google

Facebook to Add Instant Messaging

Facebook Hopping on the Instant Messaging Bandwagon
It was bound to happen eventually (if for no other reason than MySpace did it first) -- Facebook is finally offering up an instant-messaging service. Ironically, Facebook's new IM service may have the effect of killing off a couple of chat applications already available on the social-networking site.

Initial rumors claimed that the new Facebook IM service, which is to be embedded into people's profiles, would be based on Jabber, the same standard underlying Google Talk. This would have meant that other IM programs, such as Pidgin, Meebo, or even Google Talk, could connect to the Facebook service easily and bring it to the desktop. These rumors, of course, turned out to be false, and Facebook IM, at least initially, will only be available on Facebook pages.

With MSN Messenger, Yahoo!, AIM, Skype, Gizmo, and Google Talk already clogging the Internet, we're pretty confident we don't need any more new IM services. Especially not ones that can only be accessed on the Web by logging into a separate place from all your other IM services. But if Facebook ever manages to get all the other IM programs to work with its IM service, then it might become an attractive online chat place indeed.

From TechCrunch

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Audio/Video, Computers

Yahoo to Close Subscription Music Service

Yahoo Exits the Music Biz
Yahoo! is obviously having a tough week. First, Microsoft made a hostile bid to purchase the company; then, over the weekend, the Web pioneer announced it was closing down its popular Yahoo! Music service. Mid this year, Yahoo! Music Unlimited subscription service will officially close its doors and offer customers the opportunity to move their subscription over to Real's Rhapsody. Rhapsody struck a deal with Yahoo! that will allow Yahoo! Music customers to continue to pay, for a limited time, the $8.99 a month that Yahoo! charges, though eventually they'll hav to decide on whether to continue their subscription with Rhapsody for $12.99 a month.

Oddly enough, just as Yahoo! was announcing the closing of its music subscription service, it also announced the acquisition of FoxyTunes, an extension for Firefox that allows you to control your music library from your browser's status bar.

After jettisoning its music service, Yahoo! hasn't said anything out its plans to leverage its in-browser music player, but we're sure the company has something surprising up its sleeve.

Presumably all those Sansa Connects that work exclusively with the Yahoo! Music Service will now work with Rhapsody -- or so we hope.

From Cnet

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Computers, Google

Yes, Google Is That Good

While the Internet has made it easy to stay informed about what's going on in the world, it's also made it possible for hype to spread and grow at an incredible rate, often faster than real news. So, it's good from time to time to take a step back from the hype and look things over, which is just what PC World did with search engines. They compared the top options and asked the simple question: Is Google as good as everyone says it is?

The answer, perhaps unsurprisingly, is that yes, Google is that good. However, what may surprise you is that Google didn't cream the competition (like Yahoo! and Microsoft's Live). In fact, in terms of actual text-based searching (just looking up information about Abe Lincoln, for example) Google was bested by Yahoo!'s AlltheWeb as well as by AltaVista. However, its video, picture, and address searching, along with its ubiquity on mobile devices, still makes Google top dog in the search engine category.

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From PC World

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