| Today |
| 10:32 AM |
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Dell Withdraws From 3PAR Bidding War
 It looks like the bidding war for 3PAR could be over. Dell has just issued a release indicating that it will not increase its most recent $2 billion proposal to acquire 3PAR, and the company's has ended acquisition talks for the data storage company. Dell is entitled to receive a $72 million break-up fee from 3PAR upon the termination of its merger agreement.
This morning, HP upped the ante today with an offer worth $33 per share or $2.4 billion. 3PAR has accepted HP's bid. Dell also said that its improved offer included a proposed commercial relationship and an increased break-up fee. 
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| 10:19 AM |
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On Its Second Birthday, Google Chrome Officially Hits Version 6
 Ever since it became stable enough to use on a day-to-day basis on a Mac last year, Google Chrome has been my browser of choice. Other browsers have been adding some nice features -- but Chrome keeps adding them faster. And today on its second birthday, that rate of change isn't slowing down.
Google has officially rolled out Chrome 6 as the latest stable version of the browser today. This shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone using the dev or beta builds of the browser, but it's nonetheless an important mark as it means it's stable enough for mass consumption. 
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| 09:22 AM |
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After Dell Matches $2B Offer For 3PAR, HP Ups Its Bid To $2.4B
 It looks like we're back to square one again. Dell has matched HP's $2 billion offer to buy 3PAR, and HP upped the ante today with an offer worth $33 per share or $2.4 billion. 3PAR has accepted HP's bid.
Dell had previously signed an agreement to acquire 3PAR for $18 per share or $1.13 billion, with a provision for matching competing bids. HP then effectively outbid the company and offered $1.6 billion, but Dell matched that offer yesterday, after which HP made a renewed bid for $1.8 billion. HP then offered $2 billion last Friday. 
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| 08:59 AM |
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Cisco To Acquire Smart Grid Monitoring Tech Company Arch Rock
Cisco this morning announced its intent to acquire privately-held Arch Rock, which specializes in IP-based wireless sensor network technology with a focus on energy and environmental monitoring and Smart Grid applications.
Financial terms of the transaction are not being disclosed. 
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| 08:48 AM |
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AOL And Google Renew Search Deal For 5 Years, Expand Partnership To Mobile, YouTube
 AOL CEO Tim Armstrong hinted that this was coming, but this morning Google and AOL announced a five-year renewal of the search deal between the two companies. Google will continue to power search across AOL’s content network and properties. The partnership will be expanded to include mobile search and YouTube.
Armstrong said in a statement “Today is another important step in the turnaround of AOL...AOL users will be getting a better search and search ads experience from the best search company in the world – Google. After nearly a decade-long partnership in search, we’re looking forward to expanding our global relationship to mobile search and YouTube. All aspects of our partnership will be improved by this deal.”
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| 08:27 AM |
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Android Users Can Now Check In To Foursquare By Using Their Voice

Thanks to a partnership with Vlingo, owners of Android 2.0 or higher-equipped phones can now check in to Foursquare and update their status on Facebook and Twitter simply by speaking into their phones.
To try it out, download the free Vlingo app to your Android handset.
Using your voice, you can then update your location status on Foursquare by saying "check into Logan Airport", locate your friends with commands like "where are my friends?" and "who's nearby?" as well as send shout-outs to your buddies (e.g. "shout at Logan Airport waiting to board a plane to San Francisco"). 
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| 08:26 AM |
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Allmyapps Snags 1 Million Euros for iTunes-for-Apps
 The iTunes-for-apps, Allmyapps, has just announced its first round of funding with French VC fund, Elaia Partners - the same firm that has backed French all-stars like Goom Radio, Goojet and Criteo. With 1 million in the bank, the Paris-based company founded in June 2009 plans to focus on product development and emerge as the leading Microsoft-dedicated app store.
Just so happens that Allmyapps, founded by Thibauld Favre and Arnaud Coulondre, is also the company that won the startup pitch competition at TechCrunch Paris in March. 
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| 07:52 AM |
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Xobni Study: Email Overload Means We’re Never Not Working

A new study by email purveyor Xobni confirms what we bloggers know to be true, there's actually no such thing as a day off in the Internet age (Want more visceral proof than an email study? Check out the timestamp of this post).
Information anxiety has pretty much put the kibosh on "time off" as two out of three Americans and Brits check their email outside of regular business hours (ha) and half of Americans email while on vacation (double ha).
The Xobni study, an online survey of 2,200 British and American adults ages 18 and older conducted in August, holds that the traditional 9-5 work day no longer exists due to the fact that Americans and Brits can't stop checking their email. Apparently we sneak a peak at out inboxes while on vacation, weekends, sick days and even when we are (gasp!) in bed. 
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| 06:52 AM |
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60% Of Apps In Android Market Are Free (Vs. 30% Or Less In Other App Stores)

App store analytics provider Distimo yesterday published its latest report, once again zooming in on the pricing of mobile applications across a variety of platforms.
Consistent with its previous findings, Google's Android Market has by far the largest share of free applications available compared to other mobile app store, but the gap is also widening.
In July 2010, 60% of all applications on Android Market were free of charge, representing an increase of 3% since May 2010 when it was 57%. 
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| 06:20 AM |
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WhereMark Launches Location-Based Service, A Cautionary Tale
 Okay, here's the deal, if you are a startup unveiling a location-based service in a market saturated with location-based services please tell us what is unique about you vs. the 800 or so other services out there and please please whatever you do don't copy the RULE.fm pitch, which we liked the first time around.
WhereMark
"We are writing to you in an awkward state of euphoria and exhaustion. This combination is resulting from 15 months of being strung out on more Diet Coke than a human should consume, a sleep debt rivaling the national deficit, and finally going live with our startups newest service."
RULE.fm
"Another late night, we’re tired, hopped up on caffeine, malnourished and could probably use a shower…but man do we love this startup S#!T. We are sitting here with the launch of our productivity tool rule.fm ( http://rule.fm – screenshots attached) around the corner." 
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| 06:08 AM |
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The Tweeting Wifi Body Scale Scores 3 Million Euros
Withings, the Paris-based company behind the famous tweeting wifi body scale, has just scored 3 million euros from French VC firm, Ventech. It's the company's first round of funding and will be used primarily for the development of 2 new products, which should come out within the next 6 months.
For anyone who isn't already familiar with the company's first product, the tweeting wifi body scale, it's a terrific wifi-connected device that tracks your weight. May sound simple but it can recognize up to 8 users and allows you to transfer your weight information to a computer, iPhone or iPad - which is where the Tweeting comes from, obviously. The product launched officially last year on June 25 goes for €129 in France and is a great little way to track a fitness program or diet. 
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| 04:01 AM |
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Google Sued Over Nexus One 3G Connectivity Problems, Misleading Claims

On Tuesday, Google was slapped with a breach of contract class action lawsuit alleging that its Nexus One smartphone failed to maintain 3G connectivity and that the Mountain View company not only made misleading claims about the product's capabilities but also failed to adequately support customers in search of answers.
Plaintiff Nathan Nabors of Florida is seeking damages and class action interest on behalf of residents of his home state as well as California who have bought the Nexus One since its January debut.
The only defendant named in the suit is Google - in other words, manufacturer HTC and exclusive 3G carrier T-Mobile USA are not included in the suit. The potential size of the classes is not specified in the complaint. 
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| 03:20 AM |
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Virgin America Rides Loopt Taco Truck Special To Fifth Largest Revenue Day Ever
 Sometimes the titles just write themselves. On Tuesday Virgin America and Loopt partnered to offer people two-for-one tickets to Cancun or Los Cabos from California. All you had to do was check in on Loopt at SFO, LAX or one of a variety of taco trucks in San Francisco and Los Angeles in a four hour window.
So how did it go? Loopt says 1,300 people checked in to a single taco truck in San Francisco, and 80% of those people have already bought tickets on Virgin America for flights. It was Virgin's fifth highest revenue day ever, says Loopt (we're confirming with Virgin). 
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| Wed, Sep 01, 2010 |
| 11:59 PM |
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Twitter Just Killed Something Else: Their Own Website. Twitter For iPad Is That Good.
 Are you addicted to Twitter? Do you have an iPad? Even if the answer to both is "no" right now, after you see Twitter for iPad, those answers are going to change -- quickly.
Yes, the wait is over. Launching tonight in the App Store is Twitter for iPad -- the first official native iPad app from the company. We all knew it was coming (Twitter even said so a few months ago), but it has been a long wait. It was definitely worth it.
Like most people, I wander into hyperbole from time to time. But it has now been a few days since I first played with Twitter for iPad, and I still think it is hands-down the best iPad app out there. It's that good. With all due respect to Reeder, Instapaper, Flipboard, and Pulse, this is now going to be my go-to app for just about everything related to reading news. It's simply such a great experience for reading tweets -- and more importantly, reading the links your friends share. 
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| 10:55 PM |
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The iTunes Ping Social Question: Follow, Friend, Or Lurk?
 Right now, many of you are likely downloading iTunes 10, the latest version of Apple's media software. The most notable feature in this new version is Ping, Apple's first stab at building a music social network (or really any kind of social network). It's interesting on a number of levels, but even the most basic level is pretty interesting: Ping's social graph.
First of all, to use Ping at all you have to opt-in to it. While Apple CEO Steve Jobs touted the 160 million built-in users (it's currently available in iTunes in 23 countries), that's a bit misleading because many people won't opt-in to using it -- many of them for no other reason than they're lazy or just don't care. But assuming you do opt-in to it, the next social layer is interesting as well. Immediately, you're taken to a Privacy Settings page where Apple asks you how you'd like to use the service. This is where you decide if you want to use the friend model, the follow model, or the lurk model. 
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| 09:47 PM |
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Yes, iTunes 10 Is Finally Here. Get Downloading
 If you're anything like me, you've been hitting refresh on the Apple iTunes website waiting for them to put iTunes 10 up for download. Sure, it has said it was available since this morning, but when you click through, it would still be iTunes 9.2.1 with a promise that iTunes 10 was "coming soon." Well, it took several hours, but it's finally here.
Apple announced iTunes 10 this morning at their event in San Francisco. The latest version is more than just a minor update, there are several things that have been reworks, including some UI elements. But the biggest addition is obviously Ping, the music social network Apple has baked into iTunes. I got a chance to use it earlier on some demo computers and on the iPhone/iPod touch -- it's very interesting. Now it's time to see if 160 million built-in users agree. 
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| 09:26 PM |
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BankSimple Deposits $3.1 Million From First Round, Ron Conway, And Sean Parker

New York City startup BankSimple today disclosed that it raised its first venture funding in a round led by First Round Capital, Roger Ehrenberg's IA Ventures, and Village Ventures, along with seed investors SV Angel (Ron Conway) and Nauiokas Park (Amy Nauiokas and Sean Parker), and . But it did not disclose how much it raised. I've confirmed that the round was $2.9 million, with an additional $190,000 raised last year in convertible debt (which converted to shares with this round), for a total of $3.1 million raised. 
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| 08:55 PM |
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Inflection Raises $30 Million To Take On The Public Records Industry
Inflection, a company aimed to democratizing the public records system on the web, has raised $30 million in Series A financing led by Matrix Partners and Sutter Hill Ventures.
Founded in 2006, Inflection aggregates public records and data from past and present and currently operates Archives.com, a site that sources historical records made available on the web. Archives is meant to allow people to access birth, death, marriage, divorce, and other historical vital records to get information about deceased members of their families. Currently the site has more than 2 million members conducting searches and sees 3 million unique visitors per month. 
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| 08:37 PM |
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20 Year Old Founder Jessica Mah Raises Over $1 Million For InDinero
 We've confirmed that wunderkind Jessica Mah is one week away from closing a hotly anticipated round of seed financing for her banking startup InDinero. Confirmed investors in the round (which still has three open spots reserved for valley VIPs like SV Angel) include 500 StartUps' Dave McClure, Microsoft's Fritz Lanman, and YouTube's Jawed Krem.
Part of the YCombinator class of 2010, Indinero aims to be the Mint for small businesses and is off to a running start as this latest round is set to close between 1 and 1.5 million. According to Mah she had to turn investors away, and promises that more "juicy details" about the story behind the funding are yet to come.

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| 07:49 PM |
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Elevation’s LPs Refuse Extension for New Deals, Fund Riding on Facebook and Yelp
 The hits just keep on coming for Elevation Partners, the one-time digital media, private equity dream team that has reconfigured itself as an investor in late stage Web 2.0 treasures. Earlier this summer, Elevation requested an extension on investing its $1.9 billion fund, and TechCrunch has learned that that request was denied—a move that came as surprise to us and to Elevation, we hear.
So what does that mean? Clearly, LPs are sending a strong message that has to do with Elevation, but also has a lot to do with the broader market: They want to see some returns before they pony up more money. But the news isn’t nearly as bad as it sounds. 
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| 07:40 PM |
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ReadyForZero Wants To Help You Get Control Of Credit Card Debt
 Credit card debt is a serious issue for Americans, who have an average of four credit cards each. Defaulting on credit card bills can result in damage to your credit score and even bankruptcy. Y Combinator-backed ReadyForZero is launching today as easy to use web-based platform to help guide consumers out of credit card debt.
The site asks you to import your credit card information, including what types of cards you have, the amount owed, and will then walk you through the same steps a trusted financial advisor would give you. Based on your minimum payments, salary and balance, ReadyForZero will figures out an optimal
strategy for what to pay and when. The site will send you reminders and you can track your progress online. While you cannot actually pay your bills directly from ReadyForZero, the startup will eventually allow users to do this directly from the site. 
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| 07:31 PM |
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Ooyala Expands Into Australia, Appoints Former Adobe Exec As Managing Director
 Premium streaming video service Ooyala, serving such influential media properties as Fremantle Media, Vice Magazine, Glam Media, Electronic Arts as well as yours truly, today announces its plan to expand its operations to Australia. To helm this initiative, the company has appointed former Adobe executive John Treloar as Managing Director for the Australia and New Zealand region.
Founded by former Googlers, Ooyala's "killer app" is the simplicity of its "Backlot" video platform as well as its souped up analytics for content managers and advertisers. 
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| 06:59 PM |
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There’s Some Spotify In My Sonos
 Great news for Europeans and those few U.S. users of music streaming service Spotify. Sonos, creator of the super cool (my descripton) S5 music player, is announcing today that users will soon be able to listen to streaming Spotify music through their Sonos devices. That means users will now be able to listen to music files stored on any computer in their home as well as Spotify, Rhapsody, Napster, Deezer, Pandora and other services.
U.S. users still have to wait for Spotify to launch here, of course, or find another way to access the service. On the upside, Sonos says their iPad controller app will be hitting iTunes sometime soon. So they've got that going for them, which is nice. 
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| 06:46 PM |
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What Does It Mean? Microsoft Rides The ‘Double Rainbow’ Meme To Pimp Its Wares

An anonymous tipster - we have reason to believe it was actually a Microsoft employee or contractor - just casually pointed us to a new promotional video that was published on one of the Redmond software giant's YouTube channels.
In case you've been living under a rock the past few weeks, or are the type of person that goes out and actually interacts with people in real life on a regular basis, you'll immediately realize they are riding the coattails of the (awesome) 'Double Rainbow' meme. 
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| 06:06 PM |
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Amazon Unveils $.99 Fox And ABC TV Show Purchases. Apple Fanboys say wha?
 Whoa, this came out of left-field. Amazon just announced that its Video on demand service will be serving up $.99 ABC and Fox purchases just like Apple. However, it's not just limited to one platform as Amazon Video on demand is widely available a bunch of products. This could be huge and might take some sales away from the new Apple TV. 
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| 05:19 PM |
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Facebook Will Hit $2 Billion 2010 Revenue, Says Mob Of Unofficial Facebook Spokespersons
 I'm done digging on this story and I'm just going to come out and say it. Facebook revenue estimates have been all over the place for 2010 - from less than a billion ranging up to nearly $2 billion. eMarketer recently estimated $1.28 billion, for example.
I haven't poked around on the Facebook CFO's laptop for a while now (those were the days!), so I don't have anything better to report. Except this - fairly senior Facebook employees are telling their friends that the company will hit and just exceed $2 billion in revenue this year. Part of this is just talking to friends. And part of it is recruiting.
Right or wrong, it's a consistent message over the last several weeks that has come from half a dozen or more second hand sources. And it's always the same message - "my friend at Facebook just told me they were going to have more than $2 billion in 2010 revenue." 
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| 05:00 PM |
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Pinger’s Textfree Is Massive, Now Over 3.5 Billion Messages Sent
 It's a promise sounds too good to be true: free, unlimited texting to and from your iPhone. And even if a service did manage to offer it, it certainly couldn't be sustainable, could it? Pinger, a startup that launched back in 2006 as a voicemail service but has since pivoted in a big way, would beg to differ: the company has managed to become immensely popular on the iPhone by offering free text messages to users through an application called Textfree. And it's just blown past another major milestone: users have sent 3.5 billion text messages using Textfree since it launched in March 2009.
So how do the do it? The key, unsurprisingly, is ads. Textfree has gotten such massive distribution that it can now turn a profit by placing ads in the application (the company has been profitable since December). Textfree doesn't insert ads into your conversations — rather, it shows basic display ads which get 1.4 billion ad impressions a month. 
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| 04:50 PM |
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Steve Jobs’ Doublespeak Strikes Again: No Actually Meant Yes For Apple TV
"You're going to be able to be watching a movie, push it to your TV, and finish watching it there. You're going to be able to push photos from your iPad to your TV... it's going to be pretty cool."
-- Apple CEO Steve Jobs, September 1st, 2010
Many people noticed that Jobs' "and one more thing ..." intro today was reserved for Apple's "hobby," Apple TV. Jobs also referred to Apple's TV venture as a "hobby" back at the D8 conference in June with significantly less tongue in cheek. In an interview with All Things Digital's Kara Swisher, the Apple CEO implied that he had given up on it with the dismissive "smarter people than us will figure it out."
"The problem with innovation in the TV industry is the go-to-market strategy ... Ask TiVo, ask Roku, ask us. ... ask Google in a few months. It's not a problem of technology, it's not a problem of vision, it's a problem of go to market strategy. [TV] is very tower of Babel-ish, it's Balkanized."
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| 04:11 PM |
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Preview: Apple’s Ping Music Social Network In Action On iOS [Pictures]
 One of the big announcements at Apple's event today was Ping, the music social network that Apple has baked into iTunes. But it's not just on iTunes for the computer, it's also a part of iTunes on the iPhone and iPod touch. This will be a part of the new iOS 4.1 release which is going out to developers right now, and should be out for consumers next week.
In the demo area after the event, Apple had a bunch of iPod touches loaded with iOS 4.1, so we got to play around with it. It's a pretty slick experience on the device because it's so simple. Below find some pictures of how it works. 
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| 04:03 PM |
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Round-up: Our Take On Apple’s New Media Devices
 Apple's new lineup has been announced: A new iPod touch with a Retina display and dual cameras, a bite-sized touchscreen Nano, a sandwich-sized stream-only Apple TV, and updates to both iTunes and iOS, improving their social and gaming capabilities.
We've got the news in about 20 separate posts, sure, but we have yet to apply our keen blogging sense to the announcements, rooting through the specs and pricing like trained truffle-hogs, and emerging gorged with opinion. Only then, our blog-thirst sated with Coldplay and turtlenecks, can we resume normal coverage of non-Apple news. 
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