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Good morning. Here's the news. -
Ubimo, a startup founded by ex-Googlers, helps publishers and advertisers show ads to mobile users based on their location. It's raised a $2 million seed round. -
HTC is making its own mobile operating system for Chinese consumers. -
"Nokia believes its can use its role as the auto industry’s mapmaker as a launchpad into the connected car. In an interview with GigaOM, Nokia Here EVP Michael Halbherr shares his vision of the Nokia-powered vehicle." -
The Syrian Electronic Army took down The New York Times website for several hours yesterday. Here's how. -
A California school district hired a company to follow students on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter and listen for "cyberbullying, crime, drug-use and suicidal thoughts." -
"Twitter Inc. hired Nathan Hubbard, the former president of Ticketmaster, as its first head of commerce, part of a push to enable shopping via short postings on its social website." -
This working, 1/3-scale replica of a Macintosh from the 1980s fits in the palm of your hand. -
The Hyperloop is nice, but what about a tube that transports you from New York to Beijing in 2 hours? -
After selling his startup to Yahoo, former Xobni CEO Jeff Bonforte is now the executive in charge of Yahoo Mail, Messenger, Groups, Contacts, and Calendar. -
Marc Andreessen says the days of startups and even larger companies buying their own servers are over. | | | | | | | |
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