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» » » » Google starts over, sculpture on the moon and more
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Back in 2005, Google had tasked teams of engineers with developing a secret mobile product that would position it to better compete with Microsoft. When 2007 rolled around, teams had worked 40- to 80- hour weeks for almost a year in an effort to revolutionize mobile phones. However, Apple was first out of the gate, revealing the iPhone on January 9th and forcing Google to rethink all the work that had been done. Fred Vogelstein recounts the outfit's post-iPhone Android development and a touchscreen Dream device built to make up for iOS shortcomings.

A hundred years ago this week, The Klingsbury Commitment kept AT&T from being another broken-up monopoly that fell under the US anti-trust laws of the early 20th century. Brian Fung takes a look at the letter (one of the first successful PR campaigns) that maintained the company's hold on telecommunications and the monopoly's ultimate fall.
by Steve LeVine, Quartz
200 mile range in an electric car? Well, Envia Systems certainly thought it possible and it struck a deal with GM to power vehicles like the Chevy Volt. One year later, the deal is void, the startup is being accused of misrepresenting its wares and two execs are battling each other in civil suits. So, what went wrong?
Via : Engadget
The Sculpture on the Moon (7,060 words)
by Corey S. Powell and Laurie Gwen Shapiro, Slate
Paul van Hoerydonck is the only artist to have a sculpture on the moon.Slate's Corey S. Powell and Laurie Gwen Shapiro tell the story of Fallen Astronautand the Apollo 15 mission that placed the 3-inch aluminum figure in a small dusty crater in 1971.


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