News Category

New & Updates

1.South Korea's free computer game model hits US

2.Apple Threatens To Close iTunes Store If Fee Hiked

3.Men happiest online, women prefer family time: poll

4.Congress targets rogue online pharmacies

5.Best Buy gets antitrust approval to buy Napster

6.Netflix adds Starz power to online catalogue

7.Internet Radio Bill Advances To White House

8.Congress passes bill to help save Internet radio

9.British band Oasis launching new album on MySpace

10.StumbleUpon Without Tripping on a Toolbar

Highest Hits 10

1.New languages crack Roman alphabet's Internet address dominance

2.FCC eases some broadband rules on AT&T

3.House panel votes to extend Net tax ban

4.Spears label files Web piracy suit

5.Press group slams Chinese online censorship

6.Blogger preaches Internet download freedoms

7.Italy launches auction for WiMAX licenses

8.Future may be murky for Yahoo and newspaper alliance

9.Chinese Internet Censorship Machine Revealed

10.YouTube lets users map videos onto Google Earth

StumbleUpon Without Tripping on a Toolbar


StumbleUpon announced today a new way to experience its signature Web site discovery: You can now "Stumble" onto user-recommended content without registering or installing a toolbar in your browser. Just visit StumbleUpon's new homepage.

"By allowing people to now Stumble without registering or downloading a toolbar, we will surface the best content on the Web to an even wider audience," said Garrett Camp, company co-founder, in a statement. But you'll still need to register if you want to recommend sites to other Stumblers.

Like registered users, visitors to the Stumble homepage will be able to track their favorite posts. The company is also upgrading its navigation, profile pages, user reviews, and ratings and comments. We'll have a detailed hands-on review later on; check back soon.

StumbleUpon also announced today a partner program: A partner site can integrate a StumbleUpon toolbar that Stumbles content only with the site. Initial participating sites are HowStuffWorks, The Huffington Post, National Geographic and Rolling Stone.

Originally posted on AppScout.