You don't have to buy the book -- all 320 pages are in the public domain -- but you do have to hunt.

(New York Times) — Edwin Perello discovered that Bing, the Microsoft search engine, could find addresses in his rural Indiana town when Google could not. Laura Michelson, an administrative assistant in San Francisco, was lured by Bing’s flight fare tracker. Paul Callan, a photography buff in Chicago, fell for Bing’s vivid background images. Read More…

(Mashable) — Microsoft’s search engine just got a whole lot more media-focused with the launch of Bing Entertainment, a new vertical centering on music, movies, TV and games. The goal behind the new destination at bing.com/entertainment is to make it easier to find what movie to watch, what music to listen to, what casual games to […]

(TG Daily) — Google ditches Windows. Hell breaks loose! Pink newspaper roils the Internets. Windows users cry, “D’oh!” I feel redonkulous for writing this, but I am a headline Slore and it is my job. So, Google, a known Microsoft uber-user (not), decides to ditch Windows because of security concerns. Read More…

by Kiara Ashanti If you were to think of Microsoft inking a sponsorship or advertising deal, you’d probably envision them signing onto a major sporting event or collaborating with a large technology firm.  Microsoft, after all, is an industry giant.  But Rodney Dorival, owner of Big Paws, Little Claws, a Manhattan-based dog walking service, is […]