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Location based social network Foursquare announced a new feature today: Tips Lists. Users and brands on the service are now able to bundle together sets of tips about places into thematic lists. Any user can make Lists, the interface for doing so looks quite helpful and simple, multiple users can collaborate on a List and followers receive notifications whenever a new Place is added to a List they follow. It's a good feature that offers List creators a powerful way to build relationships with users as a trusted tour-guide for their niche interests.
Want to get a push notification any time you check in to a place near one of Anthony Bourdain's favorite restaurants? I bet you do. Want to know when you're near where one of the Jersey Shore stars went to high school? Hey, I'm not going to judge. The best I've seen yet? Ben Popper's Visitors Guide to Silicon Alley (NY)
In our continuing tradition of rounding up new mobile application releases we found interesting and/or exciting over the past month, we present you with this new list of apps for July 2011. This month, we found a lot of great new iPhone apps, some Android and tablet apps, and a bunch of "notable" application updates.
As always, share your thoughts on those we missed in the comments below.
In our continuing tradition of rounding up new mobile application releases we found interesting and/or exciting over the past month, we present you with this new list of apps for June 2011. Previously in June, we shared a list of apps that came out in May and during the first part of June, so be sure to check that post for some early June app launches.
This time around, we're again focusing on new (and notably updated) iPhone and Android applications, as well as a few iPad, tablet and cross-platform apps that caught our eye. As always, share which apps are your new favorites in the comments below.
In this continuing series here on ReadWriteWeb, we round up some of our favorite new applications for smartphones each month, specifically for iPhone and Android devices. This spring edition includes some major new launches on Android, like Netflix and Google Music, as well as some incredible technology leaps on iPhone, like the app which identifies trees by their leaves! As a bonus for this month, we've added a section with notable app updates and another featuring new tablet apps.
In this continuing series, we round up some of our favorite new applications for smartphones each month, specifically for iPhone and Android devices. This spring edition is one of the longest lists yet - there have been a number of incredible new launches to highlight this past month. (And yes, we know it's May already, these things take time). As a bonus just for this month, we've added a section for new iPad and Honeycomb apps, too.
As always, feel free to share your favorite apps in the comments!

Twitter lists are a beautiful thing, a great way to gather together expert opinion on any topic. If you thought Twitter's own search was bad at retrieving archival conversations, though, is archival search of Twitter lists too much to dream of?
It may not be anymore, thanks to a startup called Nsyght. Nsyght has been around for a few years now, and it does a whole lot of things for and beyond Twitter, but the service's newest feature is what really moves the needle for me: The ability to filter and search the archives of the lists of people I'm following. I can see what Chris Grayson's Augmented Reality Peeps list has said about Google over the past few months, or what the members of the Enterprise Irregulars said about the much-tweeted #Workday analyst demo event earlier this week. Hello, useful!
The graphical user interface or GUI shapes and defines how we interact with the Web. These YouTube videos on GUI innovation can guide us to a more fluid and natural way to interact with not just the web, but with computers in general.
There are no iPads or iPhones in this collection. Their groundbreaking contributions to GUI have been noted on our site often. Instead, our choices for the best YouTube videos in GUI include a Perceptive Pixel demo, 10 finger multi-touch, Microsoft Surface, a popular Linux interface and 3D touch display. Also of note is Hyposurface, which is a screen made out of physically movable pixels.
Now that World Cup soccer has become the most popular Web event ever, we wanted to help you understand what it is about this sport that's so effective at capturing the world's attention.
From the number one video of soccer celebrities Ronaldinho and Ronaldo showing their best tricks, to the 50 best goals of all time, to street soccer on rooftops, these are our picks for the best videos with the greatest number of views. As a bonus we've included two honorable mentions. These two aren't the most popular videos, but they do much to explain the world-unifying force that the World Cup is. If we've left out any of your favorite soccer videos, please post your links in the comments below.
On the eve of ReadWriteWeb's Real-Time Web Summit we want to give you a better sense of what we're going to be unconferencing about tomorrow. For those of you that can't make it to New York City to attend the event, you'll be able to follow some of our activities on our summit stream page.
From the number one presentation, which has been viewed 10,000 times, to the tenth most popular, which has been viewed 600 times, all these presentations are less than 9 months old. They explain how companies can use the real-time Web to get ahead, and how media outlets can situate themselves to be the first to report breaking stories. Also explained in great detail is how designers are planning to use the real-time Web in the future. If you know of any presentations we left out, please leave a link in the comments below. And have fun tomorrow!
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