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...September. Other top acts to play it so far include the Rolling Stones, Justin Timberlake, Elton John and the White Stripes. A reunited Led Zeppelin will play a one-time only gig at the O2 next month (it was originally scheduled for November but an injury to guitarist Jimmy Page has pushed it back to December 10th.) Some 25 million fans surged online for that show's 18,000 tickets, crashing the arena's website (which goes to show that online, the O2 still has some way to go in terms of dealing with expectations). Other upcoming big draws include...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Revival of London's Millennium Dome | 10/26/2007 | See Source »

...TIME.com to fill a void--it is clear, clean, Webby and user-friendly. Now you can check in every morning, as I do, with Mark's PageCast, which highlights the day's big political stories. (It's also my way of keeping track of where he is.) The Page exemplifies TIME's tradition of aggregating the best information out there: it has links to the latest stories, campaign ads and TV clips from debates, talk shows and YouTube. If Barack Obama says something memorable on The Charlie Rose Show, you'll be able to find it on The Page...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Paging All Political Junkies | 10/25/2007 | See Source »

Another way to understand the difference between users of the two sites is to examine where people go after leaving their MySpace or Facebook page. MySpace users count multimedia and photography sites (such as YouTube, Flickr and Photobucket) as the most common sites visited after dropping by the site. Facebook visitors have a similar pattern, visiting sites like Slide, YouTube and Flixter. The one stand-out difference between the two is that, owing to Facebook's heritage as a social network for college students, 5% of those leaving the Facebook domain continue on to websites within the educational category...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MySpace v. Facebook: Competing Addictions | 10/24/2007 | See Source »

...time. Their miracle is their universal accessibility—they are loved by toddlers, teens, hippies, yuppies. And besides Potter himself, Albus Dumbledore is arguably the central figure of the entire saga—the only wizard whom Voldemort fears, the man who pulls all the strings, from page one to page zillion, to make sure that Harry can achieve his prophesied potential. Reading the book, Dumbledore becomes our grandfather, our protector, a God figure. To say we love him does not even come close...

Author: By Michael Segal | Title: Magic’s Greatest Secrets | 10/24/2007 | See Source »

...defense of his shifting position. All fine, but this seems to boil down to a few people complaining about four-year-old tax cuts and the economic views of a Bush adviser who hasn’t worked for Bush for two years. Not typically the stuff of front-page news. Malcom A. Glenn ’09, who was The Crimson’s summer editor, said he didn’t remember how he came to assign the story, although he pointed out that Mankiw “is a big figure on campus...

Author: By Michael Kolber | Title: Ombudsman: Some Notes from Summer Crimson | 10/23/2007 | See Source »

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