Around the Web 9.10.08: Antitrust cops stir, satellite radio cries poor, Apple iPods polish
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-- Microsoft’s old predator, the Justice Department, may be preparing to go after new prey and pursue an antitrust suit over Google and Yahoo’s partnership over advertising. NYT
-- Google’s 10 years of products and acquisitions: Where are they now? Silicon Alley Insider
-- Now what? The newly merged Sirius XM Radio says it can’t pay its debt. WashPost
-- Can’t get along with friends, family and coworkers but can’t afford therapy or figure out how to get yourself on Dr. Phil? Sidetaker.com, a new website, uses the crowd to sort it out for you. Telegraph.co.uk
-- AOL revamps the front page of AOL.com and opens the door to outside e-mail and social networking services such as Facebook. PaidContent
-- In the counterintuitive department: The fact that there was no earth-shaking news at the Apple event Tuesday -- just a few tweaks of the iPod line and iTunes -- is a sign of how much of a powerhouse Apple is. CNet
-- TuneCore, which helps musicians put their work on iTunes, eMusic and Amazon, hopes to do the same for indie filmmakers. ArsTechnica
-- For the my-body-is-a-temple folks comes a new fitness gadget that will give minute by minute assessment of one’s health. NYT
-- MySpace Music, the awaited revamp of MySpace’s music site, will launch this month, no matter what, with or without its own CEO, says MySpace co-founder and CEO Chris DeWolfe. DigitalMusicNews
-- Michelle Quinn