Fast Feed [1]
BP Manslaughter Charges, Twitter's Influencers, The Guardian's U.S. Expansion, and More...
Welcome to Fast Feed, the Fast Company reader's essential source for breaking news and innovation from around the web--bite-sized and updated all day.
Gmail rolls out behavioral advertising [3]: using similar algorithms for its priority inbox [4], new ads will depend on the messages you're been receiving and include local deals [5]. "Soon, some of you will start seeing fewer ads, overall," says a new promotional video. [Update: 4:37]
Windows Mobile OS [6] to take 2nd place with 20% market share by 2015, according to a new report by IDC (Android [7] will be number 1 with 45%). [Update: 4:37]
Oil could be gone in 50 years [8], even assuming constant demand, according to the HSBC [9] bank's senior global economist economist, Karen Ward. Gas is a difficult alternative because of transportation issues, but coal [10] will be around for around for another 176 years. [Update: 4:37]
Two flying robots [11] play ping pong in this viral video [Update: 4:37]
Gadhafi's son returns from US internship to command violent suppression [12]. Khamis Gadhafi was on a State Department-sanctioned marathon tour of US technology firms to learn how to modernize the country's infrastructure. [Updated: 1:24]
ATT admits to throttling 4G phones [13], says a fix is coming for the HTC [14] Inspire [Updated: 12:06]
Cloning ban fails in Europe [15]: intractable differences on how to stop the procedure [16] prevent legislation in the EU [Updated: 12:06]
Vimeo's launches new app [17]: uploading capability, sophisticated movie editing, and easy sharing [Updated: 12:06]
TSA Body Scanners have 'trivial' radiation levels [18]: New study says that roughly 4000 exposures [19] would equal a single mammogram. [Updated: 12:06]
Do Not Track legislation gets congressional support [20]: Sen John Kerry introduced draft legislation for the FTC [21] to develop and enforce privacy rules. [Updated: 12:06]
Gmail service [22] experiencing outages for some users, according to Google's [23] own public alert service [Updated: 11:04]

Justice for BP execs (maybe) [24]: the DOJ is considering manslaughter charges for BP, including Tony Hayward. This ain't no slap on the wrist.
Twitter's popular table [25]: A tiny fraction of twitter users, 0.02%, claim half of all the attention on the microblogging site.
The British are coming! [26] The Guardian is expanding coverage in the U.S. "the United States is going to be a more important part of what we do in the future," says Editor-in-Chief Alan Rusbridger
Canada's polite data caps hit Netflix [27]: A Canadian ISP has had enough of the gigs of data streamed from high-resolution Netflix movies. But, they do so in such a polite way: user settings are defaulted to limited streaming and can be switched back at will.
Loud and proud [28]: a new magazine for gay solidiers isn't waiting for the DADT repeal; it will be on shelves next month.
Sources: Digital Trends, CNBC, YouTube, Yahoo News, Digital Trends, Vimeo, Wall Street Journal, InformationWeek, Google.com, The Guardian, Mashable, Yahoo News, Ars Technica, Daily Caller
