- A couple big SF companies are backing out of their huge office spaces. Not the best sign, y'all. [SF Business Times]
- BuzzFeed has hired a lot of people in the Bay Area. [Business Insider]
- 44-year-old San Quentin inmate Michael Lamont Jones was found dead in his cell Monday. [KRON4]
- Rincon Hill Tower's been redesigned, but if they end up building that new Bay Bridge off-ramp the current plan's kind of moot. [SocketSite]
- SF's school board approved a ban on out-of-towners at the Ruth Asawa School of the Arts. [SF Chronicle]
- Twitter "wants to appeal to n00bs and power users all at once," but can it? [Wired]
- Why didn't Facebook ask our consent before experimenting on us? [Slate]
- Lung specialist Talmadge E. King, Jr., is [UCSF] med school's new dean.
- Shortly after Muni started letting two sets of its metro trains stop at stations, it had to suspend the practice. The issue? Bad software. [Bay City News]
- PG&E's president is retiring. [SF Chronicle]
- Construction has started at Moscone Center, all part of an expansion to boost the convention center's size to a million square feet. [KTVU]
- Described to me by its author as "A look back at some of the silliness of 1999 on the tech scene," if you don't see echoes of today in this look back at the bubble of 1999 you're not paying attention. [Dividend Reference]
- Suspect in a fatal Tenderloin drive-by has been arrested. [SF Examiner]