Looks like Bin Jawad continues to be the front line. The back-and-forth battles over the town have settled down, and now the main fight is going to be to keep Qaddafi's forces from pushing the rebels out of Ra's Lanuf.
There were some clashes around the outskirts of Tobruk (in the far east, near the Egyptian border) but it's still not clear against whom or how significant. Tobruk itself remains solidly in rebel hands at this point.
Also some fighting around Az Zintan, to the southwest of Tripoli. Nothing major, but the local loyalist brigade commander was captured while in the hospital for treatment of wounds. Any kind of rebel offensive from the south would be welcome news, as it opens up a third front and takes some of the heat off Az Zawiyah and the main front near Bin Jawad.
There's also a fascinating (but clumsy) information war taking place on the message boards for sites like al-Jazeera English, where a steady flow of "reporters" or "concerned Libyans" are posting pro-Qaddafi messages and supposed "eyewitness accounts". The interesting bit is that AJ English has you sign in with a Twitter or FB account (or a few other identity options), and creates a linkback. And when you check their profiles, they totally don't match up with the story. Like a supposed "reporter" who writes in strangely stilted English with lots of unnecessary capitalization, when her FB account indicates a middle-aged American woman with an Amherst education who worked for the UN and lives in Paris.
Guess the Libyan Information Ministry and/or Libyan intel either created a batch of badly-constructed fake FB and Twitter accounts, or (more likely) hijacked a bunch and are just using them boilerplate without even looking at or understanding, the profiles they've hijacked. I'm very interested to see if you'll see this sort of disinformation campaign in other conflicts, and/or if a group like Anonymous would consider counter-hacking the hijacked profiles.