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Friday, March 13, 2009

Hulu’s Library Obsession

Elizabeth Holmes

Is more always better?
Hulu has expanded its content library considerably since its launch a year ago. The Internet video site has grown from 50 content partners to more than 130 and has nearly 40,000 pieces of video.

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Thursday, February 5, 2009

Alms for the Press?

Jack Shafer

We’ve finally reached the point at which some of the finest minds doing the biggest thinking about the battered news business believe the best eraser for red ink is… charity. Financial pros David Swensen, the chief investment officer at Yale, and his colleague Michael Schmidt posit that the best way to save journalism is to go the nonprofit route, funded by endowments. But is it?

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Thursday, January 15, 2009

Apple’s No. 2 Has Low Profile, High Impact

Nick Wingfield

When Apple Computer Inc. Chief Executive Steve Jobs lured little-known Timothy D. Cook to the company in early 1998, Mr. Cook was charged with straightening out the messy operations of a fallen Silicon Valley icon. Now, more than eight years later, Apple is resurgent and Mr. Cook is the company’s chief operating officer and its second in command. But he is still little known to the public–a stark contrast to Mr. Jobs, an executive so familiar that he’s lampooned on “Saturday Night Live.”

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Monday, January 12, 2009

CES: Introducing the Obama iPod Dock

Mary Pilon

When the popularity of Barack Obama meets the popularity of iPod speaker docks, you get…an Obama iPod speaker dock.
But Taiwan-based Ozaki, the company behind the dancing President-elect, didn’t stop there. The Obama dock is part of its iMini line, which fuses the technology of an iPod dock, radio, alarm and speakers–and fuzzy fabric.

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Thursday, January 8, 2009

Why Apple’s Steve Jobs Doesn’t Matter Anymore

Evan Newmark

That was one kooky memo Apple CEO Steve Jobs sent out Monday. And it is hard to imagine anyone but him getting away with it. But when you are both a genius and a cancer survivor, many people are willing to cut you slack. Especially if you have created $80 billion or so of shareholder value. Overlooked in the whole brouhaha over Jobs’s health, however, is its most crucial fact: Steve Jobs just doesn’t really matter anymore.

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Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Twitter Off to a Rough 2009

Ben Worthen

You might be familiar with phishing attacks, those messages sent by criminals that look like they’re from a bank or Nigerian prince. But what about Twishing?
The term may enter the tech lexicon this week, thanks to an attack targeting the Web site Twitter, which runs a popular service that lets people share short updates about what they’re doing.

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Friday, January 2, 2009

And the Bragging Rights Go to Internet Retailers

Christopher Lawton

No retail category had a great Christmas, but e-commerce players have some reason to gloat over their brick-and-mortar counterparts: In certain key holiday categories, online sales outperformed offline retail sales, according to market research firm comScore.

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Intel’s PC.com Site Steps Into Vegas Spotlight

Don Clark

Intel has never been much associated with glitz. The chipmaker, after all, essentially sells high-tech widgets that few people think much about these days. But nearly everybody at times has a question or a complaint about PCs–the inspiration for an Intel-sponsored Web site that plans to add to the star power in Las Vegas next week.

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Wednesday, December 31, 2008

John Malone Quietly Dumps IAC Shares

Shira Ovide

Why has John Malone been dumping shares of IAC/InterActiveCorp in the past two weeks?
Liberty Media Corp., the company controlled by cable industry pioneer Mr. Malone–and incidentally the majority shareholder in IAC–has in recent weeks sold roughly $17.5 million worth of IAC stock.
The recent sales raise questions about whether Mr. Malone is losing confidence in his IAC investment.

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Blame the Rich for Poor Online Sales

Ben Worthen

Sales for online retailers during the holiday season appear to have declined slightly from 2007, a calamity in an industry accustomed to growth of 20 percent or more. And it looks as though one group was keeping a tighter grip on its wallets than others: the wealthy.

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Tuesday, December 30, 2008

HP Printers: Big in Iran?

Justin Scheck

There’s lots of talk in the tech industry these days about capitalizing on growth in “emerging markets,” countries like China, Vietnam and Brazil where people are rapidly buying computers and printers.

A story in Monday’s Boston Globe says Hewlett-Packard Co. is taking that strategy one step further: Its printers, writes Farah Stockman, “have become a top seller” in Iran–a country whose economy the U.S. government wants to prevent from emerging.

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Monday, December 29, 2008

Georgetown Not Smiling on Apple Store

Yukari Iwatani Kane

Apple’s highly successful retail stores may be lauded for their sleek modern design and smart layout, but the Georgetown district in Washington, D.C., doesn’t seem to care.

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Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Even Bigger Nightmare on Tech Street

Om Malik

The technology sector, already rocked by the credit crunch and slowing global economies, is facing a bleak 2009, the impact of which is going to be felt across the entire ecosystem. From PC makers to chipmakers to chip equipment makers, almost everyone is bracing for a stomach-churning ride.

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Friday, December 19, 2008

How Apple Could Survive Without Steve Jobs

Justin Scheck and Nick Winfield

Apple Inc. set off shock waves Tuesday by announcing Steve Jobs will not speak at what the company said would be its final appearance at the Macworld trade show. The news sent the company’s stock downward, and raised questions about whether Mr. Jobs had new health problems or some new products were not ready.

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Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Germany’s SolarWorld Wants to Buy…a Car Company?

Eric Savitz

Have things gotten that bad in the solar industry? Something has prompted Germany’s SolarWorld to state its intention of offering one billion Euros to acquire four production plants and one headquarters currently owned and operated by the Opel division of General Motors. The goal? To create Europe’s first “green” car company and–presumably–sell enough electric and hybrid cars to offset the dismal margins of the company’s core solar business. One would think there’d be other fish to fry.

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