Search Results

Results 261-280 of 429 for Rob Spiegel

SEC Probe Into Hurd’s HP Exit Could Sting Oracle

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has apparently opened an inquiry into former HP CEO Mark Hurd's sudden departure from the company last August. The SEC is looking into whether Hurd leaked information about HP's planned US$13.9 billion acquisition of Electronic Data Systems to Jodie Fisher, an HP contract event coordinator, according to media reports...

E-Commerce Could Show Facebook the Money

In the movie "The Social Network," the Zuckerberg character keeps insisting to his marketing director that selling advertising on the site would make Facebook uncool. Six years later, we've grown accustomed to advertising on Facebook. Now, Zuckerberg's team is ready to take the commercialization of Facebook a step further, opening the doors for full e-commerce...

Zuckerberg Goes Searching in China

Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg was spotted in Beijing Monday at the headquarters of Baidu, China's largest search engine. A photo of Zuckerberg heading to lunch with Baidu cofounder and CEO Robin Li spread across the Internet, setting off speculation that Facebook is trying to figure out a way to overcome the Chinese government's blockade of Facebook. China blocks a number of American websites, including Facebook, Twitter and YouTube...

Oracle May Be Too Late for the Cloud Office Party

Oracle on Wednesday announced two cloud-based office productivity suites for the desktop and mobile devices -- Oracle Cloud Office and Oracle Open Office 3.3. Both products will compete directly with Google Docs and Microsoft Office ...

Critics Fret Over Commerce Dept.’s Internet Privacy Plan

The U.S. Commerce Department's proposed federal Internet privacy rules are a giveaway to data collectors, according to some consumer groups. Other critics say they could spell the end of the free Internet ...

Twitter Hauls in Funding, Contemplates Revenue

Twitter has received US$200 million in financing from the Silicon Valley venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, according to a Wednesday post by Twitter CEO Dick Costolo on the company blog. The funding pegs Twitter's valuation at $3.7 billion. Clearly, the investors believe Twitter will find an effective way to squeeze substantial revenue from its massive user community.

Google to Take Its Time Crowning Fast City

Google has put off making a choice on which city to use as a test for ultra high-speed broadband, according to a Wednesday blog post by Milo Medin, vice president of access services ...

Person of the Year: Zuckerberg Put a Human Face on Technology

Mark Zuckerberg, the 26-year-old CEO of Facebook, was named Time magazine's Person of the Year on Wednesday. Time argued the importance of Zuckerberg and Facebook saying, "Facebook has merged with the social fabric of American life, and not just American but human life: nearly half of all Americans have a Facebook account, but 70 percent of Facebook users live outside the United States."

Army to Enlist Smartphones for Active Duty

The U.S. Army wants to start issuing smartphones as part of each solder's basic equipment, the Army Times reported on Sunday. It plans to begin fielding smartphones, network equipment and applications in February to the first Army brigade under a combat team modernization program. In addition to smartphones, the Army will be testing other electronic devices that may be useful to troops.

Can Yahoo’s Rumored Cuts Keep Its Goose From Getting Cooked?

Yahoo is planning to cut its workforce by about 650 employees Tuesday, according to numerous press reports, in response to pressure from investors who want the company to inject some life into its lackluster stock performance ...

Google, Apple Scrap Over Nortel’s Wireless Patents

Apple, Google and others have entered into a bidding war for the patents held by Nortel Networks, which is liquidating its assets in bankruptcy, Reuters reported Monday. Nortel filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in January 2009 but failed to emerge successfully and began selling assets in mid-2009 ...

Paul Allen to Refile Sweeping Patent Suits With Specifics Spelled Out

A federal judge on Friday dismissed a patent lawsuit Interval Licensing -- Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen's company -- filed last August in Seattle against 11 firms, including Apple and Google. Interval claims the defendants violated four patents owned by Paul Allen's company Interval Research on technologies it developed before it folded in 2000. When the company closed, it transferred the patents to Interval Licensing...

Chrome Beta Testers Get Their Hands on Google’s Little Black Book

Google's testing program for its open source Chrome operating system is no ordinary beta. The company is inviting applications to be one of the reportedly 60,000 users who will be part of the beta test and receive a Cr-48 netbook loaded with Chrome OS. Google reportedly is signing up beta testers by U.S. ZIP code -- rather than on a first-come-first-served basis -- to get broad input...

Oracle Tightens Its Grip, Apache Slips Through Its Fingers

In protest over what it sees as excessive control over Java by Oracle, the Apache Software Foundation has resigned from the Java SE/EE Executive Committee on Thursday. Apache has served on the Java Executive Committee for more than 10 years ...

Google Comes to Microsoft Exchange’s Rescue

In what looks like a poke in the eye at Microsoft, Google has introduced Google Message Continuity, a service designed to safeguard Exchange messages through Gmail. The Postini-based service targets those who run Microsoft Exchange 2003 or 2007. It is designed to make sure users never lose access to email during an Exchange outage -- whether planned or unplanned...

Dell Cozies Up to Compellent

Dell announced Thursday it has entered into merger talks with Compellent Technologies, offering US$27.50 per share for a total of nearly $900 million. The offer is below Compellent's stock price on Wednesday of $33.65 a share ...

Disney-ABC Deal Closes Major Gap in Netflix’s Streaming TV Lineup

Netflix is spending big time to become the dominant video streaming player in the nascent Web-TV world. On Wednesday, Netflix announced it has reached an agreement with Walt Disney to stream ABC programs through its online service ...

IE9 to Let Privacy-Minded Web Users Leave No Tracks

Microsoft announced Wednesday that it will add a "do not track" option to the next version of Internet Explorer 9 when it is released in 2011. The Tracking Protection feature is a privacy tool designed to help keep third-party websites from monitoring users' Web behavior by letting users filter content on a page that may have an impact on privacy ...

Google’s Chrome OS May Cloud Microsoft’s Windows

What's the difference between a browser and an operating system? Or, can Google take on Microsoft is its sweet spot -- the Windows operating system? Google held a press conference in San Francisco Tuesday announcing Google Chrome OS, an Internet-based operating system that has been launched in beta version on a laptop known simply as "Cr-48." By next summer, both Acer and Samsung will release laptops with Chrome OS and Intel chips...

AT&T Bombs on Customer Satisfaction, Quibbles Over Grade

AT&T ranks as the lowest-scoring cellphone service provider in a new Consumer Reports survey that asked 58,000 customers to rate their carriers. AT&T was the only one to drop significantly in overall satisfaction from a year earlier. ...

E-Commerce Times Channels