Latest Technology News

Microsoft slashes price of Xbox 360 HD DVD add-on

Microsoft continues to play hardball in the next-generation DVD format wars, this time slashing the price of its add-on HD DVD player for Xbox 360 by 30 percent.

The price cut does not seem to be effective for all retailers: as of Wednesday morning it was only showing the new $129 price at Toys-R-Us and Amazon.com. In any event, the move shows that the Redmond company is nowhere near ready to give up on HD DVD.

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Comcast to split 'triple-play' services into HD premium, value tiers

Citing Verizon as his company's principal -- if not only -- real competition going forward, a senior Comcast executive told an investors' conference this morning it's responding to FiOS with a huge investment in higher-definition services.

NEW YORK CITY (BetaNews) - "You don't love issuing press releases like the one we did last night," admitted Comcast co-CFO Michael Angelakis at a UBS financial analysts' conference early this morning. Angelakis was referring to a less-than-pretty picture of Comcast's subscriber growth, which it had to admit was lower than previous estimates.

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News Corp takes a leap of faith in Beliefnet

Media conglomerate News Corp said Wednesday that its film and television arm had purchased religious site Beliefnet, which is the most popular religion site in the US. Although terms of the deal were not disclosed, it is believed that News Corp paid in the tens of millions for the site. Topics on the site are not just Christian-centric: subjects on other religions are covered, including Judaism, Hinduism, and others.

Beliefnet will likely remain a separate entity and would not be integrated with other News Corp web properties. However, the site may look to integrate somewhat with MySpace in the future, Fox Digital president Dan Fawcett told the Wall Street Journal. The site would also adopt advertising technology that was developed by Fox Interactive for MySpace, he said.

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Former Moto CTO takes job with Cisco

Cisco confirmed late Tuesday that Padmasree Warrior would take a position with the company as its chief technology officer, just one day after she left Motorola following the exit of CEO Ed Zander. Warrior would be a good fit for Cisco as it moves into becoming more of a consumer company, but holds a good deal of enterprise and networking knowledge which is still very much the company's primary business.

"I am eager to bring to Cisco my technical expertise, over 20 years of experience in many aspects of the communications industry, a global bent of mind and an energizing leadership style," she said in a blog post announcing her hiring. She also said the company's drive to build new paradigms in communications drew her to the company. Warrior would report to CEO John Chambers.

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On second thought, Microsoft probably won't buy SAP

At the end of the day Tuesday, SAP finally denied speculation that the company might be acquired by Microsoft. But analysts tended to doubt those rumors anyway. Here's why.

SAP AG Chief Executive Henning Kagermann has reportedly finally put rumors to rest that his company has been talking with Microsoft about some sort of acquisition of the German-based software giant. But even in the absence of a flatout denial from either SAP or Microsoft, analysts contacted earlier this week found the possibility a bit hard to swallow -- and wondered how the conjecturing even got started.

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XM agrees to higher performance royalties

In what could signal the beginning of the end of the performance royalties debate, XM says it has agreed to an annual fee based on a gross revenue scale -- what Internet streamers would prefer -- rather than a listener-hour scale.

XM Satellite Radio today agreed with the US Copyright Royalty Board to a performance royalties rate that's an escalating flat percentage of its adjusted gross revenues. Up to this point, the service was paying a third of a cent for every listener who pays attention for an hour.

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Exec exodus from Motorola continues as CTO leaves

With CEO Ed Zander on his way out, news came Monday that the company's chief technology officer has also left the company.

References to Padmasree Warrior had already been removed late Monday from the corporation's Web site, and a spokesperson confirmed her departure, saying it had been in the works since last month. No reasoning was given for her resignation.

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Google adds AIM capabilities to Gmail chat

Google said Tuesday that it had added interoperability with AIM into its GTalk client within Gmail, allowing users to login to their AIM accounts from within the client.

While the feature would allow Web-based access into AOL's service, the feature has not yet made it into the desktop client. All features native to the Gmail version of the chat client, such as chat history and and automatic sorting of buddies based on how often the user communicates with them would work for AIM contacts as well.

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Should Sprint Nextel spin off WiMAX?

Sprint Nextel this week publicly raised the spectre of spinning off Xohm, the WiMAX broadband wireless business being built on its emerging 4G network. Will this present an obstacle for WiMAX in the US...or is an obstacle being lifted?

Consumers' Union just rated Sprint Nextel wireless service at the bottom of the pack, scoring 67% out of 100% in customer survey-based comparison results released today. But believe it or not, that's a 2% gain over last year, and Sprint is treating the news as a positive trend.

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iPhone has strong early showing in browser share

Despite being on the market for only five months, the iPhone already has nearly a 0.1 percent share of the global browsing market, according to research firm NetApplications.

While it may seem extraordinarily small, with respect to mobile devices, the data -- released this week by research firm NetApplications -- is actually quite significant. Windows CE, which has been on the market for ten years, has only a 0.06% share, while Hiptop, the makers of the Sidekick, only counts for a 0.02% share.

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Samsung to sample nearly four times faster graphics memory

Next February at the industry's leading symposium on semiconductor technology, Samsung is preparing to present a dissertation and perhaps a sample on a new class of graphics memory with 375% the data rate of today's GDDR3.

Along the way, someone at some point decided to skip a number: It will be called GDDR5, and unless someone else steps forward really soon, Samsung may be the only manufacturer (unless Rambus steps up to the plate) to present not only a technical explanation but also working samples to a solid-state circuits conference in San Francisco in February.

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MPAA's student P2P sniffer pulled over copyright issues

In an embarrassing blunder for an organization that has made copyright one of its signature issues, the MPAA is now being accused of violating copyright itself.

As part of the organization's fight against the pirating of movies, the Motion Picture Association of America had been urging universities to install an Ubuntu-based toolkit that would assist it in tracking and reporting students who were participating in file-sharing. The Association proposed the so-called "University Toolkit" as part of letters sent to 25 universities back in October.

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Hamburg court re-locks iPhone in Germany

A German court has ruled that T-Mobile should not be forced to sell an unlocked version of Apple's iPhone, rejecting a complaint by rival Vodafone that led to an injunction last month.

Vodafone and smaller network Debitel had complained to the Hamburg District Court that it was not legal to tie a phone to a single carrier. Apple has built its iPhone business around selecting a single partner per country, and in exchange for the exclusivity, it receives a cut of new customer signups.

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Vista SP1 to replace 'Reduced Functionality' with nagware

A service originally designed to compel unpaid Vista users to obtain genuine licenses is apparently being scrapped in Service Pack 1, to be replaced with a more "in-your-face" approach.

In a prepared Q&A released by Microsoft this morning, corporate vice president for Windows product marketing Mike Sievert divulged that Reduced Functionality Mode (RFM) -- a service that disables certain features of Windows Vista until the user activates the system, assuming she can -- will be scrapped in Service Pack 1. In its place will be something that reduces the user's experience instead.

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MySpace may compete with record labels for distributing new music

The social networking site is looking to draw users by offering exclusive video and audio content from artists, and is offering incentives for those artists to, in effect, "sign with MySpace."

Called MySpace Transmissions, the service will focus on differentiating itself from its competition through content that is not available elsewhere. Participants will be able to upload videos for viral distribution, or sell exclusive tracks directly to the consumer.

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