Microsoft lays off 800 people
Microsoft is laying off another 800 people, adding to the 5,000 the company has already let go this year.
The Techflash blog first reported the news.
T-Mobile plans on-bill Android application purchases
T-Mobile will let its subscribers pay for Android applications on their monthly mobile bills starting Nov. 17, also introducing its own section [...]
Microsoft is laying off another 800 people, adding to the 5,000 the company has already let go this year.
The Techflash blog first reported the news.
T-Mobile will let its subscribers pay for Android applications on their monthly mobile bills starting Nov. 17, also introducing its own section of the Android Marketplace that day.
Oracle is planning an aggressive fight with European regulators if its attempt to take over Sun is slapped with a statement of objections in the coming week, said people close to the company Wednesday.
New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo has filed a federal antitrust lawsuit against microprocessor maker Intel, alleging that the company engaged in a “systematic campaign” of illegal conduct to protect a monopoly.
Cuomo’s lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware Wednesday, alleges that Intel extracted exclusive agreements from large computer makers and threatened to punish those perceived to be working too closely with Intel competitors.
Web sites such as job boards face a persistent problem: their data is constantly pilfered by automated bots.
The data ends up on other competing job boards, which have stolen the content. It’s a problem that plagues any Web site whose intellectual property must be publicly posted for free, or even those with subscription models.
A group of 12 mobile operators and vendors said Wednesday that they have agreed on a way to offer SMS (Short Message Service) and voice services on next-generation mobile network technology LTE (Long-Term Evolution).
The goal of the initiative, called One Voice, is to ensure widespread adoption of LTE and to avoid fragmentation on technical issues, according to a statement.
Novell has unveiled an enterprise social networking suite that is integrated with Google’s new Wave application and lets co-workers collaborate on documents.
We’ve known it was coming for a while now, but the milestone has finally been passed: Apple announced on Wednesday that the App Store now boasts more than 100,000 applications available for download. And download the people have, more than two billion times in 77 countries.
Adobe Systems has issued an update for five vulnerabilities in its Shockwave Player, which is installed on some 450 million PCs.
It classified the update as “critical,” its most severe rating. The vulnerabilities affect version 11.5.1.601 as well as earlier ones. The company recommends upgrading to version 11.5.1.602.
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