February 8, 2008 9:00 AM PST
Week in review: Yahoo in Microsoft's sights
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The College Opportunity and Affordability Act leaves intact an entertainment industry-backed provision that says higher-education institutions participating in federal financial aid programs "shall" devise plans for "alternative" offerings to unlawful downloading--such as subscription-based services--or "technology-based deterrents to prevent such illegal activity."
Leading university groups and fair-use advocates oppose those requirements, arguing they are overly burdensome, potentially expensive, and, at least by their interpretation, leave the implication that schools risk losing their financial aid for failure to comply. The bill's sponsors, for their part, insist it's a "myth" that schools will lose financial aid funding if they fail to come up with the requisite plans.
Congress also gave its final approval to a bill that would prohibit "automatic" removal of phone numbers from the national Do-Not-Call registry, which is designed to allow consumers to opt out of receiving unsolicited sales calls. The bill, called the Do-Not-Call Improvement Act, now goes to the White House for the president's signature.
The latest action is a direct response to concerns from consumer advocates and politicians that under rules established in June 2003 by the Federal Trade Commission, Americans would have been forced to re-register their digits every five years.
The Do-Not-Call Improvement Act effectively overturns that rule. It says numbers can only be removed from the registry under two conditions: with permission from the individual assigned it, or if the FTC determines, based on periodic checks, that the numbers have been disconnected, reassigned, or are otherwise "invalid."
On the greener side of D.C., Dell chief Michael Dell and other high-profile technology company CEOs descended on the nation's capital with a message for policymakers: do more to encourage energy-efficient practices, but don't spell out specific standards for the products that companies like theirs build.
On behalf of a lobby group known as the Technology CEO Council, Dell, EMC chief Joe Tucci, and Applied Materials head Mike Splinter suggested the government should do more to "lead by example." They said it can do that by re-evaluating its own power consumption, setting "high goals" for energy efficiency, awarding presidential medals to companies that excel in using information technology to boost their energy efficiency, and minimizing trade and tariff barriers and maximizing tax incentives for companies with a track record of efficient energy use.
Pump up the iPhone
The iPhone is getting bigger, but at least one observer thinks we will soon be seeing a pullback.
Apple has doubled the capacity of its iPhone and iPod Touch for an additional $100.
The iPhone now comes in 8GB for $399 and 16GB for $499. And the iPod Touch can also store more music and videos now, with an 8GB model for $299, a 16GB version for $399, and a 32GB device for $499.
The new iPhone and iPod Touch appear to be otherwise unchanged from their previous incarnations, though they ship with the new software unveiled at Macworld, which provides the ability to edit the home screen and triangulate your position using maps.
Apple has also managed to develop the third-best-selling smartphone in the world, according to a new report from Canalys. The market researcher's latest tally of the "smart mobile device" market found that Apple's iPhone had 6.5 percent of the worldwide market in the fourth quarter.
That might not sound like a lot, but it's good enough for third place behind Nokia, which has a whopping 53 percent of the market, and Research In Motion, which has 11.4 percent. And last year, of course, Apple had 0 percent of this market.
Canalys doesn't provide an exact definition of what exactly constitutes a "smart mobile device" in the press release touting the research, but said it's talking about smartphones, handhelds, and wireless handhelds.
However, Apple does not appear to be very bullish about its business in the first quarter, according to a financial analyst. Craig Berger of FBR Research tracks chip companies like Broadcom and Marvell that supply chips for Apple's iPods and iPhones, among others. Berger issued a report saying that Apple is reducing the number of iPods, iPhones, and Macbooks it plans to build in the first quarter.
Consumer electronics and PC companies know the first quarter is always a downer compared with the fourth quarter, which is chock full of holiday shopping goodness. Berger is saying, however, that Apple now plans to cut production by an even larger amount than originally planned. Based on "channel checks," Berger says, Apple is cutting iPod and iPhone production by 60 percent compared with the fourth quarter, when it had originally planned to cut production by 50 percent compared with the fourth quarter.
Also of note
ARM plans to demonstrate prototype phones based on ARM processors and Google's Android operating system, possibly paving the way for the chip designer to join Google's Open Handset Alliance...AT&T said it's expanding its third-generation wireless broadband footprint and completing the upgrade of its network to the fastest 3G technology available...and in a move to curtail retaliation by vengeful sellers in its feedback system, eBay plans to prohibit sellers from posting negative feedback about their customers.
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takeover, Yahoo! Inc., Steve Ballmer, bid, Week in review
2 comments
Join the conversation! Add your comment (Log in or register)- Broken Record
- After years of court oversight, billions of dollars paid, all Microsoft's competitors can talk about it how Microsoft uses its heft to to 'squash competition'. The truth is superior technology always wins, case in point Google itself. Its really time for these companies to man up and fight the fight instead ******** everyday about how Microsoft crushes eveything it path unfairly. That is what is taught in B schools all over this country every day. All is fair in war, or at least so the story goes.
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- Amen.
- 'Nuff said.
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