Date:
Mon, April 28, 2008 08:12:27 PMFrom:
BusinessWeek's Technology Insider
Subject:
Earnings Show Microsoft Needs Yahoo
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April 28, 2008 |
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Tech InsiderTechnology & Science News, Product Reviews |
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Inside: This Week in Technology
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NEWS
Nokia Starts Listening Tired of losing ground in the U.S., the handset maker is ready to customize phones for carriers
TECHNOLOGY
Motorola's Market Share Shrinks With mobile-phone losses at $418 million, sales down 39%, and competition expected to peak, the handset maker needs new products to recover
INFO TECH
Cloud Computing: Eyes on the Skies The tech credentials behind remote computing continue to gather, but the concept remains, well, cloudy to many. Here, a closer look
TECHNOLOGY
A Clearer Picture for Flat-Panel TVs Sound legend Dolby and rival THX are offering new ways to bring those images into much sharper focus. Question is, will manufacturers bite?
HEALTH CARE
Are There Too Many Women Doctors? As an MD shortage looms, female physicians and their flexible hours are taking some of the blame
SPECIAL REPORT
Best Young Entrepreneurs of Tech As the economy slumps, many entrepreneurs are looking past consumer Web sites to focus on products and services for companies
SPECIAL REPORT
The Power of Play Check out our special report on the current gaming industry, including an analysis of trends for 2008, profiles of radical innovators—and introducing the BusinessWeek Arcade, a celebration of some of the Web's best free games
SUSTAINABLE TECH
Special Report: Sustainable Tech Scientists are experimenting with viruses, salmon sperm DNA, potatoes, and more in making biomaterials for consumer electronics
TECH HOMELAND SECURITY
Homeland Insecurity The Homeland Security Dept.'s overreliance on outside contractors and insufficient management of them could leave the U.S. vulnerable
TECH PIONEERS
Meet This Year's Tech Pioneers The World Economic Forum has bestowed the coveted honor on 39 companies, which could become the Googles, a previous winner, of tomorrow
BEST OF THE WEB
Scaling the Social Web Move over, MySpace. Online players from media giant Viacom to auctioneer eBay are adding networking features for their users
TECHNOLOGY SPECIAL REPORT
Selling Computers to India With growth slowing in China, computer makers hope Asia's other big market will pick up the slack
SPECIAL REPORT
The Power of Gaming A recent report estimates that the video game market will increase to $48.9 billion in 2011. Our special report looks at some of the innovations sparking this growth
SPECIAL REPORT
The Future of Social Networking A rising tide of companies are tapping Semantic Web technologies to unearth hard-to-find connections between disparate pieces of online data CEO Guide to Green Computing As a threat to operations and the bottom line, corporate computing's fast-growing power consumption is forcing companies to adopt green energy
VIRTUAL LIFE
The Coming Virtual Web In the future, the Internet is almost certain to look more realistic, interactive, and social—a lot like a virtual world
CEO GUIDE TO TECHNOLOGY
Taming the World Wide Web A rising tide of companies are tapping Semantic Web technologies to unearth hard-to-find connections between disparate pieces of online data
SPECIAL REPORT
Wireless World Ultrafast networks and whizzy features are about to turn your cellphone into—well, your right arm
NEXT-GEN GAME CONSOLES
Game Definitely Not Over On the eve of the launch of PS3 and Wii, stakes in the console tussle amid Sony, Nintendo, and Microsoft have never been higher
CEO GUIDE TO TECHNOLOGY
CEO Guide to Social Networks Networking technology gives companies a new set of tools for recruiting and customer service
PREDICTION MARKETS
CEO Guide to Technology -- Prediction Markets More corporations are setting up their own markets for economic forecasts, hoping to tap into the wisdom of employees
WEB SERVICES
The On-Demand Software Scrum Oracle, Microsoft, and SAP are battling each other—and smaller players—to gain a bigger slice of a fast-growing pie
SPECIAL REPORT
Computer Security Computer-based fraudsters are finding new ways to trick people—not technology—to get the information they seek
SPECIAL REPORT
Young Entrepreneurs of Tech We surveyed dozens of the country's biggest venture capitalists to come up with a short list of the 11 young people that are shaking up tech
HEART HEALTH
Heart, Heal Thyself? So far, stem cells have not delivered the results scientists hoped for. But excitement is still rising
SPECIAL REPORT
Open Source's New Frontiers How free software startups are challenging industry giants
SPECIAL REPORT
Eight Tech Trends for 2006 Tech Special Report on living-room wars, social search, wireless' new world, Web moviemakers—and lots more
SPECIAL REPORT
Computing's Next Generation For the first time in years, hardware startups are trying to break into the market. Their gambit: Inexpensive special-purpose machines
SPECIAL REPORT
TV Goes Broadband Name any gizmo. Chances are it's gotten more sophisticated since you last looked
SPECIAL REPORT: YOUNG ENTREPRENEURS OF TECH
Tech's Young Turks Are Back As Internet companies and the economy in general rebound, so has the college-age entrepreneur—but it's a tougher road today IT white papers, webcasts and reports for tech leaders and decision-makers
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Work Visas: Let the Market Rule
The U.S. should let private enterprise determine who gets jobs. H-1B's are expensive, so companies won't pay for more than they need. Pro or con?
VIDEO PODCAST >>
Tech 101
Technology should make life easier. When it doesn't, it's not your fault. Need help? Ask us!
Each week Senior Technology Writer Arik Hesseldahl answers your toughest tech questions—in plain English. Write to him at Tech101@businessweek.com.
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Tech & You
HP's new mini-notebook has a wide screen, a big keyboard, and a great price. The weak link? Its software
Help Desk
Wondering why you can't buy a digital video recorder without also signing up for TiVo or a specific cable service?
Ask Steve >
MORE Tech & You >
Reader Murphy Mac Writes:
"We need a new term for the iPhone's touch screen to differentiate it from the 'touch screens' Verizon and Sprint are putting out—it's really not the same thing."
Read The Story And Tell Us What You Think >
FEATURED PRODUCT REVIEWS > >
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FEATURED SPECIAL
REPORT >>
CEO Guide: Emerging Outsourcing Hubs |
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The New Economics of OutsourcingEfforts to send IT work anywhere but Bangalore are taking on added urgency as costs of doing work in India rise and the dollar sinksOutsourcing at HomeWith Indian wages rising and the rupee strengthening against the dollar, some IT services companies are opening facilities in the U.S.Podcast: Offshoring BargainsSome executives are realizing there are benefits to diversifying outsourcing operations. For some U.S. companies, Latin America is becoming an attractive option |


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