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Technology & Media - International Herald Tribune
Technology news from The International Herald Tribune, the world's daily newspaper online.
- E-greetings gain ground at businesses this season
Once seen as the tacky, last-minute substitute for pen and paper, e-cards have become more acceptable this holiday season. - Airlines grapple with Internet etiquette and restrictions
Internet access will soon be available on some airlines, forcing companies to figure out how to deal with questions of etiquette, openness and free speech in crowded quarters. - India adds record 8.3 million wireless users in November
Fixed-line user base falls to 39.31 million as more and more users shift to mobile phones. - Life after Def Jam: Jay-Z leaves recording label
What's next for the rapper, investor and entrepreneur? It's anyone's guess. - Time Warner's new chief looks ahead, possibly to a breakup
Wall Street analysts have complained about confusion during the executive transition, and there is a widespread view that there is no logical reason for the company's disparate assets. - Yahoo and ESPN use riches to lure sportswriters
With the two companies on a furious hiring binge, reporters and columnists are being offered more than they ever imagined they could make in journalism. - Travelers Aid helps fill the gaps of an interrupted journey
Founded in 1851, Travelers Aid International has 1,600 volunteers who staff booths at airports and train and bus terminals. - MIT spinoff's little green laptop computers a hit in remote Peruvian village
Doubts about whether poor, rural children can benefit from quirky computers evaporate quickly in an Andean village, where 50 children got machines from the One Laptop Per Child project months ago. - Quoted in the news? Post a comment, please
Google News offers a new feature that allows people quoted in news articles to post a comment that will be paired with that article online. - Little love among matchmakers
The online dating service Chemistry.com plans to unleash a new advertising campaign that seeks to depict its competitor, eHarmony.com, as out of touch with mainstream American values. - Altadis revels, in private, on the mystique of smoking
The European tobacco company has set up an internal Web site, Le Lab, designed to be part social networking site, part data resource, part virtual pep rally for its brand managers. - Breakup of Eircom could be opening for rivals
The potential separation of Eircom's network and service businesses comes as European lawmakers consider a more modest, but far-reaching proposal. - 'Quarterlife,' series born on Net, struggles to thrive
Some episodes of the drama about a group of good-looking people in their 20s have yet to attract 100,000 video views. - Slim Sony TV uses new technology
The sets replace the bulky backlighting of typical LCD televisions with a thin film that glows with colors even when viewed from the side. - Studios face rising cost of archiving films
Digital masters cost 12 times as much to preserve as conventional masters, and the film industry is again wrestling with preserving its most precious assets. - Free papers draw new audience in Italy
Instead of diluting the market, 24 minuti and Corriere della Sera Anteprima are contributing to the stability of the newspaper industry. - U.S. approves Google-DoubleClick takeover
The $3.1 billion transaction still faces substantial antitrust scrutiny from European regulators and cannot be completed without their approval. - With deal, Apple settles last of lawsuits to stop leaks
The suits were aimed at the gaggle of Apple enthusiasts who have made a sport and a business out of pre-empting Steven Jobs's product announcements. - Two Russian telecommunications companies to merge
VimpelCom's purchase of Golden Telecom will create Russia's first integrated mobile and fixed-line provider. - Dell to buy UK technology consultant, also signs retail deal
Computer maker Dell Inc. said Friday it has agreed to buy The Networked Storage Co., a privately held data-storage consulting firm based in the United Kingdom. - SFR makes offer to buy rest of Neuf Cegetel
The Vivendi unit is willing to pay about €5 billion to create a formidable competitor to the leading French telephone company, France Télécom. - BSkyB rebuffed on ITV stake
BSkyB faces a losses of more than £200 million, or $400 million, if forced to sell most of its shares at the current price. - Top editors at Le Monde walk off job
The departure was impelled by an e-mail sent to 400 staff members describing financial details at the paper that they considered confidential. - 'Sopranos' creator vindicated
A U.S. court found that David Chase owed no money to the lawyer who did him a favor when he was in the midst of developing the show. - Kerry Group buyout offer raises share price of SCMP Group
Shares of SCMP Group, publisher of the South China Morning Post newspaper, rose as much as 9.2 percent to 2.73 Hong Kong dollars after Kerry, owned by the billionaire Robert Kuok, offered 2.75 dollars per share to buy the 55.1 percent of the stock that it does not already own. - NetSuite raises $161 million from IPO
The IPO proved more lucrative than the California company anticipated, reflecting the hopes riding on NetSuite despite a nine-year history of losses, which total nearly $242 million. - New licenses lift Oracle's revenue projections
Oracle, the business software company, has reported a sharp rise in new licenses, soundly beating Wall Street projections for the second quarter. - Zell expected to take over control of Tribune Co.
The real estate billionaire Samuel Zell was to take the helm of Tribune Co. on Thursday, if Tribune's investment banks agree that the company still meets the financial standards they set for it when they signed on last spring. - At 71, physics professor is a Web star
Walter H. G. Lewin, a physics professor at MIT, has found devotees across the country and beyond with his free online lectures. - Tech "microclusters" form in Silicon Valley
The wellspring of the digital technologies fueling globalization is itself a collection of remarkably local economies. - Watchdog says British broadband users shortchanged
The Consumer Panel, which advises Ofcom, said there was widespread discontent among computer users over frustratingly slow broadband. - Facebook apologizes for suspending British member of Parliament as fake
Steve Webb, of the Liberal Democrats, tried to log on but received a message saying his account had been disabled following complaints he did not exist.