Intel to spend $1 bln to push Net in poor nations

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Intel Corp. said on Tuesday it plans to spend $1 billion to promote Internet use and computer training in developing countries, the latest move in the No. 1 chip maker’s effort to break into new markets.The program, which Intel has dubbed “World Ahead,” aims to bring high-speed wireless Internet access to 1 billion people who can’t get online, while training 10 million teachers to use technology in education.

The Santa Clara, California-based company said it would back those goals with $1 billion of spending over five years.

“Decades of providing technology in growing volume and at decreasing costs have driven great gains for developing nations, communities and people worldwide, but there is still much to do,” Intel chief executive Paul Otellini said in a statement.

Otellini is expected to give details of the initiative at a technology conference in Austin, Texas, on Wednesday.

The program includes Intel’s ongoing effort to promote cheap PCs that it hopes will find enthusiastic buyers among schools and villages in developing countries where most people cannot afford to buy their own personal computers.

It also extends Intel’s push to popularize a new wireless technology called WiMax, whose fast speed and long range has led many companies and industry groups to think it is ideal for poorer regions.

Intel, which makes the microprocessors that power the vast majority of personal computers around the world, has grappled with slowing growth in PCs as wealthy markets in the United States, Europe and Japan become saturated.

Amazon switches to Microsoft from Google

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Microsoft Corp. scored an important win against rival Google Inc. over the weekend, as Amazon.com began using its technology to power the Internet retailer’s A9 search unit.Microsoft’s new Windows Live is at the core of the company’s efforts to win online advertising dollars away from Google Inc. and Yahoo Inc.. A9 had previously been powered by Google.

Amazon’s search engine, A9, breaks down searches into various categories, such as Web searches, book searches, and blog searches. It is a stand-alone search site, www.a9.com, as well as the search technology used on the www.amazon.com Web site.

A9 Chief Executive David Tennenhouse told Reuters that Windows Live presented a “very interesting, powerful Web search option” that had previously been featured on the A9 site.

Tennenhouse said the Google search was removed from the site on Sunday, following the expiration of that contract. He would not comment on the terms of the Microsoft deal, or whether a new contract with Google had been an option.

Microsoft’s new search engine and user interface consolidates a variety of the software giant’s Web services such as search, e-mail, instant messaging and security at its Live.com site.

Senior product manager at Microsoft’s MSN Internet unit, Justin Osmer, confirmed that Google’s contract with Amazon.com had expired, but did not elaborate on what was behind the switch.

“It’s another opportunity to reach a new segment for us and get people acquainted with the Windows Live search brand,” Osmer said.

Google and Yahoo built multibillion-dollar businesses supported mainly by online ad sales from search, while Microsoft lagged behind. But Microsoft now aims to close the gap with Windows Live and a new pay-per-click advertising system called adCenter.

“We view this as more of a marathon than a sprint,” said Osmer.

MSN’s search engine lost market share again to Google and Yahoo in March. Its U.S. share fell to 11 percent from 14 percent, while Google and Yahoo each gained, rising to 49 percent and 22 percent of the search market, respectively, according to Nielsen//NetRatings.

Google did not return a phone call seeking comment.

eBay buys Swedish online auctioneer for $48 mln

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Web auctioneer eBay Inc said on Monday it had bought Tradera.com, a small Swedish rival, for about $48 million.Tradera.com has more than 750,000 listings at any given time, eBay said in a statement, adding it had plans to expand online trading in Sweden using its new investment.

eBay said it did not expect the acquisition to have a material impact on its financial guidance issued with its first-quarter results last week.

Tradera’s investors include Provider Funds and TIME Vision bpart AB.

Microsoft hires CEO of Ask.com to head Web unit

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Software giant Microsoft Corp. said on Friday it hired away Steve Berkowitz, the chief executive of rival Internet company Ask.com, to head Microsoft’s own Internet business.Effective May 8, Berkowitz succeeds David Cole, a 20-year Microsoft veteran, who is set to begin a one-year leave of absence, Microsoft said in a statement. He had outlined his plans in a memo to employees in February.

Berkowitz is credited in the industry with orchestrating the turnaround of Ask.com, the Web search and media business acquired by Barry Diller’s conglomerate, IAC/InterActiveCorp, for $1.85 billion 13 months ago.

Under his leadership, Ask, originally known as Ask Jeeves, enjoyed a revival in its audience and market share gains in the highly competitive Web search business over the past year.

Berkowitz was named the senior vice president of Microsoft’s recently formed Online Business Group, which brings together the operations of Microsoft’s MSN Internet business unit with other consumer businesses within Microsoft.

The group includes MSN.com, MSNTV and MSN Internet Access programming, advertising sales, business development, and marketing for Live Platforms, MSN and Windows Live, with responsibility for generating greater advertising sales.

Microsoft’s Online Business Group competes against rivals such as Google Inc., Yahoo Inc., Time Warner Inc.’s AOL unit and Ask.com.

Berkowitz will report to Kevin Johnson, co-president of Microsoft’s platforms and services unit, Microsoft said.

He propelled Ask Jeeves into the contemporary Web search market with the acquisition of Teoma in 2001. He led the redesign of Ask, made the site easier to use by removing pop-up and banner ads and providing greater context on searches.

Revenue more than doubled under his leadership.

Previously, Berkowitz was president and chief operating officer of technology trade publisher IDG Books, where he built a hit consumer brand by expanding the “Dummies” series of books to cover topics ranging from the Web to pet care. He expanded IDG Books by acquiring publishing brands such as Cliffs Notes, Frommers Travel Guides and Betty Crocker Cookbooks.

Google goes to China as ‘Gu Ge’

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Google Inc CEO Eric Schmidt on Wednesday defended the search engine’s cooperation with Chinese censorship as he announced the creation of a Beijing research center and unveiled a Chinese-language brand name.Google is trying to raise its profile in China after waiting until January to launch its Chinese-language site Google.cn.

Activists have criticized the company for blocking searches for material about Taiwan, Tibet, democracy and other sensitive issues on the site.

“We believe that the decision that we made to follow the law in China was absolutely the right one,” Schmidt said at a news conference.

He said Google had to accept restrictions in order to serve China, which has the world’s second-largest population of Internet users after the United States, with more than 111 million people online.

Schmidt also announced the creation of a research center in Beijing that he said should have 150 employees by mid-2006 and “eventually thousands of people.” He said the center is meant to create products for markets worldwide, though he said planning was still in such an early stage that he didn’t know what they might be.

Schmidt was speaking at a ceremony to announce Google’s Chinese-language brand name — ‘Gu Ge,’ or ‘Valley Song,’ which the company says draws on Chinese rural traditions to describe a fruitful and rewarding experience.

Talking to reporters later, Schmidt said Google’s managers were stung by criticism that they accepted Chinese censorship, but said they haven’t lobbied Beijing to change its rules.

“I think it’s arrogant for us to walk into a country where we are just beginning to operate and tell that country how to operate,” he said.

Asked whether Google might try to persuade Beijing to change its restrictions, Schmidt said he didn’t rule anything out, but said it hasn’t tried to change such limits elsewhere. He noted that Google’s site in Germany is barred from linking to Nazi-oriented material.

“There are many cases where certain information is not available due to local law or local custom,” he said.

Schmidt said China accounts for only a small portion of Google’s revenues because the company has only recently obtain a license to allow it to carry local advertising. But he said the company expects China to be an important part of its future business.

One possible Google project in China would be to make Chinese books available online in digital form or to use translation software to produce English-language editions, Schmidt said.

He said the Beijing technical center could quickly become Google’s biggest outside the United States, surpassing its European lab in Zurich, Switzerland.

Chinese universities “are now churning out a very large number of very, very good programmers,” he said. “So we are moving quickly now to hire the best and the brightest.”

Google offers free Web calendar service

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Google Inc. is introducing on Thursday a free Web calendar service for consumers to schedule events and share them with others, opening a new level of competition with rivals such as Yahoo Inc. and Microsoft Corp.Google Calendar, available at www.google.com/calendar, offers a variety of features to make using Web calendars as easy as desktop calendars such as Outlook, allowing users to “drag and drop” events from one calendar to another.

The new service takes advantage of slick Web programming tricks using Javascript and XML along with RSS. But perhaps the biggest breakthrough is the calendar’s use of “natural language processing” technology that simplifies how events are entered.

The feature allows users to type simple commands like “leave work today at 5 p.m.” or “drinks Thursday with Elinor” that the system can interpret and automatically insert into the calendar. Events can be private, shared with friends, or made public on the Web, Google Calendar’s product manager said.

“Google Calendar takes all the events in my life and keeps them in one place,” Carl Sjogreen said in a phone interview.

“We enable the user to create multiple calendars, share them with other people and overlay Web calendars back on the user’s own calendar,” the Google product manager said.

Users of Google’s free e-mail service Gmail may find the Google Calendar particularly useful. Google’s software scours Gmail to recognize mentions of events and then automatically offers the user to add the date information to the calendar.

PRESSING OTHERS TO INNOVATE

Details of the long-rumored calendar, complete with screenshots of features and instruction guides, had leaked out in late February among Silicon Valley technology enthusiasts.

The calendar poses a direct challenge to Yahoo Calendar, the No. 1 Web calendar service in the United States, which was introduced in 1998 and has changed little in substance in recent years. But Google said it plans to “play nice” and allow users to share Google Calendar events with Yahoo Calendar.

While Sjogreen is careful to say that Google Calendar is not designed to replace corporate calendars, it could raise expectations among office workers that its features should be part of corporate scheduling systems like Microsoft’s Outlook or IBM’s Lotus Notes.

Sjogreen said Google is working to offer seamless connections to Microsoft Outlook, the Palm Treo smartphone and to various other mobile phone calendars in coming months.

The trial version of Google Calendar is being offered in English. Gmail users will begin being offered the service within the next week. In coming months, Google will translate the calendar into multiple languages, Sjogreen said.

The Sunnyvale, California-based rival of Google said in a statement that the company is working on updates to Yahoo Calendar, which it plans to release in coming months.

Last year, Yahoo acquired Upcoming.org. (http://upcoming.org/), a social event calendar that helps users manage events, share them with friends and family, and post notifications to one’s own or to other Web sites.

Microsoft’s Open Source Olive Branch

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It seems kind of strange to have Microsoft, long considered the open source “enemy,” to deliver a keynote at a conference about Linux, but that’s exactly what happened in Boston today. Microsoft Platform Technology Strategy Director Bill Hilf delivered a keynote on interoperability between Windows and Linux and discussed the maturation of the debate between the two operating systems.

He also detailed Microsoft’s own test efforts in its Open Source Software Lab and officially announced the launch of Port 25, the communications and blogging site that gives some additional character and personality to those efforts.

Knowing that he stood at the head of an audience that may not have been particularly enamored of Microsoft, Hilf took every opportunity to make sure the audience knew that he knew what they think about Microsoft.

“This is the first time that Microsoft has ever done a LinuxWorld keynote,” Hilf said. “Hopefully you won’t throw things at me.”

Hilf then detailed the scale and scope that Microsoft’s Open Source Software Lab entails.

“We focus heavily on scenarios that exist between Microsoft and open source and also test in development to see what will happen.”

The lab has over 300 servers and client systems running nearly every Linux, Unix and BSD distribution. Hardware includes IBM’s Power and Sun’s Sparc, as well as x86 based systems.

“We run nearly every operating system there is,” Hilf said. ” Diversity in our lab is super important, so we intentionally make it very complex.”

Beyond just an exercise in running operating systems, Hilf’s group also runs both commercial and open source applications across the lab’s servers.

Hilf noted colloquially that at the entrance to Microsoft’s Open Source Labs, there are three penguins: one with hands over his ears (hear no evil), eyes (see no evil) and mouth (speak no evil).

“Its a reminder that we do technical research, and we don’t get caught up in hype or systems; we deal with technical systems.”

Microsoft’s Open Source Labs efforts are all about helping to figure out interoperability. He noted that Microsoft isn’t all about vendor lock in and there it recognizes there is choice in the market.

“Sometimes we have to compete and co-operate in the same breadth,” Hilf said. “We do that with many partners today including IBM, SAP, Oracle and others.”

Hilf said that the laws of physics do not apply to the software business, and that it is infinitely malleable.

“Standards should be adaptive to market conditions,” he said.

A key to figuring out those market conditions is getting feedback, which is what Microsoft is doing with its Port 25 initiative.

Port 25 is a play on the fact that port 25 is typically used for SMTP (define) for e-mail communication.

The site contains blogs, interviews and technical analysis from Microsoft’s Open Source Software Lab. The goal is to open the feedback loop so that Microsoft can “communicate” better with the open source community.

Hilf expects the feedback will be productive and not like some of the anti-Microsoft arguments of the past.

“I’m very proud to see the evolution of this industry that we’ve done away with the childish squabbling of ‘mine is better than yours,’” Hilf said.

“Commercial and open source can co-exist and it’s a maturation of what’s going on in our industry.”

PayPal Mobile Payments Official

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Amid a flurry of announcements at CTIA today, PayPal officially rolled out PayPal Mobile, calling the SMS payment system the first of its kind.

Then they corrected themselves, admitting there may be some smaller companies with similar services already available.

But they don’t really matter, PayPal said. And analysts agreed.

First introduced last month, PayPal Mobile allows users to send a text to “PayPal” (729725) from their phones and enter the dollar amount they want to send to a particular vendor, charity or user ID number.

PayPal will then contact the mobile user to confirm and complete the transaction.

Forrester Research analyst Sucharita Mulpuru is enthusiastic about the service.

“Conceptually, it’s a great idea,” she told internetnews.com. “It’s the easiest system I’ve seen. Before if you were going to pay on your cell phone, you’d have to get a lot more pieces involved.”

Dana Stalder, PayPal senior vice president of business operations, gushed at praise like that.

“Nobody has really built or offered the product that PayPal is bringing to the market today,” he told internetnews.com, but soon remembered that TextPayMe started offering SMS payments in December.

“I think from a basic function standpoint, there are some similarities [between the two products],” he said.

Then he presented the differences.

“The fundamental difference with PayPal comes in first and foremost with the power of the network,” he said, “[Our] 100 million accounts fundamentally change the utility of the payment system.”

It’s true that TextPayMe does not have 100 million accounts.

“It’s not near 40 million,” TextPayMe spokesperson Phillip Yuen told internetnews.com. “We have a decent amount of users and it’s growing at a nice rate.”

Mulpuru said the disparity in subscriber numbers is enough to make PayPal different.

“PayPal has 100+ million accounts. It’s got eBay. And it’s got that name recognition,” she said.

What’s more, Mulpuru said, 100 million accounts is enough to make a mobile payments system matter.

But right now, they don’t. At least not in the United States. Here, consumers think of their mobile devices as phones alone.

But by offering PayPal Mobile for free, Mulpurua said, PayPal can change those habits.

“They are leveraging their backbone, the 100 million accounts they already have,” she said. “They are getting people used to this technology on a very small scale.”

Exactly, Stadler said.

“I think that [perception] is changing, has been changing, and will continue to change,” he said. “I think that it is great customer-oriented use cases like PayPal Mobile that are going to be the driver behind those changes.”

And that’s something even underappreciated TextPayMe can appreciate. Sometimes it takes a big player with 100 million accounts to change consumer expectations.

“They’ve done some good things,” Yuen said, acknowledging competition. “They’ve actually brought us a lot of attention through this.”

Ancestor worship a mouse click away in China

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Virtual carnations, memorial messages and tribute songs are some of the online services available to China’s Web surfers too busy on Wednesday to pay proper respects at the graves of their ancestors.As China passes Tomb Sweeping Day — a traditional festival where people pray, offer food and burn paper money at relatives’ graves — authorities are urging people to care for the environment and honor relatives online instead, Xinhua news agency said.

Several cemeteries and funeral companies in China have heeded the call, establishing online memorial halls promising access to relatives within seconds, 365 days a year.

Shanghai Funeral Service Center claims to have had 40 million visits from respectful relatives grateful to pay respects at the click of a mouse since the service was introduced in 2001.

The Qing Ming festival is a public holiday in Hong Kong and Taiwan, and members of China’s parliament have urged the government to reintroduce the holiday after it was scrapped in 1949 when the atheists Communists swept to power.

Chinese man bids to sell his soul on auction site

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Some might call it an auction to die for, as the Chinese observe their traditional Qing Ming festival honouring the dead.A man in his late 20s in Jiaxing, a city near Shanghai, has attempted to sell his soul on Taobao, China’s top online auction site, attracting bids from some 58 soul-searching buyers before the posting was pulled.

“We reviewed Taobao’s policies and realized we had no specific policy on the selling of souls,” said Porter Erisman, spokesman for Taobao’s parent, Yahoo-backed Alibaba.com. “After reviewing our policies, the posting was taken down last Friday.”

Erisman said Taobao wasn’t opposed to the idea of soul selling online, but wanted more proof that the seller could provide the goods.

“After some discussion, we decided that we will allow the member to sell his soul on Taobao, but only if he can provide written permission from a ‘higher authority’,” he said.

Taobao made its decision as Chinese around the world on Wednesday observed Qing Ming, a traditional holiday where many travel to their ancestors’ graves to clean them and offer gifts to the spirits.

Taobao is no stranger to odd items being put up for auction, with past sale items including advertising space on one member’s forehead.

The firm’s chief rival, eBay, has also hosted its share of strange items for auction, including a second-hand Volkswagen once owned by Pope Benedict and a mangrove island in Florida.

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