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  • LG Optimus G on Sprint to receive Jelly Bean 4.1.2 update

    LG Optimus G

    If you’re the owner of a Sprint Optimus G, you’ll want to keep an eye out for the 4.1.2 update that Sprint has announced it will be pushing to your device. You’ll get Google Now, expandable notifications, and all the other awesome features in Jelly Bean. Now we just have to wait and see if AT&T’s Optimus G gets the same treatment anytime soon. Hit the source below to get a full list of new features in the update.

    source: Sprint

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  • TrakDot Luggage tracking device will tell you where your luggage is at all times, now available for preorder

    TRAKDOT-DEVICE2

    Greetings frequent travelers!  If you like to travel as much as I do, you have probably fallen victim to the missing luggage bandit at some point. Bummer when you are attending a week long business seminar and everything you brought to wear is MIA. Low cost tracking solution guru’s, GlobaTrac, LLC., has a solution. They have just announced the release of their latest innovation, the GPS TrakDot Luggage  for preorder.

    Just purchase the low cost TrackDot for $49.99, activate it for $8.99, and subscribe to the service for a nominal $12.99 annual subscription fee and the TrakDot will do the rest. Just drop the GPS enabled TrakDot into your luggage and it will report what city/airport it’s at in real time to your cell phone. It will even automatically turn itself off just before takeoff and turn back on upon landing.  By the time you get off the plane, you will receive a text message telling you what city it’s in.

    I don’t know about you, but with all the traveling I do, the TrakDot’s initial cost and subscription fee is well worth the peace of mind that comes along with it. Knowing my luggage is in Denver while I sit in Dallas will most definitely benefit me when I walk up to the counter to ask the airline rep what the mix-up was. The TackDot will ship in June, but it you preorder before April 27, GlobaTrac will waive your activation fee!

    To order and for more info visit TrakDot.

    Full Press Release

    Trakdot Luggage Tracking Device Now Available for Pre-Order

    Los Angeles – March 7, 2013 – Trakdot™ announces they are now accepting pre-orders for the Trakdot Luggage™ device through their website. Created by GlobaTrac, LLC , an innovator in low cost tracking solutions, Trakdot Luggage fits into a checked bag, and reports city/airport location in real time to any cellular telephone. Those early adopters who place an order on Trakdot.com before April 27, 2013 will have their activation fee waived and will be among the first to receive the device.

    Trakdot Luggage was designed to provide peace of mind over one’s valuables and take the stress out of travel.  The device is very simple to use.  Once the tracker is registered, turned on, and placed in a piece of luggage, the technology takes over the rest of the work.  Rather than utilizing GPS technology, Trakdot operates on cell technology to triangulate an active device’s location.  It will turn itself off just before takeoff, and then turn back on upon landing to confirm which city the bag is currently in and text the owner that information.  Alternatively, users can visit the website to locate their luggage.

    “After the overwhelming success we had at the Consumer Electronics Show, and the strong demand from consumers around the world, we wanted to provide an early and direct path to purchase,” explains CEO Harry Steck.

    The product will be available in late June for $49.99 MSRP, with an activation fee of $8.99 and an annual service fee of $12.99.  The activation fee waiver equates to more than 12% of product purchase costs.  Advance orders are based on a limited quantity and may sell out prior to April 27, 2013, after which no more pre-release orders can be fulfilled with this special offer.  Visit www.Trakdot.com for more information or to place an order.

    Come comment on this article: TrakDot Luggage tracking device will tell you where your luggage is at all times, now available for preorder

  • Original Angry Birds now free for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch

    Angry Birds iPhone iPad
    Rovio has made one its classic mobile games available on the iPhone, iPad and iPod touch available for free by slashing the prices of Angry Birds and Angry Birds HD to nothing for iOS users in both the United States and United Kingdom. It is unclear if this is a permanent move or just a limited-time offer, however Rovio also removed the free demo versions of the apps, which were limited to only a few levels. Since debuting in 2009, the Angry Birds franchise has found great success and the games have been downloaded more than 1 billion times.

  • Facebook announces revamped newsfeed with apparent nod to Google+

    facebook_redesigned_newsfeed

    Earlier today Facebook announced changes to the newsfeed for the popular social media site that appear to mimic some features from Google+. The overall look is laid out in a manner similar to Google+ with items in the feed becoming more prominent while a ribbon down the left side of the site is full of icons for different functions. To the right side of the layout are blocks for access to specific lists of friends or other pages you may be following. Though Facebook claims the new redesign is based on mobile devices, opening a Google+ homepage and comparing it with the new Facebook newsfeed may leave you wondering whether they were copying the principles of Google+.

    Another function that may strike users as similar to Google+ are the different options for what appears in the newsfeed. In their video showing off the new function, users can select to see posts of photos or music or just friends or just pages they are following. It is not clear whether users will be able to customize these selections. The idea is to limit what shows up in the newsfeed similar to the way Google+ users can use Circles.

    Facebook mentioned some other enhancements during their announcement event. According to Facebook’s information, users are more visual now and are much more likely to post pictures and videos instead of plain text updates. So images and videos will be displayed much larger in a nod to this change in usage. Facebook also said links to web sites and other articles will include more text “blurbs” than they do now. Facebook also claims the clients for mobile devices will be very similar to the standard web interface so that users will have a consistent experience no matter how they access the service. Unfortunately, it appears Android users will be last in line to get any updates.

    Facebook said they will slowly rollout the change in what will amount to a long soak test. Users can sign up to try to get in on the changes early in the process. If you are interested, hit the source link and scroll to the bottom of the page.

    Click here to view the embedded video.

    source: Facebook

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  • Cord Cutters: Taking a first look at the Roku 3

    Roku’s new Roku 3 is out, complete with a revamped UI and a remote control that sports a headphone jack. Check out our video review:

    Show notes for this episode:

    What’s your take on the new Roku, and especially the headphone jack? Worth a buy, or just a gimmick? Sound off in the comments below, get in touch with us on Twitter (@cordcutters) or email us at cordcutters @ gigaom.com. Also, please check out our new Google+ Cord Cutters community!

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  • ASUS CEO sets goal of topping touchscreen notebook and tablet market

    ASUS Market Share CEO
    The CEO of ASUS (2357) has set an ambitious goal for his company: To become the largest vendor for touchscreen notebooks, and the second-largest for all notebooks and tablets in 2013. Digitimes reports that CEO Jerry Shen set the goal at a recent meeting with investors, adding that the company also plans to launch new smartphones in August. In the most recent quarter, ASUS generated a majority of its profit from sales of its notebook computers, which totaled 59% of revenue, followed by the success of its Transformer line of tablets. The company recently announced two new hybrid devices, the PadFone and FonePad, at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona and look to increase its smartphone market share around the world.

  • GoDaddy predicts first batch of new web site names will go on sale by June

    As the process to roll out hundreds of new top-level domain names, which will join familiar ones like “.org” and “.com,” grinds forward, the head of the largest domain registrar predicted the public will be able to buy them by June.

    GoDaddy CEO Blake Irving, attending a large scale meeting of current and future domain registries this week, said by phone that no one knows exactly when the first batch of new names will be available but that the “over/under” consensus among the sellers is three months from now.

    Under the process, the new names — which include suffixes like “.party,” “.dog” and “.mormon” — are expected to be rolled out in batches of 20 at a time. The impending sales will deliver millions of dollars to the domain name industry which makes major money off registration fees and in the secondary market for internet names.

    The industry has been touting the addition of the approximately 2000 new suffixes as a “land rush” and a “gold rush.” Critics, however, have warned the process will mean a surge in cyber-squatting and trademark infringement. Companies, which have likened it to a shakedown, are already exasperated at having to pay for new names like “.xxx” they don’t need or want but feel obliged to obtain lest someone abuse them. This could occur, for example, if someone who is not Disney bought the name “www.disney.dog”.

    The domain name sales have also been characterized as a brazen act of self-dealing by ICANN, an unaccountable agency that overseas the naming process for the internet.

    GoDaddy’s Irvine defends the process, saying “free market economics allow people to buy the names they want.” He added that the potential for abuse is lower since so-called domain parking (sitting on a name but using it just for ads) is not as big of a business as it once was.

    The first of the new names to go on sale are likely to be non-Roman scripts like Chinese or Russian. These were given high priority by ICANN and the order of others was determined by lottery; other names tapped to go early are “.wedding” and “.buy.” (You can see the priority list here).

    GoDaddy, anticipating a sizable amount of new business, said it is making its website easier to navigate in response. The company this week also dropped its own application to manage “.casa” and “.home” in order not to be perceived as competing with the names it sells on behalf of others.

    (Image by  d3images via Shutterstock)

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  • Google’s DROID RAZR Jelly Bean update kills Motoblur bloat

    DROID RAZR Jelly Bean Update
    Motorola on Thursday began rolling out an update for the DROID RAZR and DROID RAZR MAXX that brings both devices up to Android 4.1.2. Along with standard Jelly Bean features such as Google Now and Project Butter, the company has also begun to remove some of the traditional Motoblur apps and replace them with stock Android ones. In what is most certainly Google’s (GOOG) doing, the move marks the beginning of the end for Motorola’s user interface. The company has removed the Social Location app, MotoCast, MotoActv, MotoPrint, Alarm and Timer, My Gallery, My Music and Verizon Video on Demand apps from both devices. The Gallery, Music and Alarm and Timer apps have all be replaced with stock Android alternatives, while the default Web browser has been changed to Chrome.

  • Designing for the internet of things means designing for life, not screens (video)

    With computer programs and mobile applications, people seek out physical devices on which to use them. When designing a service for the internet of things, however, the trick is to build something that’s almost invisible — but not so invisible that people won’t interact with it. At our GigaOM internet of things meetup held last week in San Francisco, Jawbone’s Roberto Tagliabue explained why that’s a design challenge that’s tough to deal with.

    In his talk, the designer, who helped build the Nike+, discussed the challenges of making those devices social as a means to get more people to buy them and then use them. When someone tweets about their run it might make you want to check your own fitness scores, for example. Watch the video below and start thinking about how you might rethink design in a world of connected devices — from storytelling to observations about where you sneak a connected product or service in.

    If you liked this talk, check out the others here, here or here, or come to our next Internet of Things meetup in Boulder, Colo., next week.

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  • Boston brings out AaaS — ARM as a Service — to accelerate microserver migration

    Server vendor Boston is releasing a platform of servers that use cell phone chips that developers can use to test their software for future ARM-based enterprise applications. Boston built the platform using Calxeda’s ARM-based servers, and has dubbed it ARM as a Service, or AaaS. the idea behind the product is to help developers move software from servers with brawny x86 cores to microservers with plenty of low-power wimpy cores.

    With its AaaS, United Kingdom-based Boston will use software from Ellexus to essentially provide Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) to customers. Once enrolled, developers will be able to spin up or down multiple nodes on Boston’s Viridis microservers, which use the low-power Calxeda systems.

    The impact of the Boston AaaS could trickle down the supply chain to Calxeda and AMD as well as other companies making or planning microservers and, naturally, ARM itself.

    As I reported last month, the microserver market is expected to keep growing, and the new ARM cloud could bump up the growth rate. One might say it could help kick some AaaS.

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  • Ex-Wired editor Evan Hansen lands at Obvious Corp., joins editorial for Medium

    Former Wired.com editor-in-chief Evan Hansen has joined the Obvious Corporation to work on editorial content, providing interesting insight into the direction of Evan Williams and Biz Stone’s company.

    Williams and Stone re-launched Obvious Corp. in June 2012 after they both left Twitter, the company they co-founded with Jack Dorsey. Expectations for both Obvious Corp. and Medium, a collaborative publishing tool and the first product it launched in August, have been high, although the product appears to be growing slowly.

    Hansen wrote in his email to friends and family (reported by Mike Isaac of AllThingsD, formerly of Wired) that he would be working specifically on editorial content at Medium, which hired noted literary agent Kate Lee to direct content back in November.

    At the moment, Medium is publishing blog posts from a wide variety of writers, technologists, and artists, clearly focusing on quality over quantity and slowly rolling out the ability to contribute. Published stories are divided into “collections” around certain themes, and aims to re-think how writers to publish to the web.

    Last year at our Roadmap conference, Williams told attendees “I’d rather be HBO than whoever creates ‘Desperate Housewives,’” perhaps hinting at the type of content strategy that Medium intends to pursue.

    This post and its headline were corrected at 4:28pm to after Hansen clarified on Twitter that he wasn’t leading all of editorial at Medium, just science and technology.

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    • For sale from Pivotal Initiative: Cloud Foundry

      The Pivotal Initiative is now selling software and support subscriptions for the Cloud Foundry Platform as a Service (PaaS) and is opening up governance of that effort to bring outside voices into the process.

      Pivotal Initiative officeThe addition of “external committers” to the project could ease tensions brewing among some Cloud Foundry backers — companies that built their own PaaSes atop the Cloud Foundry framework.

      But then again, the fact that Pivotal is now selling software/support could open new areas of contention with partners that may want to do the same thing. Such is the life of an open source project where coopetition is the rule of engagement.

      As set forth in a new blog post, Cloud Foundry is going to add “full-time external committers” to the process. Governance and openness had been an ongoing issue with the PaaS project according to an exec with one Cloud Foundry vendor. “We just didn’t have any visibility into what was going on [inside the project],” he said.

      He would like to see the whole effort turned over to a vendor-neutral foundation for management, as Rackspace did with OpenStack and IBM did with Eclipse. That didn’t happen here but the addition of outside committers is a step in the right direction and, to be fair, some folks in the OpenStack community complained that Rackspace took its sweet time to make its move.

      Lucas Carlson, CEO of AppFog, another Cloud Foundry backer, said he’s seen other good signs from Cloud Foundry. He is thrilled, for example, that the code is back on a public Github repository. It had been removed some time ago. “We see it as a sign of a more open approach from the Cloud Foundry team,” he said.

      Collaborators or competitors: a fine line

      Some history: The worry initially was that Cloud Foundry, despite all the talk of open-source goodness and just plain openness, was too closely associated with one vendor:  VMware. Then, when VMware spun it off to a VMware-and-EMC-backed entity (Pivotal) there was more uncertainty about its future.

      There was also concern that some of the Cloud Foundry players were going to take the work they’d done and fork the project altogether because of the lack of visibility into Cloud Foundry plans. Under this definition a “fork” — and yes, I’ll get hate mail on this — that could lead to the creation of several not-always-compatible versions of a project. For some in the open source community, there is no such thing as a bad fork.

      But for mere mortals there is worry about an actual ecosystem divergence when many members of the same community start getting their updates from different places instead of relying on a central source, in this case Pivotal. To be fair, there is analogous concern that several versions of OpenStack backed by many vendors — some contributing back more than others — will lead to the same problem. At any rate, that’s the kind of angst Pivotal is trying to lay to rest.

      In Thursday’s blog post, James Watters, head of product for Cloud Foundry, reiterated that the project will support multiple clouds, promising “open interfaces, support and continued development on AWS, OpenStack, vCloud and vSphere environments.”

      And, he maintained, that the addition of outside committers was always a goal:

      ” … we are engaged with several organizations about putting dedicated resources on the extended engineering team –we believe this to be a very important step forward. The scale of these external investments is significant and a major milestone in our growth. The heart of Cloud Foundry, however, really comes from individual community contributions and users, so of course, we invite you to join us. All you need to do is send a pull-request.”

      Going  orward it will be interesting to see what engineers from which companies will be added as committers. For now, the naysayers appear to be relieved at what Cloud Foundry has done.

      Watters endorsed Cloud Foundry’s existing “corporate sponsored, Apache 2 licensed, pull request driven approach” as the right way to go. The outside committers will open up the process going forward, but he also left the door open to further changes. He wrote: “The massive growth of the community and ecosystem requires mediating a diverse set of needs and we will always be open to other governance models for the project in the future.”

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    • The problems with righteous investing

      Ask the very best investors and entrepreneurs about the secrets to their success and many of them will say it’s all about the passion. Falling in love with an idea, or a product, to the point of obsession can be a powerful catalyst that makes a venture work. But what happens when passion for an idea actually blinds us to deep problems with that idea? That’s one of the key things I think went wrong with the first wave of cleantech venture capital investing.

      This week Reuters published a report, citing anonymous sources, saying that Kleiner Perkins held a meeting with its limited partners (the funds and endowments that put money into Kleiner’s fund) where Kleiner leader John Doerr apologized for a weak fund performance and promised to do better in the future. Kleiner closed on a new $525 million fund a little less than a year ago, and at the time made a bunch of changes.

      Kleiner's Gore and Doerr Pitching Green Growth FundKleiner was one of the most aggressive and high-profile venture capital firms to put money into cleantech startups, and at one point had been hoping to invest a third of its funds into green companies. Part of Kleiner’s poor fund performance no doubt has to do with its greentech investments that haven’t made the firm money. And actually a bunch of its investments struggled mightily, like Miasole, Fisker Automotive, and Amonix.

      I’ve written a lot on why cleantech and VC is a difficult match. Check out these pieces from over the years:

      But one of the more nuanced reasons that I haven’t spent much time on is passion: what I think was investor passion for doing good, for helping fight global warming and for saving the planet. It’s hard to paint that type of enthusiasm as a bad thing. But I think the drive to be known as an investor that makes the world a better place was something that could have distorted the lens used to find investments that will make money.

      A lot of the venture investors in Silicon Valley are cut from the same cloth. Many are environmentally-leaning Californians who have kids and who are in their mid-50s and 60s. Many made their fortunes — either through startups or investing — off of the IT sector. The general mindset several years ago was to look for what came next after IT, and greentech provided them with something they could feel good about doing and providing the right legacy for their kids.

      That feeling of righteousness is a powerful drug that can cloud rational thinking sometimes. A startup with a potentially game changing innovation that can save the world should succeed — we all want it to succeed — but how much of these investments were hopeful money, blinded by do-gooder passion, as opposed to rational money?

      That Doerr put his own personal money into some of these companies as they struggled highlights just how strong the do-gooder pull is and how personal these investments were sometimes. Reuters reported last month that Doerr dipped into his own pocket for the about $2.5 million that struggling solar company Miasole needed to make payroll before it was sold. I’ve heard rumors that Miasole isn’t the only company that Doerr, and Kleiner Partner Ray Lane, put personal funds into. When those companies fail, it’s a slap to the identity of the investor as the savior.

      More money going into greentech innovations is the right thing to do from the perspective of the world. The planet needs this technology. But it will likely have to come from non-VC pockets of money, like government funds or project finance.

      While Kleiner is the highest profile of the venture firms to make an aggressive bet on cleantech and then (seemingly) retrench, it by no means is the only one. VantagePoint Venture Partners admitted recently that it had to curb its cleantech fund due to lack of interest from investors. Private equity firm Hudson Clean Energy Partners also halted its clean energy fundraising process and the managing director resigned.

      Other firms, like Draper Fisher Jurvetson and Mohr Davidow, have shifted strategies to focus on cleantech lite, or cleanweb startups. There’s a few VC firms left that are still trying to do investments in new energy tech and sustainability-focused startups like Khosla Ventures, Braemar Energy Ventures, and Lux Capital, but these are few and far between. The silver lining for those guys is that there’s a lot less competition out there now.

      Clearly over-exuberant save-the-world optimism wasn’t the only problem with cleantech. The sector is vast, complex, science-heavy, partly regulated, partly government dependent, and many areas haven’t seen innovation in decades.

      We’ll be watching closely to see if some of the cleantech 2.0 strategies are actually working and if those include that same do-gooder passion.

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    • Outreach and Policy Discussions at the RSA Conference

      Last week, I had the privilege of speaking with thousands of cybersecurity practitioners and stakeholders at the 2013 RSA Conference USA in San Francisco, CA.  

      The conference was an ideal venue for discussing the President’s new Executive Order on Improving Critical Infrastructure Cybersecurity (E.O. 13636) that was announced in this year’s State of the Union address. The E.O. will be the catalyst for a variety of new initiatives to develop cybersecurity standards, improve public-private information sharing, and ensure privacy and civil liberties protections.  With so many cybersecurity professionals in one place, I and several senior leaders from the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Commerce were able to provide in-depth explanations of the E.O., answer questions on its implementation, and engage with industry partners on how they can help. 

      read more

    • Dell threatened with ‘years of litigation’ over buyout plan

      Dell Buyout Plan
      There are probably days when Michael Dell regrets ever taking his company public. AllThingsD reports that famed activist investor Carl Icahn says that there will be “years of litigation” ahead for Dell (DELL) if it goes through with its current buyout plan without making substantial changes. In particular, Icahn wants Dell to “pay a special dividend of $9 per share” to investors if they decide to vote down Dell’s proposed plan to go private later this year. Icahn says that this “proposed $9.00 special dividend gives Dell shareholders a total value of $22.81 per share, representing a 67% premium to the $13.65 per share price proposed” in the original plan. Of course, increasing the potential cost of the buyout by 67% would greatly complicate things for Dell, which has inked a delicate agreement with Silver Lake Partners, Microsoft (MSFT) and several banks who are financing debt for the transaction.

    • The Philips Hue Is The Perfect Minecraft Accessory To Track The Day/Night Cycle

      Minecraft Hue

      It’s hard to find a compelling use case for the Philips Hue. But Jim Rutherford and his son hacked the wireless LED lightbulbs to be in sync with the day/night cycle in Minecraft. It creates an immersive setup and is actually useful as creepers start appearing at nighttime.

      In Minecraft, 24 hours go by in 10 minutes. It’s therefore fairly easy to program the Hue to progressively change color. But Rutherford had to find a clever implementation to sync time between the game and the light.

      He developed an iPad app to adjust the position of the sun or the moon in the sky according to the game. You just have to pan your finger across the screen. Then, the app handles the interface to the lightbulb. You can see how it pans out at the end of the video.

      At $199 for the Philips Hue starter pack, it sure is an expensive accessory. Only the existing Hue owners or hardcore Minecraft players should consider replicating this setup.

      Rutherford said that he will release the app in the App Store so that everyone will be able to enjoy Minecraft’s virtual sunset. For now, you can have a look at the source code.

    • Solving America’s Innovation Crisis

      An interview with Bruce Nussbaum, professor at Parsons The New School of Design and author of Creative Intelligence: Harnessing the Power to Create, Connect, and Inspire.


      Download this podcast

      A written transcript will be available by March 15.

    • Apple reportedly low-balls record companies, wants royalties to be half of Pandora’s rates

      Apple Record Company Royalty
      Apple (AAPL) didn’t get to be the world’s most valuable tech company by paying other companies premiums for their products and services. The New York Post reports that Apple has once again taken its hard-bargaining approach to the recording industry, as unnamed sources claim that the company wants to pay record labels just $0.06 per every 100 songs users stream over its yet-to-be-announced music-streaming service. To get some perspective on just how cheap this is, consider that Pandora pays double this rate at $0.12 per 100 songs and that Spotify pays around $0.35 per 100 songs. Of course, neither of those companies has the enormous clout of Apple, which the Post’s sources acknowledge “could tap a whole new revenue stream for them” with its own music service. All the same, it would be surprising if the record companies in the end agreed to accept half of what the current lowest payer on the market is offering.

    • T-Mobile reportedly plans to launch BlackBerry Q10 in May

      BlackBerry Q10 Release Date T-Mobile
      T-Mobile is slated to launch BlackBerry’s (BBRY) latest flagship smartphone later this month. Recent reports have suggested that the BlackBerry Z10 will be released on March 27th, or perhaps even earlier. It was unclear, however, if the carrier would offer the QWERTY-equipped BlackBerry Q10. A BlackBerry representative reportedly confirmed to N4BB that T-Mobile plans to release the Q10 “sometime in May.” The smartphone features a 3.1-inch Super AMOLED display, 1.5GHz dual-core Snapdragon S4 Plus processor and an 8-megapixel rear camera. The device also includes 2GB of RAM, 16GB of internal storage, LTE connectivity, NFC, a microSD slot and a 2100 mAh battery.

    • Pandora Chairman and CEO to step down, search for successor begins

      Pandora Chairman, CEO and President Joe Kennedy is stepping down from his posts, the company announced today shortly after the release of its Q4 results. Kennedy, who has led the company since 2004, will remain in charge until Pandora has named a successor.

      Those quarterly results were mixed: for the company’s fiscal Q4 2013, which ended in January, Pandora clocked $125 million in revenue during that quarter, compared to $81.3 million during its fiscal Q4 2012. However, losses also grew substantially to $14.4 million, compared to $8.1 million a year ago. For its fiscal FY 2013, Pandora incurred losses of $37.7 million, which is up significantly from the $19.9 million it incurred in its fiscal FY 2012.

      Pandora has long struggled with finding a business model that matches its high licensing costs. The company spent 61 percent of its revenue last year on music licensing, and it has repeatedly pushed to lower the rates it has to pay rights holders.

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