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  • Profile of Twitter Users

    The Pew Internet and American Life Project just released a study “Twitter and Status Updating, Fall 2009” two days ago (October 21, 2009).  The report provides interesting information about social network users.  Twitter traffic exploded over the last year, going from about 2 million unique visitors per month in December 2008 to over 17 million in May 2009.  According to the study, 19% of internet users use Twitter or another service to share updates about themselves, or to see updates about others.  This represents a significant increase in its earlier finding in April 2009 when just 11% of internet users were using a status-update service.  Additionally, the study points out that the growth of Twitter is being driven by three groups of internet users:  “social network Web site users, those who connect to the Internet via mobile devices, and younger Internet users–those under age 44.”

    It is interesting to learn that whether or not a user is on other social networks determines their willingness to use a service like Twitter.  The Pew study found that internet users who use social network sites like Facebook, LinkedIn, or MySpace are more likely to use Twitter or another status updating service.  Thirty-five percent of internet users who have profiles on MySpace, Facebook, or LinkedIn also have profiles on Twitter. The study also found that just 6% of internet users who do not use these social networks are on Twitter.

    According to the Pew study, wireless access is an independent factor in predicting whether someone uses Twitter or another status update service.  Fifty-four percent of internet users have a wireless connection to the Web in September 2009. Of this group, 25% use Twitter or another status-update service, up from 14% wireless users in December 2009. However, only 8% of internet users who rely exclusively on tethered access use Twitter or another service, up from 6% in December 2008.  Perhaps, the mobile Web users are more likely to tweet since they have wireless access.

    In addition, the study indicated that the more Web-connected devices a user has, the more likely they are to tweet.  Thirty-nine percent of Internet users with four or more Internet-connected devices (such as a laptop, cell phone, game console, or Kindle) use Twitter, compared to 28% of Internet users with three devices, 19 percent of Internet users with two devices, and 10 percent of Internet users with one device.

    The Pew study showed that young people flock to Twitter.  Internet users in age between 18 and 44 are more likely than older users to use Twitter or another status update service.  According to the study, the median age of a Twitter user is 31 and has remained stable over the past year.  Both MySpace and LinkedIn have gotten younger users.  The median age for MySpace is now 26, down from 27 in May 2008 and the median age for LinkedIn is now 39, down from 40.  However, Facebook users are getting older, upping its median age to 33, from 26 in May 2008.

    Do you use any social networks?  Do you own any mobile Web-connected devices?  How do you fit into the Pew study?  Do you agree with the results mentioned in this report?  Please feel free to share your comments here.

    Posted in Social Networking

  • VC-Backed Movetis Mulls IPO

    BRUSSELS (Reuters) – Belgian drugmaker Movetis is considering an initial public offering (IPO) as one of several options to raise capital needed to market its leading product, its chairman said on Friday.

    A stock market float by the gastrointestinal specialist, which was founded in 2006 as a spin-out from Johnson & Johnson (JNJ.N), could signal an opening in the IPO window for European drug companies following a dearth of new issues.

    Unlike riskier biotechnology groups, Movetis already has advanced products and has just obtained approval from the European Commission to sell its lead drug Resolor, also known as prucalopride, as a treatment for chronic constipation.

    It plans to launch the drug in Germany and Britain in the first quarter of 2010, with other EU countries following later next year.

    Resolor treats chronic constipation in women for whom existing laxatives fail to provide relief.

    “We will need additional financing to launch this product … and we are examining different ways to obtain this financing. An IPO is one of them,” Movetis Chairman Staf Van Reet told Reuters.

    Movetis was also considering a further private financing round, Van Reet said, adding that its stakeholders were prepared to continue to invest substantially in the company.

    Belgian media have reported that the group plans to launch an IPO next month and could start trading in Euronext Brussels from December.

    Besides Resolor, the group has two products in Phase II mid-stage clinical development. They will start clinical trials performed on a larger group of patients next year.

    It also has two products in its pre-clinical pipeline.

    Resolor will compete with a range of mostly over-the-counter (OTC) drugs, marketed mainly by small to medium-sized players.

    “But it is not really a replacement for these products. It is aimed specifically at patients who cannot be helped adequately by existing products,” Van Reet said.

    Movetis will conduct further clinical studies to determine the safety and efficacy of Resolor as a treatment for chronic constipation in men, and also intends to develop the product for the treatment of children.

    Long termer, it is looking at interesting product opportunities to supplement its offering, Van Reet said, adding however that it had no immediate acquisition plans.

    Movetis was spun off in November 2006 from Janssen Pharmaceutica, a unit of U.S. healthcare giant Johnson & Johnson (JNJ.N).

    It has the right to commercialise Resolor in the European Union, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland, but Johnson & Johnson kept the rights for the rest of the world when the group was spun off.

    The group is, however, entitled to royalties when Johnson & Johnson starts marketing Resolor in different parts of the world, Van Reet said.

    Leading investors in Movetis include French venture capital group Sofinnova Partners and Life Sciences Partners of the Netherlands.

    By Antonia van de Velde
    (Editing by Ben Hirschler and Mike Nesbit)

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  • Gartmore Eyes London Listing

    LONDON (Reuters) – Fund management firm Gartmore, which manages more than 17 billion pounds ($28 billion) of assets, is preparing an initial public offering as early as the end of the year, sources close to the matter said on Friday.

    Private equity firm Hellman & Friedman, which holds a 50 percent stake in Gartmore, is looking to cut its stake by listing the fund manager’s shares in London, sources said.

    The preparations reheat proposals from 2007 to float the company for up to 1.5 billion pounds. These plans were put on ice due to the financial crisis and company valuations have since dropped significantly.

    In April, a senior Gartmore executive played down the likelihood of an IPO because of the state of the markets. [ID:nLS156350]

    However, the recent surge in equity prices has reignited interest amongst private equity firms to list portfolio businesses.

    “Hellman & Friedman is always looking at these opportunities; it wouldn’t be at all surprising if they would want to do something with Gartmore, which has some momentum behind it,” a source with knowledge of the situation said.

    Hellman & Friedman and Gartmore both declined to comment.

    Private equity firms are looking to realise some of their better-performing businesses in order to return money to investors, who have been starved of cash as company sales have been difficult to achieve.

    There is a long list of IPO candidates from private equity firms — BC Partners’ [PCPRT.UL] Amadeus, Medica and Unity Media; Bridgepoint’s [BRDG.UL] Pets at Home, Blackstone’s Travelport and Permira’s [PERM.UL] New Look.

    But Europe’s IPO market is still at a fragile stage, with investors demanding big discounts in valuations.

    Hellman & Friedman’s stake dates from October 2006 when it backed a management buyout leaving senior management and the private equity firm with equal holdings in the company.

    (Reporting by Daisy Ku, Raji Menon and Simon Meads; Editing by Tom Freke; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter) ($1 = 0.6006 pound)

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  • Video hilarity: Windows 7 launched on a MacBook Pro on NBC’s The Today Show

    Oh, dear. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer was on The Today Show (international viewers: The Today Show is a morning news and entertainment program that airs on NBC, a big TV network here) to unveil Windows 7. Call me crazy, but isn’t that a first-gen MacBook Pro in the background? Good job, NBC!

    I’ve embedded the video from Hulu for our U.S. readers, and for international readers here’s a few screencaps:

    mbp1

    mbp2

    mbp3

    Once again, bravo, NBC, for a job well done! (And people call us sloppy, with a budget one-zillionth that of The Today Show!)


  • Kentucky Supreme Court Hears Online Gambling Case

    The Kentucky Supreme Court heard arguments on Thursday on whether the Common Wealth of Kentucky has the power to seize 141 domains belonging to online gambling sites.

    Previously a Franklin Circuit Court Judge ruled for the state saying it was allowed to seize the domain names, but the Court of Appeals overturned that decision. The case was then appealed to the Supreme Court.

    Jon L. Fleischaker, attorney for the Interactive Media Entertainment &Gaming Association (iMEGA) called the efforts by Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear to block the state residents’ use of Internet gambling websites "intellectually dishonest."

    "They made up a process that is totally lacking in due process," Fleischaker said during arguments before the Supreme Court.

    Fleischaker, along with attorneys representing Sportsbook.com and the Interactive Gaming Council, asked the Supreme Court to uphold an earlier decision by the Kentucky Court of Appeals, blocking the seizure of 141 domain names belonging to online gambling sites.

    In a 2-to-1 decision, the Appeals Court in January rejected the governor’s claim that Kentucky players and the Internet gambling sites had violated state law. The decision also held that a lower court had erred when it applied the state’s "gambling devices" statute to justify the seizure of the Internet domain names.

    Judge-Michelle-Keller

    "[I]t stretches credulity to conclude that a series of numbers, or Internet address, can be said to constitute a "machine or any mechanical or other devicedesigned and manufactured primarily for use in connection with gambling," Judge Michelle M. Keller wrote in her majority opinion.

    A decision is not expected before the end of the year.
     

  • Does the New iMac Foretell the Next Apple TV?

    new imacs

    Apple’s brand new 27-inch iMacs come with an interesting feature: the ability to act as a display for connected devices via the built-in DisplayPort connection. This means that, with the proper adaptors, you can connect an array of home theatre devices to the iMac, including Blu-Ray players. The screen has also moved to the HDTV standard 16:9 ratio and it’s wall mountable. All of this makes me think one thing, my next HDTV may be an iMac.

    The setup would be relatively straightforward. The new iMacs already come with wireless mouse and keyboard, so controlling it from your couch isn’t a problem. Add a tuner attachment from Elgato to get your cable on the iMac, as well as DVR capabilities. Plug in your Blu-Ray player via DisplayPort and then install any of the plethora of multimedia interfaces available for the Mac. My personal favorite is Boxee.

    None of this is particularly groundbreaking, you could have done something very similar with a bit more hackage the day before the new iMacs were announced. But it does lead one to start thinking in an interesting direction. There’s no doubt that the computer and the television are moving towards convergence. Apple’s made its first play for the digital living room with the Apple TV, to less than impressive results, as we’ve discussed before. It’s also a company that learns from its mistakes and has a history of taking small, evolutionary steps that can, in a few years, add up to some really exciting changes. Just look at how they’ve handled multitouch.

    Combine these small steps with the slow death of desktop computers and Apple has to be thinking about what the future of the iMac will be. What would be the next steps toward a real iMac as HDTV? Well, you’d need to integrate the tuner, and you’d definitely have to offer a large range of sizes, while simultaneously dropping prices. This wouldn’t be quite as hard as you might imagine. The current 27-inch iMac is much more powerful than you really need, and the cost of LCD displays is quickly dropping. Integrate the Apple TV’s media interface and tweak OS X a bit to make it easier to control from ten feet away and you’re almost there.

    Do I think this is definitely the direction Apple is moving with the iMac? Not necessarily, but its actions thus far have certainly got me thinking about it and I wouldn’t be surprised to see Apple make a strong play at the high-end of the HDTV market. In a few years you may be able to buy 30, 40 and 50 inch iMacs, at a premium over standard HDTVs, but with a lot more functionality built-in. It’s certainly Apple’s style to go into an industry and try to slice off the top 10 percent of market share, which also happens to include the lion’s share of the profits. It’s done it in computers, it’s done it with cell phones, why not with HDTVs?



    In Q3, NewNet focus turns to business models and search. Read the, “NewNet Q3 Wrap-up.”

  • Star Wars Lightsaber laser pointers make for an easy purchasing decision

    c5e6_star_wars_laser_pointers_close

    As laser pointers go, you could do far worse than this little keychain Lightsaber. I mean think about it; if your job requires you to use a laser pointer, then you might as well have a cool one. And at $15, it’s not like this is a huge monetary investment. As an investment in your social standing amongst your peers, though, this thing ought to pay off in spades.

    Choose from Darth Vader or Darth Maul versions, available at ThinkGeek.

    Features include:

    • Working red dot laser pointer
    • The force
    • Highly detailed scaled replicas
    • Batteries included
    • Pew pew pew!

    Those are the actual features listed on the product page. Very nice.

    Star Wars Lightsaber Laser Pointer [ThinkGeek]


  • Microsoft Q1 2010 by the numbers: Windows license sales at record levels

    By Joe Wilcox, Betanews

    Microsoft may have quite a headache, but the economy finally isn’t whacking the company as hard. This morning, Microsoft announced fiscal 2010 first quarter results before Wall Street’s opening bell, beating analyst consensus expectations. Mixing metaphors, Microsoft’s results don’t stink as bad as they have for the last couple of quarters.

    Windows 7 is off to a resounding start. Microsoft launched the new operating system yesterday, but PC OEMs have been buying the software for months. During a conference call with financial analysts this morning, Bill Koefoed, general manager of Microsoft investor relations, said that Windows license sales were strongest ever for any single quarter.

    For fiscal 2010 first quarter, Microsoft reported revenue of $12.92 billion, for a 14 percent year-over-year decline. Operating income: $4.48 billion, down 25 percent. Net income: $3.57 billion, or 40 cents a share. Net income fell by 18 percent and earnings per share by 17 percent year over year.

    Results would have been higher if not for a one-time charge. Microsoft deferred $1.47 billion from fiscal first quarter to the second, because of technology guarantees for Windows 7. People buying Windows Vista PCs were eligible for free or discounted 7 upgrades starting July 1. Without the deferral, Microsoft would have reported $14.39 billion in revenue, for only a 4 percent year-over-year decline, and 52 cents earnings per share, up 8 percent from fiscal 2009 first quarter.

    Microsoft stopped offering guidance during fiscal 2009. So Wall Street consensus was solely based on analysts’ judgment. Consensus called for a 17.9 percent year-over-year revenue decline, to $12.37 billion. Earnings-per-share estimate was 32 cents, for a 33.3 percent consensus decline. So even without the deferral, Microsoft beat the Street.

    Chris Liddell, Microsoft’s CFO, described the quarterly results as “strong,” during the conference call. He attributed Microsoft’s start at revenue and earnings recovery to Windows and Xbox sales and to cost containment. Fiscal 2010 first quarter “might have been the bottom of the economic reset,” he said. He predicted real recovery to start in early calendar 2010.

    Microsoft Q1 2010 Revenue

    Liddell still didn’t offer much guidance for fiscal second quarter, but still more than other quarters:

    • Windows & Windows Live: Revenue growth will be in line with the PC market, or slightly ahead. Liddell said Microsoft expects the “netbook mix to stabilize” over the fiscal year.
    • Server & Tools: Revenue growth will exceed server shipments.
    • Business: Revenue growth will lag the PC market, in part as businesses wait for Office 2010.
    • Online Services: Revenue growth will be equal to or better than the market.
    • Entertainment & Devices: Flat.

    Microsoft got a little boost by bad news not being worse. Last week, Gartner and IDC released better-than-expected preliminary third calendar quarter PC shipment data. Gartner had expected worldwide PC shipments to decline 5.6 percent, when they instead rose 0.5 percent to 80.9 million units. IDC put PC shipments up 2.3 percent following 6.8 percent and 2.4 percent declines in the first and second quarters, respectively. IDC estimated PC shipments to be 78.1 million units. By comparisons, Microsoft estimates that worldwid, year-over-year PC shipments were flat to 2 percent growth. Sequentially, sales were up in the mid-teens.

    Microsoft Q1 2010 Income

    But circumstances mitigated the benefits to Microsoft:

    • Netbooks continued their sales surge. Most of these portables shipped with Windows XP Home, for which Microsoft collects substantially smaller licensing fees than either Windows Vista or 7. However, Microsoft also shipped Windows 7 Starter Edition, which margins are better than XP Home.
    • Some regions sagged: PC shipments declined 8 percent year over year in EMEA (Europe, Middle East and Africa), offset by dramatic netbook and low-cost notebook sales, according to IDC.
    • Checks on component suppliers suggest that OEMs flooded the channel with inventory in anticipation of strong Windows 7 uplift. Microsoft could see Windows license sales decline in fiscal second quarter, particularly if PC sell-through is weaker than OEMs and retailers anticipate.

    Segment Results

    Windows & Windows Live. Microsoft has changed the name of what was the “Client” division to “Windows & Windows Live,” reflecting recent organizational changes. Revenue fell 39 percent year over year and income by 52 percent. The declines are not as severe as they seem, because of the $1.47 billion deferral. Windows & Windows Live revenue was $2.6 billion without the deferral but $3.8 billion with it. Microsoft expects to realize $1.7 billion total deferred revenue for the division in the coming quarter.

    The division derives 80 percent of its revenue from license sales to PC OEMs, which were up 6 percent year over year. However, OEM license revenues declined by 6 percent, reflecting the margin damage inflected by increasing netbook sales. Microsoft estimates that during the quarter, netbooks accounted for 12 percent of PC sales.

    Microsoft reported that Windows license sales were strong during the quarter, with sales during September being the strongest for any month ever, in line with the aforementioned record quarterly sales. Robust license sales reflect strong OEM demand for Windows 7. However, as mentioned earlier, the strong license sales could be viewed as OEMs flooding the channel with units that may or may not sell through. Liddell said that OEMs “are buying in anticipation of demand” rather than for “actual demand.” Therefore, robust Windows license sales are cautiously encouraging.

    Server & Tools. The division is most insulated against economic maladies, because 55 percent of revenues comes from contractual volume-licensing agreements. However, because of corporate layoffs, Microsoft is seeing customers renewing license contracts at lower levels. The division’s revenue was flat year over year, while income grew by 23 percent. Microsoft predicted that industry server hardware sales declined 20 percent year over year during the quarter.

    Business. Next to Windows, Microsoft’s other cash cow division reported revenue and income declines of 11 percent and 10 percent, respectively. Several factors accounted for growth declines, including aggressive back-to-school promotions for Office and declines in Business and Dynamics licensing — down 4 percent and 6 percent, respectively.

    Consumer revenue declined $390 million, or 34 percent, which is seemingly counter-intuitive to Microsoft offering deep discounts. Shouldn’t revenue increase then? The discounts were for Office Home and Student 2007, which comes with three licenses and sold for less than $90 from some retailers. Presumably, the heavily discounted three licenses-for-one product sapped sales from higher-priced, single-license Office SKUs.

    Online Services. Income plummeted by 50 percent. The division’s performance, with ad sales in decline, starkly contrasts with quarterly results from Google, which asserted the worst of the econolypse is over. The majority of the Online Services division’s sales come from advertising, which fell 3 percent year over year to $421 million.

    Entertainment & Devices. Microsoft sold 2.1 million Xbox consoles during the quarter, bringing the install base to about 35 million. Xbox Live revenue grew by 50 percent.

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2009



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  • Google Launches Latest Version of AdWords API

    Google has launched the newest version of the AdWords API v2009 beta. That would be version 200909. Google cites the following as the highlights of the new API:

    Asynchronous calls – Asynchronous calls allow you to work with large sets of data faster and more easily. Instead of having to wait for our system to fully complete your request before you can make another one, you’re now able to make another call as soon as the API service confirms that it has received your previous call. No more waiting for the server to complete large requests. V200909 will continue to support Synchronous methods as well.

    Keyword and placement ideas – With the new TargetingIdeaService, you’ll be able to get keyword and placement ideas through the API, leveraging the functionality of the search-based keyword tool.

    Location Extensions preview – Limited location extensions functionality is now available as a preview of the full functionality in development.

    AdWordsThese are just the highlights. Google has a complete list of all of the new features in its release notes.

    The company says that over the next few months, it will continue to introduce new features and additional AdWords functionality. New features will include ReportService, AccountService and the ability to pre-check for errors.

    "Given that v2009 introduces new concepts and features, we have extended the sunset period for deprecated services to 6 months," Google says. "If you haven’t already begun migrating your systems to the v2009 API, we strongly encourage you to start right away."

    v13 services CampaignService, AdGroupService, CriterionService, AdService, InfoService, KeywordToolService, and SiteSuggestionService will sunset on April 22, 2010. Other v13 service sunset dates will be announced in due time.

  • Women, Mothers, Families and Reform

    We’ve discussed health insurance reform from a lot of different perspectives here at WhiteHouse.gov, from doctors to seniors to small business owners.  In a new video, First Lady Michelle Obama discusses it as a woman, and as a mom:

    Viewing this video requires Adobe Flash Player 8 or higher. Download the free player.

    download .mp4 (77 MB)

    iVillage is also taking questions on this video that HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius will answer next week, hop over to join in.

     
  • Hands On: Magic Mouse

    Our very own Olly Farshi dropped by his local Apple Store in Helsinki and was kind enough to hook us up with a quick hands on video looking at Apple’s new Magic Mouse. So, enjoy!



    As Q4 begins, online video is now mainstream. Read the, “Connected Consumer Q3 Wrap-up.”

  • FAIL: Windows 7 crashes during live TV demo


    There’s no need for a translation here. A fail this epic speaks for itself and brings back fond memories of the classic Windows 98 fail. Enjoy. The laughs from the TV hosts are the best part IMHO. [via MacDailyNews]


  • As House Lawmakers Near Vote On Health Bill, Controversies Linger

    As a vote on the House’s final health reform legislation appears near, the Democratic leadership has renewed its focus on the public plan, although other issues also remain on the table.

    Politico reports that “Speaker Nancy Pelosi counted votes Thursday night and determined she could not pass a ‘robust public option’ — the most aggressive of the three forms of a public option House Democrats have been considering as part of a national overhaul of health care. Pelosi’s decision—coupled with a significant turn of events yesterday during a private White House meeting—points to an increasingly likely compromise for a ‘trigger’ option for a government plan. … Administration officials have been telling POLITICO for weeks now that this the most likely compromise because it can probably satisfy liberals …. There has been a flurry of rumors that a robust government option remains viable. But top House Democrats privately concede that is wishful thinking that ignores the power of moderate Democrats in this debate” (Allen, 10/23).

    The Hill:  “The survey ordered by Pelosi turned up 46 Democrats who said they would vote against the so-called ‘robust’ public option, according to a Democratic lawmaker who spoke on the condition of anonymity.” That’s enough to block the legislation (Soraghan, 10/22).

    Pelosi said Democrats could be assured that a public option will be in the House bill, the New York Times reports. She also cautioned, however, that many have focused too much on the public option and overlooked other key provisions of the legislation. “So much attention has been paid to the public option and once we have a bill, which will be soon, then you can also pay attention to so many other good things that are in the bill,” she said (Herszenhorn, 10/22).

    The Washington Post reported earlier that  “House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and her top lieutenants said Thursday that they are close to corralling the 218 votes they need to move forward with comprehensive legislation” (Montgomery and Murray, 10/23).

    Meanwhile, CongressDaily reports, “A group of 36 House Democrats is threatening to derail healthcare reform legislation if CBO projections don’t show lower costs over the long term.” The group includes mainly Blue Dogs, but not all are members of that conservative coalition (Hunt and House, 10/23). 

    Roll Call: “Pelosi vowed Thursday during her weekly press conference that the House bill must reduce the deficit in the second decade, not just the first, but she does not yet have a conclusive CBO statement to that effect.” Hoyer and Pelosi both said they were confident that they could achieve goals both of paying for the bill now, and lowering the deficit in the future (Dennis and Newmyer, 10/22).

    CQ Politics: The House bill will include a federal antitrust exemption for health insurance companies, Pelosi said. “The House Judiciary Committee approved a bill Wednesday that would partially repeal the 60-year-old exemption from antitrust law for health insurers … (and) authorize the government to prosecute insurers for antitrust violations if they are found to be engaged in ‘price fixing, bid rigging or market allocations.’” The Senate is considering similar legislation (10/22).

    Associated Press/Boston Globe: Meanwhile, “House Democrats have reached a deal on Medicare payments that will secure critical support from heartland and Pacific Coast lawmakers for President Barack Obama’s goal of revamping health care.” The deal includes two studies that would identify recommendations for paying physicians based on quality, rather than volume, and address geographic differences in how much doctors are paid. The recommendations would be implemented unless Congress rejects them (Alonso-Zaldivar, 10/22).

    Associated Press/Boston Globe: “House Democrats are at an impasse over whether their remake of the nation’s health care system would effectively allow federal funding of abortion.” At least 24 anti-abortion Democrats are protesting measures they say could lead to taxpayer funding for the procedures (Werner, 10/23).

  • PSN video content update – more anime incoming

    With the Naruto movies hitting the Video Store early this month, the PlayStation Network continued its anime push with the addition of the more popu…

  • AT&T announces Q3 results, iPhone/data gains drive profits

    AT&T Logo

    Yesterday AT&T announced its third-quarter earnings, and while year-over-year revenue was down (along with the rest of the market) Ma’ Bell managed to beat analysts $0.50 earnings per share prediction by $0.04.  Not bad, AT&T. The earnings were largely due to AT&T’s wireless division — 2 million new lines of service and 4.3 million post-paid wireless activations (3.2 million of which were iPhones) — produced a 33.6% percent increase in wireless data revenues bringing this quarter’s total to $3.6 billion. Our fleet of iPhones can probably account for a couple million of that 3.6 number. We’re joking, relax. Hit the press release for all the dirty details.

    Read

  • Microsoft Beats the Street, But Windows 7 Is Its Bet Going Forward

    Microsoft’s week of positive news continued this morning as the company turned in earnings and revenues that beat analysts’ expectations, but it remains clear that the company’s prospects going forward will depend heavily on the reception of its Windows 7 operating system. Sales in the company’s fiscal first quarter fell 14 percent to $12.9 billion, down for the third quarter in a row, and earnings fell 18 percent to $3.6 billion. The Redmond giant has been battling razor-thin profit margins in the portable computing arena, though, and its results today were expected to be worse. Meanwhile, there are signs that the PC market may be improving, and Microsoft is indeed riding a positive tide surrounding Windows 7.

    Microsoft’s Windows sales were actually down 39 percent for the quarter as the company’s Windows Vista business stalled while it gave out upgrade coupons for Windows 7. Earlier this year, Microsoft announced its first-ever layoffs, which it attributed to a profit margin decline caused by netbooks. As it noted in its 10-Q earlier this year:

    “The decline in OEM revenue reflects an 11 percentage point decrease in the OEM premium mix to 64 percent, primarily driven by growth of licenses related to sales of netbook PCs, as well as changes in the geographic and product mixes.”

    Microsoft’s challenges when it comes to trying to make money in the portable computing market won’t go away anytime soon, but there are signs that cost-cutting at the company is working. And a very positive quarterly earnings report from Intel may also imply that better times lie ahead in the PC market. Above all, though, Microsoft’s fortunes are likely to improve because of the positive reaction to Windows 7. It has already set records for pre-orders, and has more momentum than any Microsoft operating system in years.


  • Experienced Criminals Find New Opportunities In Medical Fraud

    Gangsters are getting into the medical fraud business, CNN reports. “Experienced in running drug, prostitution and gambling rings, crime groups of various ethnicities and nationalities are learning it’s safer and potentially more profitable to file fraudulent claims with the federal Medicare program and state-run Medicaid plans.”

    One case in Los Angeles, a medical fraud hot spot, turned up suspects from Russian and Eurasian gangs, among other groups. “Recent cases include crime boss Konstantin Grigoryan, a former Soviet army colonel who pleaded guilty to taking $20 million from Medicare. Karapet ‘Doc’ Khacheryan, boss of a Eurasian crime gang, was recently convicted with five lieutenants of stealing doctor identities in a $2 million scam.”

    The crooks steal doctors’ billing information and patient’s identifiers in order to fake medical transactions. One doctor’s billing information was robbed during a fake job interview and used to bill for $800,000 worth of electric wheelchairs. When federal agents asked the doctor if he had prescribed those services, he recalls, “I said no. I am a psychiatrist” (Chernoff and Steffen, 10/22).

  • Senate Negotiators Wrestle With Employer Mandate, Unemployed Have Mixed Feelings On Health Bills

    News reports reflect how current reform plans are likely to affect employers as well as people who are unemployed.

    The Wall Street Journal reports on the status of the employer mandate. “Business groups won a big victory last week when a key Senate committee voted to place only modest penalties on employers that don’t offer health-insurance coverage. But they are almost certain to face stiffer penalties in the final Senate health-care overhaul bill.” The two Senate bills “have strikingly different penalties for employers who don’t offer health insurance,” and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid called it “an issue we are concerned about.” He and other key negotiators spent “at least two nights this week” trying to hammer out a compromise.

    Both exempt the smallest businesses. “Overall, the Finance bill is expected to form the backbone of the final Senate bill aimed at fixing the nation’s health system. But its version of the employer mandate is coming under sharp attack from some leading Senate Democrats who say it lets businesses off too easy” (Adamy, 10/23).

    In other news, unemployed workers, who have a great deal to gain from an overhaul of the nation’s health system, disagree on Congressional health care proposals, The Baltimore Sun and the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel report. “The steep jump in unemployment and the accompanying rise in people without insurance this year were expected to increase support for health care reform. And not surprisingly, many of the people who have found themselves suddenly uninsured support health care reform. Yet the proposals before Congress face opposition even from some people hit by the downturn, and that opposition shows how the issue has divided the country” (Boulton, 10/22).

  • Play with the BlackBerry Storm 2 emulator at VerizonWireless.com

    Retail stores are finally getting in their Storm 2 dummy phones but those won’t do you any good if you actually wanna use the phone’s software. VZW has you covered though with a just-posted BlackBerry Storm 2 emulator that lets you click your way through the OS.


  • Dear Lobbyists: When Crafting Astroturf Letters, Remember To Do A Search & Replace On XYZ Corp.

    We were just talking about how one of the worst tricks of DC lobbyists is to get various special interest groups to send letters on your behalf, even though those are really written by the lobbyists themselves. The quote in that original article that highlights the practice shows how it works:


    “You go down the Latino people, the deaf people, the farmers, and choose them…. You say, ‘I can’t use this one–I already used them last time…’ We had their letterhead. We’d just write the letter. We’d fax it to them and tell them, ‘You’re in favor of this.’”

    Indeed. Well, it looks like in the process of faxing and telling a senior citizen’s group what they were in favor of, AT&T’s anti-net neutrality lobbyists forgot to do a bit of searching and replacing. Karl Bode points us to a hilarious letter filed with the FCC about net neutrality (pdf), officially on behalf of the Arkansas Retired Seniors Coalition — the exact type of group often used in these astroturfing campaigns — which suggests that someone didn’t proofread the letter first:




    Right in the first paragraph, it looks like the Arkansas Retired Seniors (or perhaps the lobbyist directly) forgot to change out the boilerplate statement: “XYZ organization shares this concern.” XYZ organization, huh? Here’s an editing tip for AT&T’s lobbyists: when crafting such letters with boilerplate language that’s supposed to get changed at a later date before being sent off to the FCC, you should highlight that text in a different color. Saves embarrassing mistakes like this one.

    In researching this further, Karl also can’t find any other evidence that the Arkansas Retired Seniors exist. Separately, he found another mistake by the lobbyists when it sent a different anti-net neutrality letter from Grumman Shipbuilding (ship builders against neutrality?). This one wasn’t as egregious, but the lobbyists forgot to remove the header info that says “Governor/PUC Letters to FCC on Net Neutrality” with the neat little classification system the lobbyists use: “Letter 2: Specific to Investment and Employment.” Wonder what the original header for XYZ organization was?

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