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Latest Happenings
mtvU Launching Local Online Campus Guide
August 27, 2008 :mtvU is launching an online network of campus guides called Campus Daily Guide..full story.
 
Firefox Plug-In Simplifies Interactions with Web Pages
August 27, 2008 : An experimental Firefox plug-in called Ubiquity from Mozilla Labs aims to simplify time-consuming interactions for Web surfers. Instead of cutting and pasting to multiple Web sites in Firefox, Ubiquity does the work with commands. Ubiquity is both an interface and a development platform that Web developers can use to create custom commands for sites...full story.
 
Microsoft's newest browser may block ads
August 27, 2008 : SEATTLE - The next version of Microsoft Corp.'s Web browser makes it easier for people to surf the Internet without leaving a trace. Companies that sell advertisements online — including Microsoft — can electronically gather tidbits about Web surfers' habits, and then use that information to help decide what kinds of ads to show. However, in the newest "beta" test version of Microsoft's forthcoming Internet Explorer 8, which was made available Wednesday, a mode called InPrivate..full story.

Microsoft Seeks Help for Another Yahoo Bid

Unable to strike a deal on its own, Microsoft Relevant Products/Services Corp. reportedly is hoping to snap up Yahoo's online search operations with the help of News Corp. and Time Warner Inc.

The latest twist in Microsoft's convoluted courtship caused Yahoo's shares to rise more than 3 percent in Wednesday's sinking stock market, even though the chances of a deal getting done still seemed remote.

If nothing else, the enthusiastic reaction to the unconfirmed report in The Wall Street Journal served as another reminder that investors want Yahoo to pursue a different path than the one mapped out by Chief Executive Jerry Yang.

And that could be bad news for Yang, who started Yahoo as an Internet directory 14 years ago. Unless he can sway shareholder sentiment before Yahoo's annual meeting Aug. 1, Yang could lose his job in a boardroom coup being attempted by investor Carl Icahn.

Recognizing Yahoo's vulnerability, Microsoft is trying to recruit News Corp., Time Warner's AOL or other media partners to put together a joint bid that would slice Yahoo into pieces, according to the Journal. The story cited undisclosed people familiar with the discussions.

Microsoft declined comment Wednesday. A Yahoo spokeswoman didn't immediately return a call seeking comment.

Under the reported breakup plan, Microsoft would emerge with Yahoo's online search operations -- the main object of the software maker's desire since it began stalking Yahoo as long as ago as 2006.

After the two sides couldn't agree on a price, Microsoft withdrew a $47.5 billion bid to buy Yahoo in its entirety in early May.

Just two weeks later, Microsoft offered to pay $1 billion for Yahoo's search engine and invest another $8 billion for a 16 percent stake in Yahoo's remaining business.

Yahoo rejected that offer, too, and instead forged an advertising partnership with Google Inc., whose rapid growth prompted Microsoft's bid for Yahoo in the first place.

Now, Microsoft is trying to figure out a way to carve up Yahoo's business and hand off the non-search pieces to News Corp., AOL or other media partners, the Journal said.

Neither News Corp. nor AOL are new players in this soap opera.

Yahoo explored possible deals with AOL and with News Corp.'s popular online hangout, MySpace.com, while trying to fend off Microsoft's advances. And Microsoft previously has talked to News Corp. about making a joint bid for Yahoo.

Desperate to placate its peeved shareholders, Yahoo has resurrected a previous proposal to combine with AOL and give Time Warner a minority stake in the merged operations, according another Journal story late Wednesday that cited unnamed people. The odds also appear stacked against that idea working out, the Journal reported.

Source : http://www.toptechnews.com/story.xhtml?story_id=013001786JNX