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Latest Happenings
Microsoft launches Dynamics NAV 2009 ERP
Nov 19, 2008: Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009, the latest generation of one of the company's midmarket ERP products, will be generally available Dec. 1 in 14 countries, the company said Wednesday at its Convergence conference in Copenhagen, Denmark...full story.
 
Yang or no Yang, Microsoft still doesn't want to buy Yahoo! (Anymore)
Nov 19, 2008: If it seems like every few days we're checking to see if Microsoft plans to buy Yahoo!, it's because we are. Earlier this year, Microsoft offered to buy the search company for $33 a share, but Yahoo! CEO Jerry Yang said that bid undervalued the company. After a little back and forth, Microsoft walked away...full story.
 
Google starts rolling out Gmail themes
Nov 19, 2008: It appears that Google is starting to roll out a new feature that allows some users to choose themes for Gmail. Google has provided a set of themes that change the look of the iGoogle personalized homepage for a while now, but this is the first time we've seen official themes for Gmail...full story.

Microsoft wants to negotiate with new Yahoo board

Jul 7, 2008 : SAN FRANCISCO - Microsoft Corp. threw its weight behind investor Carl Icahn's effort to oust Yahoo Inc.'s board next month, saying Monday that a successful rebellion would encourage the software maker to renew its takeover bid for Yahoo or negotiate another deal.

The development gives Icahn a carrot to dangle before Yahoo shareholders as he wages a campaign to oust Yahoo's nine directors at the company's annual meeting Aug. 1.

Icahn has been arguing that a purge of the Yahoo board is the only way to salvage a deal with Microsoft - a position that the Redmond, Wash.-based software maker backed with its Monday statement.

Yahoo shares climbed $1.60, or 7.5 percent, to $22.96 in Monday's morning trading. The company had no immediate comment.

Although it stopped short of endorsing Icahn's slate of candidates, Microsoft made it clear that it didn't believe it could negotiate a deal with Yahoo's current board.

Microsoft didn't say whether it would be willing to buy Yahoo at the same price - $47.5 billion, or $33 per share - that it offered two months ago. Chief Executive Steve Ballmer withdrew that bid after Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang sought $37 per share, a height that Yahoo's stock hasn't reached in 2 years.

After dropping its takeover bid, Microsoft tried to buy Yahoo's online search engine for $1 billion and invest another $8 billion for a 16 percent stake in Yahoo's remaining operations.

Yahoo instead opted for an online advertising partnership with rival Google Inc. that is supposed to boost its annual revenue by $800 million. That alliance faces an antitrust review by the U.S. Justice Department because Google and Yahoo combined control more than 80 percent of the U.S. search advertising market.

Source: http://www.dailynews.com/news/ci_9807906?source=rss