Archive for July, 2010

Yahoo testing livelier, more open home page

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Although the Yahoo home page remains a major force on the Internet, much new activity has shifted to social networks, search engines, and other sites. Yahoo’s ultimate hope is that Yahoo.com will become a more active part of people’s online lives, not users will use Yahoo.com not just to check the latest headlines but also to check up on others in their social orbits.

The new page is being tested with a small subset of users in the United States, United Kingdom, India, and France. About 314 million people used the site in July, according to ComScore’s estimates.

(Credit:
Yahoo)

Yahoo already offers a customized home page, My Yahoo. It won’t be phased out, the company said, but the regular Yahoo home page will look more like it.

“These two starting points are definitely converging,” the company said in a statement. “To help people make sense of what’s happening in their world, we’re redefining the concept of a ’start page’ away from either a broadcast view (Yahoo.com) or a personal view only (My Yahoo), and creating a homepage that blends the best of both approaches to deliver relevance for a mass market.”

One major upcoming phase will be hand-picking the online applications at the site. “People will be able to customize the applications area in the coming months during future rounds of our ongoing testing process,” Yahoo said. With its Yahoo Open Strategy, the company is trying to attract programmers to build applications on Yahoo properties, offering the promise of a large audience.

Yahoo has begun offering some users a more personalized home page that the company hopes will increase the usage and utility of a Web site that’s widely used but elderly in Internet years.

The new home page features a dashboard on the left edge that reports activity with a variety of applications. For example, it can be set so users see e-mail from Yahoo Mail, AOL, and Gmail, and other applications notify users of comment on photos posted at Flickr, events on the calendar, and bids active on eBay.

The new page will be revamped later with more dramatic changes, such as the ability to house user-selected Web applications, but the company is starting with a relatively modest redesign to get baseline testing data for later comparisons.

(Credit:
Yahoo)

People can’t sign up for the test page, because Yahoo wants a random selection of users, the company said. The timing for broad release of the final version depends on how the tests go.

Yahoo is testing a new home page. The new site is more personalized and customizable. This version is a 'baseline' for user testing; Yahoo will add more features later. (Click to enlarge.)

Clicking the mail tab on the dashboard reveals a miniature inbox. (Click to enlarge.)

Report Intel faces new EU antitrust charges

Friday, July 30th, 2010

The expected charges are the latest chapter in Intel’s antitrust battle with regulators in the U.S. and abroad.

In June, it was reported that the U.S. Federal Trade Commission had opened a formal investigation into the chipmaker’s business practices.

“We are continuing to cooperate and really don’t know what the commission will do,” Intel spokesman Chuck Mulloy told the paper when asked about the possibility of new charges. “We believe we operate within the law.”

The new charges, which could come as early as Thursday, allege that Intel offered inducements to European retailers in return for not buying processors from rival Advanced Micro Devices, the paper reported.

Intel is expected to face new antitrust charges from European regulators that focus on the chip giant’s marketing and sales practices, according to a report Tuesday night on The Wall Street Journal’s Web site, citing unidentified people familiar with matter.

Intel has also been under intense scrutiny in other parts of the world, especially in Europe, South Korea, and Japan, but it has faced little objection to its business practices in its native United States in recent years, other than in a recent investigation launched at the state level by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo.

eBay releases details of complaint against Craigsl

Friday, July 30th, 2010

In response to that, Craigslist reorganized its stock structure in January, reducing eBay’s stake in the online classified site from 28.04 percent to 24.85 percent. The reduction mean that eBay loses the ability to elect a director.

“Sadly, we have an uncomfortably conflicted shareholder in our midst, one that is obsessed with dominating online classifieds for the purpose of maximizing its own profits,” Craigslist’s blog said.

Apparently eBay feels that its ownership stake in Craigslist was unfairly reduced following eBay’s launch of rival online classifieds service Kijiji, which went live overseas in 2005 and in the U.S. in 2007, according to the 26-page lawsuit filed in Delaware’s Court of Chancery and made available by eBay on Wednesday.

According to the heavily redacted, public copy of the complaint, which names Craigslist founder Craig Newmark and CEO Jim Buckmaster, Craigslist views Kijiji as a competitive activity that cancels some shareholder rights that eBay acquired in 2004 when it bought a stake in Craigslist.

“The original agreement between the two parties always envisioned that there could be competitive activity,” eBay spokeswoman Kim Rubey told the Associated Press.

Craigslist plans to make a formal response to the complaint in the next few weeks, the company said on its blog.

She went on to say that eBay was “so happy” with its relationship with Craigslist that “we would welcome the opportunity to acquire the remainder of (the company) we do not already own whenever you and (Newmark) feel it would be appropriate,” according to the lawsuit.

The mystery over what prompted eBay to sue Craigslist last week appears to be solved.

The lawsuit also discloses that Meg Whitman, who was CEO of eBay at the time, offered to buy the remainder of Craigslist in a letter to Craigslist in July 2007. Whitman’s letter was in response to a letter Buckmaster sent that expressed “‘negative’ feelings toward eBay’s launch of Kijiji,” and that stated “we are no longer comfortable having eBay as a shareholder.”

However, eBay feels Craigslist overstepped its rights and has filed suit over the diluting of its stake.

Whitman responded by saying that eBay had taken steps to “firewall off” its Kijiji operations from the corporate management of its equity stake in Craigslist, according to the suit.

Yahoo chairman knows how to multitask mergers

Friday, July 30th, 2010

Not only has he been weighing the merits of Microsoft’s unsolicited megabillion-dollar buyout offer for nearly three months now, but he’s also had to simultaneously contend with serving as chairman of Northwest Airlines, which landed a $3.1 billion merger with Delta Air Lines on Monday.

For Bostock, it may be a case of deja vu.

That deal, which will create the world’s largest airlines company, has also been an arduous journey for the past three months, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal.

Although both boards of the two airlines gave the deal a thumbs up, Northwest pilots said they plan to oppose the deal, according to a report in The New York Times. The deal also has to get the blessing of antitrust regulators to boot.

Antitrust regulators may take a look at any Yahoo merger deal, and Yahoo may face hostilities from Microsoft if it continues to reject the software giant’s buyout bid, initially valued at $31 a share, or $44.6 billion. Microsoft has threatened to launch a proxy fight, if Yahoo does not enter into a deal with the Redmond giant by the end of next week.

Yahoo Chairman Roy Bostock is one busy dude.

You would think Microsoft would cut Bostock a break, given his incredibly busy M&A schedule…so many megadeals to do, so little time.

Roy Bostock

(Credit:
Morgan Stanley)

Microhoo What might have been

Friday, July 30th, 2010

First would have come the challenge of antitrust approval. But the Justice Department has shown itself to be more concerned with checking Google’s power, taking Microsoft’s side when it came to the ill-fated Yahoo search-advertising deal with Google.

Search would have been an obvious decision: keep Yahoo’s search engine, redirect Microsoft search traffic to it, and get the combined engineering team cracking as soon as possible. It has more volume and more advertisers. The tricky part would be migrating advertisers to Yahoo’s technology, but Microsoft would have a huge incentive to build as much critical mass as possible to try to check Google’s dominance as soon as possible.

The European Union has shown more antipathy toward Microsoft, but it, too, likely would have been spooked enough by Google’s might that it would sign off. And given that the EU is only now getting around to the issue of Microsoft bundling a Web browser with its operating system, any big compunctions about Microhoo probably wouldn’t have set in until 2015.

So which company has the better brand online? Yahoo.

Yahoo employees, spooked by the bad economy and Google’s continued dominance despite it, might have been happy about having a more stable employer and a better shot at taking on Google, cultural clashes notwithstanding. But the reality of layoffs would likely have swept away many feelings of security.

Executives fond of competing pet projects would be pitted against each other, tooting their horns and trying to fend off others’ with candid assessments–and Yahoo already had enough internally competing projects on its own, as documented in Brad Garlinghouse’s Peanut Butter Manifesto.

So by this time in our alternate history, there would be plenty of unpleasant news. Google wouldn’t be put in its place, the benefits of the Microhoo merger wouldn’t be apparent, and the world would look very similar to today’s, minus a YHOO ticker symbol on Nasdaq. But the seeds of the merger’s fruit would be planted, and if Microsoft played its cards right, Google would be reckoning with a more formidable competitor.

Integration hell
Some parts of the Microhoo integration would have been relatively straightforward. First, top management.

Worse, that unpleasantness would have taken place before any of the fruits of the integration were visible, deepening morale issues.

Microsoft has been hobbled by its MSN vs Live branding muddiness, and the Yahoo brand has long history of great recognition. In April 2008, Yahoo’s front page had 61 percent portal market share to MSN’s 20 percent, according to Hitwise. But brands live a long time, and with the merger only closed for a few months by now, Microsoft probably wouldn’t have had much of a chance to make big changes.

A year ago Sunday, on February 1, 2008, Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer told the world his company wanted to buy Yahoo.

With Yahoo part of Microsoft, one big project would look very different: the cloud-computing version of Microsoft Office, accessed via a browser. The combination of Microsoft’s existing Office customer base and Yahoo’s online customer base would have provided a much better rival to Google Docs, especially when it comes to attracting business customers who are more likely to actually pay for a reliable, supported service.

Sure, there would be some bellyaching, but all those institutional investors who were publicly griping about Yahoo’s management would have been mollified–especially because revisionist history or not, the economy in August 2008 already was well on its way downhill, and Yahoo’s stock likely wouldn’t look so great.

Merging in an ugly economy
And that cold calculation likely would have gotten colder because of the economy.

Service winners and losers
The nitty-gritty of integration would have involved figuring out what to keep when the two companies had directly competing offerings. Yahoo’s got the traffic, it’s got the brand, and its services in general probably would have come out ahead.

But Microsoft actually saw the HP-Compaq merger as an example of how to make Microhoo happen: pick a product and go with it, rather than mess with grueling efforts to combine separate and often incompatible properties. So in all likelihood, Microsoft would have treated the acquisition with the alacrity it deserved.

Philosophically, though, Microsoft and Yahoo are converging, partly because the Internet is only becoming more important and partly because they’re being driven in the same direction by Google’s competitive threat. Both want sophisticated online services, both want a better search site with more traffic, both want to be a hub for people’s lives on the Internet, both want to be an unavoidable part of online advertising.

Yahoo has another big asset: Yahoo Open Strategy. Even in the real history, YOS is only just arriving now, but even a year ago, its potential was clear: it offers Yahoo users more to do online, energizing Yahoo properties by linking them together with social activity and building them into the broader fabric of the Internet.

It’s impossible to know what would have happened, of course. But an exercise in speculation can be illuminating, as Philip K. Dick showed with The Man In The High Castle, a novel in which Nazi Germany and imperial Japan won World War II.

So next up would have been the big challenge: integration, which, as former Sun Chief Executive Scott McNealy famously described it regarding the merger of Hewlett-Packard and Compaq Computer, is like watching two garbage trucks collide in slow motion.

Yahoo’s deteriorating ad revenue would have become apparent, likely spawning a collection of Monday morning quarterbacks. After all, a better time for companies to consolidate is by snapping up weaker companies more vulnerable to economic swings. Microsoft wouldn’t have been buying Yahoo at its peak, but the accountants in Redmond likely would be worrying about goodwill impairment charges.

With some big properties, a type of merger would be needed. With Yahoo Messenger vs. Windows Live Messenger, the companies already have done interoperability work, easing the pain of merging two largely incompatible networks into one.

So Microsoft and Yahoo probably could have cleared that hurdle, but not quickly, and there are other details to reckon with, so let’s suppose that the deal closed in August. Yahoo shareholders would have received a chunk of Microsoft shares and a wad of money that looks princely in comparison with the present $11.74 value of their Yahoo shares.

Given that we’ve already rewritten history with Yang signing off on the deal, which implies that he would have gotten past any over-my-dead-body, burn-the-furniture attitude, he probably would have stuck around a year for appearances’ sake–and he’s a helpful sort of fellow who probably would have worked at least for a time to try to hand off his baby to its new parents. It wouldn’t be easy, but Yang at least already has years of experience reporting to another CEO.

Not everything would have gone well for Yahoo projects, though. The same scrutiny that Yahoo properties are undergoing now, under the Bartz administration, would have begun months earlier and likely with less sympathetic eyes. With new bean counters in charge, Yahoo sites that didn’t pass muster would have been axed with less hesitation.

So let’s suppose that Yahoo agreed to Microsoft’s acquisition offer after bargaining Microsoft up a notch on the price tag to, say, $31 per share from the original $29.

The ugliest part would have been e-mail. Each company already has two options–Microsoft’s Exchange-Outlook combination for businesses and Hotmail for consumers, and Yahoo’s Zimbra for businesses and Yahoo Mail for consumers. Two e-mail offerings already are too many, and four are way too many, but e-mail is a core part of customers’ lives, and it would have been hard to move gracefully.

Yahoo and Microsoft each announced significant cuts in the real world–1,520 for Yahoo and up to 5,000 for Microsoft–because of the economy. Combined with the inevitable redundancies from the merger, the job cuts probably would have come earlier for Microhoo and might well have been followed by more, increasing the total.

Yahoo took ages to retrofit its site with the Yahoo Open Strategy technology, including interfaces that can broadcast user activity such as rating a movie; delaying YOS even more by mashing it up with Microsoft’s online sites would have increased its risk of irrelevance.

So by this time in the companies’ merger, users probably would see nothing different. But if Microsoft were smart, it would have determined that Yahoo Mail had the better technological underpinnings, in part because of Yahoo Open Strategy, and begun steering new sign-ups to it. Perhaps a migration tool would be released, or at least under way, for those who want to change manually.

Despite months of discussions, the deal never materialized, distressing many Yahoo shareholders and hastening Yahoo’s replacement of CEO Jerry Yang with Carol Bartz. But what if Yang had gotten up on the other side of the bed one day a year ago and led his company to accept the offer?

Technologically, Yahoo and Microsoft are worlds apart. Yahoo’s widespread use of open-source software and fondness for the
Firefox browser would raise hackles all over Microsoft. But for the sake of expediency, and to avoid spooking the Yahoo administrators and coders who actually know how the Internet property is wired, Microsoft almost certainly would have left things stand as is for at least a year. It had already had undergone the long and painful experience switching Hotmail from Unix to Windows.

By the time the acquisition closed, signs of the economic troubles would be apparent. Microsoft shareholders, seeing their stake diluted and their cash reserves depleted by the acquisition, could have become a significant issue. Microsoft’s flexibility to acquire other companies, lavishly fund research with cash, or pursue other big-picture changes would have been significantly decreased.

Full text Yahoo CEO, chairman respond

Friday, July 30th, 2010

• a refined strategic focus to drive enhanced volume and yield;

Chairman Roy Bostock: We remain focused on maximizing shareholder value and pursuing strategic opportunities that position Yahoo for success and leadership in its markets. From the beginning of this process, our independent board and our management have been steadfast in our belief that Microsoft’s offer undervalued the company and we are pleased that so many of our shareholders joined us in expressing that view. Yahoo is profitable, growing, and executing well on its strategic plan to capture the large opportunities in the relatively young online advertising market. Our solid results for the first quarter of 2008 and increased full year 2008 operating cash flow outlook reflect the progress the company is making. Today, Yahoo has:

Here’s the full text of Yahoo’s response after Microsoft withdrew its offer to acquire the company.

• invested in innovations designed to revolutionize display advertising and facilitate closing the competitive gap in search; and

CEO and co-founder Jerry Yang: I am incredibly proud of the way our team has come together over the last three months. This process has underscored our unique and valuable strategic position. With the distraction of Microsoft’s unsolicited proposal now behind us, we will be able to focus all of our energies on executing the most important transition in our history so that we can maximize our potential to the benefit of our shareholders, employees, partners and users.

• enhanced expense and resource management to support improved profitability.

• reorganized to focus its efforts on its most promising products and services;

Has Apple hit the 10 millionth iPhone mark

Friday, July 30th, 2010

Has Apple really sold its 10 millionth iPhone? That’s what several bloggers are saying. But a closer look suggests that it might be a bit too early to pop open the champagne.

A joint project of AFB and Investor Village’s AAPL Sanity has been collecting data about
iPhone inventory. Using a Google spreadsheet, the group has been unofficially tracking iPhone production estimates using International Mobile Equipment Identity, or IMEI, numbers that are used to uniquely identify every GSM, UMTS, or iDEN mobile phone.

But O’Grady and others point out that these numbers may be misleading.

This might explain why Apple has been mum on the whole thing. But this is not to say that the iPhone hasn’t been selling well. In fact, market research firm NPD Group said Monday that 30 percent of smartphone buyers this summer left their existing carrier to get an iPhone 3G.

(Credit:
Apple)

The groups gathering the data explicitly point out that these are production estimates, not sales estimates. This means the figures also include Apple Retail Store inventory, store displays, and replacement units, which do not count as sales.

According to the spreadsheet, AFB is reporting that 9,190,680 iPhone units have been created, which my colleague Jason D. O’Grady at ZDNet estimates could mean that about 7.6 million iPhone 3G have already been sold and more than 10 million iPhones in total.

Video chat site TokBox gets $10 million

Friday, July 30th, 2010

TokBox launched less than a year ago, but it has been working hard, appointing Nick Triantos as CEO, releasing a light desktop application based on Adobe AIR and building code to integrate its video chat into Facebook Chat.

Cool! Now I’m just holding my breath for the Valley moneymen to start realizing how much we need flying cars.

Video phone calls just haven’t caught on like all those cinematic depictions of the future said they would–kind of like flying
cars. But a bunch of investors led by Bain Capital Ventures still believe. They’ve pumped a $10 million Series B round into TokBox, a video chat and calling site based in San Francisco. Existing investor Sequoia Capital also participated.

“TokBox has an impressive, and very loyal and energetic user base,” Scott Friend, a partner at Bain Capital Ventures who will be joining the start-up’s board of directors, said in a statement. “The company is executing well, and its service offers consumers a variety of great features that strongly differentiate TokBox from competitors. We are excited to be investing with our partners at Seqouia in a company we believe has the potential to be the next ‘big thing’ in Web communication.”

PlaySpan lands $16.8 million in funding

Friday, July 30th, 2010

PlaySpan sells virtual goods in more than 200 different video games with the help of its subsidiary, PayByCash, which supports more than 70 payment options. The company also provides offline payment options with its Ultimate Game Card, which is sold in 7-Eleven, Blockbuster, and Wal-Mart stores.

See also: Twofish.

According to the company, the new funding will be used to expand its operation into Europe and Asia, which company executives believe are untapped markets that offer growth potential for PlaySpan.

“Online-game publishers and social-media application developers are looking for new sources of revenue beyond traditional advertising and subscriptions,” Karl Mehta, founder and CEO of PlaySpan, said in a statement. “We are enabling a new business model in the form of microtransactions for users that prefer the pay-as-you-go model.”

PlaySpan, a company that specializes in digital microtransactions and payment services, announced on Tuesday that it raised $16.8 million in Series B funding from Easton Capital Group, Menlo Ventures, Novel TMT Ventures, STIC Investments, and other undisclosed investors.

Get a Sony Blu-ray player for $199.96 shipped

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

As the holidays draw nearer, we’ll probably start to see a lot more Blu-ray players dip below the $200 mark (where they should have been a year ago). Is this price low enough for you to pull the trigger?

If you were smart enough not to spend $500-plus on a Blu-ray player during the last year or so, your patience just paid off: Circuit City has the Sony BDP-S300 Blu-ray player for $199.96 shipped (plus sales tax in most states). It’s new, not a refurb, with no rebates required.

As you’ll see in the video, CNET had mostly good things to say about the BDP-S300, though the complete review dings it for slow load times (true of most Blu-ray players) and lack of Dolby TrueHD decoding (which has been remedied via a firmware update). Although CNET readers rated it 3 stars out of 5, Circuit City buyers gave it 4.2 out of 5.

Find more deals, coupon codes, and bargains on CNET’s Shopper.com.