T-Mobile sues Starbucks over Wi-Fi Deal#

T-Mobile USA is suing Starbucks, accusing the coffee behemoth of a breach of contract by allowing AT&T to provide customers with free Wi-Fi access in its cafes.
In a complaint filed Thursday in New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan, T-Mobile says Starbucks "secretly" developed a plan with AT&T to provide Wi-Fi at its cafes, despite an exclusive partnership with T-Mobile. T-Mobile, which is seeking unspecified damages, alleges the companies broke an agreement over how Starbucks should transition the service from T-Mobile to AT&T, according to Reuters.
T-Mobile said that, under the agreement, it had the exclusive right to "sell, market, and promote" its services in Starbucks up until the stores were completely transitioned to AT&T's system, according to the lawsuit. T-Mobile says it is currently bearing the brunt of the cost of the service because it is providing the technology and equipment in all but two of Starbucks' U.S. markets--the San Antonio, Texas, and Bakersfield, California, markets.
In February, Starbucks ended its seven-year partnership with T-Mobile in favor of an agreement with AT&T. Under the old partnership with T-Mobile, customers would sign up for Wi-Fi for hourly and daily rates.

Under the new partnership, Starbucks in June began offering two hours of free Wi-Fi Internet service via AT&T to customers who purchase a Starbucks Reward Card with a minimum $5 credit on it. To keep the card active, customers must use their Starbucks Card at least once a month. New members of the service also get a voucher for a free drink


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Saturday, June 07, 2008 7:54:43 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Google launches online medical records service#

Google on Monday launched Google Health, a long-anticipated medical records service letting US users store and manage their health care information online. 

The offering raises privacy concerns and draws yet another battle line between Internet search king Google and global software giant Microsoft, which began offering a similar HealthVault service in October.

"It isn't surprising both sides are going after it," Silicon Valley analyst Rob Enderle told AFP.

He said the service was likely to strongly appeal to "Baby Boomers" -- the generation of Americans born between the late 1940s and early 1960s.

"Health care is not just lucrative -- you are solving a problem critical to an aging group of Boomers. There are public relations and business benefits to it," he said.

Google said it built a secure computer platform separate from its search system to host medical records as part of an emphasis on keeping the health information protected.

"We have put in place the firmest privacy policy we can construct," Google vice president of search product and user experience Marissa Mayer told reporters at the Internet giant's headquarters in Mountain View, California.

"It is our highest level of security."

Privacy advocates however, seek proof that online medical information will be safe from tampering or snooping, possibly from insurance companies or employers out to reduce liabilities by shunning those with health issues.

"It's the Wild West online," said Deborah Peel, a psychiatrist who founded the nonprofit advocacy group PatientPrivacyRights.org. "The risks are massive."

She said Microsoft consulted her group while designing HealthVault and agreed to routine privacy audits, the first of which is to be completed in June.

Google executives said pains were taken to build a system that will protect people's medical records while providing them access from wherever they might want it.

"No Google Health users should expect to find their health information as search results on Google," product manager Roni Zeiger said.

Google Health has links to pharmacies, clinics and diagnostic labs. The service is free and enables people to have electronic copies of information such as prescriptions, lab test results, hospital stays, and medical conditions stored on Google computers.

Users of the service dictate how the information is shared.

"Google, on your behalf, is storing a copy of your records," Zeiger said. "This is a user controlled database that Google is hosting."

Google said it will mine anonymous trend data along the lines of what percentage of people with diabetes using Google Health report getting flu shots.

Google search boxes are on Health pages and targeted advertising is displayed with query results, according to Zeiger.

But Jeff Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy, said targeting health searches with ads was tantamount to tracking users' medical issues for advertisers.

"There is no question in my mind that at the end of the day this is about marketing pharmacology and health related products to consumers," he told AFP.

"Google, Microsoft and others see dollar signs in your diagnosis."

Google said it built protected online connections with a host of major US medical service providers and is open to working with other health care outlets interested in crafting software to join the network.

Dean Ornish, a California professor of medicine and founder of the nonprofit Preventive Medicine Research Institute, enthused about the new service.

"I'm excited by this because it really empowers people with getting more control over their information," said Ornish, who is on a medical advisory board working with Google on health.

People can link heart monitors to Google Health so vital statistics can be fed to a heart attack assessment services online.

A "virtual pillbox" will also automatically send alerts to people's mobile telephones, reminding them when it is time to take medicines.


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Monday, May 19, 2008 7:35:34 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Refurbished iPhone a privacy concern?#

This isn't as much of a concern for people who are buying refurbished Apple iPhones as much as it is a concern for people who sent their iPhones to Cupertino for servicing or repairs. Typically what happens when you send something in for warranty is that they'll send you another unit while they work on fixing yours. When your iPhone has been fixed, they'll ship it out to the next customer who sends in a unit for repair.

The assumption with the refurbishing process is that the unit will be brought back to "like new" condition with factory spec. Unfortunately, the Apple refurbishing procedure "doesn't erase all personal data from the iPhone." With a little bit of footwork, an Oregon State police detective was able to "retrieve some seriously sensitive personal data from a recently purchased refurbished iPhone." This includes a restoration of the email inbox, for example.

The unfortunate fact of the matter is that there is no full-format utility available for the iPhone yet. If you go through the iTunes-based "Restore" function, much of your personal data remains on the iPhone. It may not be readily visible, but it's still there.


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Monday, May 19, 2008 4:39:19 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Steve Ballmer Escapes Egging#

ballmer A man upset with the Hungarian government's decision to sign a software and training deal with Microsoft tried to pelt the company's chief executive with eggs during a presentation Monday at a Budapest university.

The man, wearing a shirt with the words "Microsoft Equals Corruption" scrawled on the back, tossed three eggs at Steve Ballmer, who nimbly ducked behind a lectern. The protester isn't likely to win a major league pitching contract: He missed Ballmer on all three attempts, despite standing less than 50 feet from the Microsoft chief.

Ballmer was in Hungary on Monday to promote a program called Titan, under which Microsoft will train IT professionals in the country. The program also includes Cisco Systems, Hewlett-Packard, Intel, and several other vendors.

More than 10,000 Hungarian programmers and other IT professionals are expected to participate in Titan, which is slated to run through 2012. Hungary, along with a number of other Eastern European countries, is seeing significant growth in IT jobs outsourced from the Web.


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Monday, May 19, 2008 4:10:44 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Sybase Readies iPhone Software#

Reuters is reporting that Sybase plans to start selling soon software that lets businesses securely distribute e-mail to the iPhone, which could help the popular device gain use among business clients.

The program for the iPhone will be released before the end of this year, John Chen said on Monday at the Reuters Global Technology, Media and Telecoms Summit in New York. When asked to be more specific, he said, "It will be soon."

The new program lets workers use the iPhone to access their e-mail with the same security safeguards that are currently available in products for use on Treo smartphones from Palm and Research in Motion's BlackBerry, Chen said.

He said that Sybase is also working on similar software for Android, a new smartphone platform that Google is developing with dozens of other companies.

The new Sybase software programs will allow businesses to deliver e-mail to several different types of phones, depending on which device a user carries, Chen said.

"It will be secure enterprise grade," Chen said. "It will let the IT guys manage it."


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Monday, May 19, 2008 4:04:13 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Mozilla Releases Firefox v3 Release Candidate#

firefox-3 Mozilla  is creeping ever closer to dropping the final version of the much-anticipated Firefox 3 Web browser. The latest build is the first Release Candidate for Firefox 3 (RC1), which means it's gone beyond the beta stage and is picking up a couple of last-minute polishes before it's offered up live to the whole world as a completed browser.

Most anyone can download this latest version, but it's still only intended for testing purposes. The biggest potential problem, Mozilla says, is that users shouldn't expect all of their add-ons to work properly with this preview release. Still, there are lots of new features in Firefox 3 RC1 that make it a compelling new version.

In this latest milestone, Mozilla has tweaked the user interface in Linux , Windows Vista, Windows XP and Mac OS X versions, as well as added changes and fixes to the location bar autocomplete feature, bookmark backup and restore, and full page zoom. Plus, Firefox 3 is more secure, compatible and stable, Mozilla said.


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Monday, May 19, 2008 3:57:04 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

AT&T takes free iPhone WiFi offer off the table#

Reports indicate that iPhone users are no longer able to access the AT&T WiFi HotSpot for free through their iPhone. It's not clear if AT&T mistakenly launched the service before it was ready for prime-time (which is possible, given the lack of an official announcement from AT&T), or if the "user-agent spoofing" method to get free WiFi HotSpot access on your laptop caused AT&T to freak-out and pull the plug. The service was clearly intentional, so it's not like AT&T just messed up by allowing iPhone users to get free WiFi for a day.

Here's to hoping that AT&T irons out the bugs (if any) or closes the "user-agent spoofing" loophole and launches the free service soon.


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Saturday, May 03, 2008 10:12:15 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Microsoft Withdraws Yahoo Bid#

Microsoft said Saturday that it was abandoning its blockbuster bid to acquire Yahoo after it raised its offer by $5 billion but Yahoo rejected it as still too low.

The about-face followed a meeting on Saturday morning in Seattle between Microsoft’s chief executive, Steven A. Ballmer, and Yahoo’s chief and co-founder, Jerry Yang, according to a person familiar with the talks.

At the meeting, which also included Yahoo’s other founder, David Filo, and a Microsoft president who oversees its online unit, Kevin Johnson, Mr. Ballmer increased Microsoft’s offer to $33 a share, or a total of about $47.5 billion, from $29.40 a share. Mr. Yang told Mr. Ballmer that Yahoo would not accept an offer below $37 a share, this person said.

“Despite our best efforts, including raising our bid by roughly $5 billion, Yahoo has not moved toward accepting our offer,” Mr. Ballmer said in a statement. “After careful consideration, we believe the economics demanded by Yahoo do not make sense for us, and it is in the best interests of Microsoft stockholders, employees and other stakeholders to withdraw our proposal.”

A person close to Yahoo said the price was not the only stumbling block. The person said Yahoo was also concerned that the deal could be blocked by regulators and wanted a higher offer, in part, as a hedge against that risk.

Microsoft’s decision to walk away casts a cloud of uncertainty over Yahoo and its shareholders. The breakdown in the talks is likely to send Yahoo’s shares plunging, and Mr. Yang and his team will have to decide how to placate investors.

The company has been exploring alternatives to a marriage with Microsoft, including a partnership in search advertising with its arch rival, Google, which could lift Yahoo’s profit and perhaps its stock price. Yahoo has also discussed possible mergers with the AOL unit of Time Warner and the MySpace unit of the News Corporation. The MySpace talks have not been active of late.

But both remaining options pose challenges. A Google partnership would be likely to attract scrutiny from regulators because of Google’s dominance over online search and advertising, while AOL and Yahoo have many overlapping businesses and technologies, making a merger difficult.

In a statement issued late Saturday, Mr. Yang said, “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.”
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Saturday, May 03, 2008 9:57:48 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) #    Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

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