Two of the biggest
launches in Rich Internet
Application history took
place in 2007/2008 when
Adobe launched AIR 1.0 in
February '08 and
Microsoft launched
Silverlight (September
'07). At the 6th
International AJAXWorld
RIA Conference & Expo in
October SYS-CON Events is
delighted to be
presenting major industry
keynotes from the two
industry executives with
overall responsibility
for both of those massive
richer-web initiatives:
Adobe's CTO Kevin Lynch
and Scott Guthrie,
Corporate Vice President
of Microsoft's .NET
Developer Platform.
On Tuesday TechCrunch and
CNet, based on the usual
'sources,' reported that
talks between Yahoo and
Microsoft were back on,
stories that prevented
Yahoo's desperate,
bewildered, shuttlecock
stock from dropping below
the 20-dollar barrier and
landing in the high teens
where it was when
Microsoft entered the
picture on February 1. It
was certainly headed in
that direction.
With the stock market
crashing, or giving a
good approximation of a
crash Thursday, Yahoo,
poor thing - well, it has
behaved like a sick lost
puppy, now hasn't it -
announced a supposedly
pressure-relieving
reorganization just like
its familiars in the
press said it would. It
is, as was widely
observed, the company's
third or fourth attempt
in the last 18 months or
so - one loses count
after a while - to
rearrange the deck chairs
and supposedly prove it
can stay afloat with
Microsoft out of the
picture.
The two Detroit pension
funds suing Yahoo in
Delaware to invalidate
its severance plan
'poison pill' have been
denied the expedited
trial that they asked for
ahead of the August 1
stockholders meeting. The
plan is supposed to
incentivize Google staff
to leave if an
acquisition were to come
off.
Microsoft says it's going
to open a Search
Technology Center in
Europe in the fiscal year
that starts in July. The
center is supposed to
'accelerate Microsoft's
investments in Live
Search and disrupt the
search and advertising
marketplace to the
benefit of both the
consumer and the
advertiser,' it said, 'in
line with Microsoft's
recent announcement in
the US of Live Search
cashback.'
The New York Times tried
putting a horse's head in
Jerry Yang's bed
Saturday, prophesying
that his 'days as Yahoo's
CEO are numbered.' In a
piece entitled 'Oh Jerry,
It's No Longer Your
Baby,' it excoriated him
for 'shafting' Yahoo
shareholders by running
off Microsoft on purpose
and turning Yahoo into a
Google 'pawn.'
After a bit of a breech
birth - caused by
visitors overloading its
web servers - Mozilla
released Firefox 3
Tuesday seeking to set a
Guinness World Record for
the most downloads in 24
hours as a way to stir up
interest and at the same
time stick it to
Microsoft.
After failing to come to
terms with Microsoft, and
with antitrust regulators
hovering in the
background, Yahoo has
gone and cut that
death-defying deal on
search advertising with
arch-rival Google saying
the agreement could clear
$800 million in annual
revenues. The deal is
non-exclusive, applies
only to paid search and
text ads, and is supposed
to run for four years
with an option to renew
for up to 10 years.
Talks between Yahoo and
Microsoft have failed for
the second time. Yahoo
said Thursday afternoon
that Microsoft has
refused to buy Yahoo for
$33 a share, the price
Microsoft offered May 3
and then pulled off the
table when Yahoo's
co-founders held out for
$37. Microsoft refusal
makes its 'strategic
clarity' suspect.
John Gage, Sun employee
number 5 and its chief
researcher, head of its
science office - the guy
who coined the Sun tag
line 'The Network is the
Computer' - a seemingly
nonsense slogan Sun used
to wish it could shake -
has finally left the
building after 25 years.
He's going to Kleiner
Perkins to be a VC
focused on green
technology investments.
Sun co-founder Bill Joy
has a berth at Kleiner,
one of Sun's original
backers. A few days ago
Sun, which is cutting
maybe another 2,500 jobs,
lost his chief salesman
Don Grantham to HP.
eBay is opening its site
so third-party developers
can integrate
applications directly
into eBay Selling
Manager, an online tool
for managing and tracking
listings on eBay. It's
excepting a flurry of
sales optimization apps.
In a Microsoft internal
e-mail that just
'happened' to get out,
Microsoft says it lost
interest in acquiring all
of Yahoo because of
Yahoo's foot-dragging and
offered instead $1
billion for just Yahoo's
search operation and
another $8 billion, the
equivalent of $35 a
share, for 16% of Yahoo,
more per-share than
Microsoft offered for all
of Yahoo.
In a new study on
Findability to be
released by AIIM, 49% of
survey respondents
'agreed' or 'strongly
agreed' that it is a
difficult and time
consuming process to find
the information they need
to do their job. The new
survey of over 500
businesses conducted in
May 2008, suspects that a
prime culprit for the
failings of Findability
in the enterprise is the
admission that 69% of
respondents believe that
only 50% or less of their
organization's
information is searchable
online. Given the ready
access that users are
supposed to have in this
'Age of Google' - how is
this possible?
Citrix has bought sepago
GmbH's sepagoProfile
software so user profiles
in XenDesktop, XenApp and
Provisioning Server are
integrated. Terms were
not disclosed but as part
of the deal the
Cologne-based sepago will
continue developing the
product for virtualizing
application provisioning
for the next year and a
half. Sepago specializes
in application
provisioning on large
computer networks.
From Application
Virtualization to Xen, a
round-up of the
virtualization themes &
topics being discussed in
NYC June 23-24, 2008 by
the world-class speaker
faculty at the 3rd
International
Virtualization Conference
& Expo being held by
SYS-CON Events in The
Roosevelt Hotel, in
midtown Manhattan.
HP, which has previously
given the space to Yahoo,
is going to pre-install a
Silverlight-based Live
Search-enabled toolbar on
all consumer PCs it ships
in the US and Canada
starting in January.
That's when the HP-Yahoo
deal expires.
In case you've been held
incommunicado for the
last few days, Yahoo's
twice-delayed
stockholders meeting,
which it pushed off until
the end of July after
legendary corporate
raider Carl Icahn
threatened a proxy fight
for control of the board,
is now scheduled for
Friday, August 1. If
things get that far, it
promises to be highly
entertaining. Fortified
by court disclosures
Monday of Yahoo
'sabotaging' negotiations
and running Microsoft
off, Icahn maintains that
the only way to 'salvage'
Yahoo is to sell it to
Microsoft and the only
way Microsoft is ever
going to come back to the
table is to dump the
Yahoo board, starting
with CEO Jerry Yang, who
he wants fired. No, make
that FIRED.
Yahoo has tied up with
Tata subsidiary
Computational Research
Laboratories (CRL) to do
cloud computing research.
Financial terms were not
disclosed. What CRL
brings to the party is
the fourth-fastest
supercomputer in the
world, a beast that Yahoo
figures has
'substantially more
processors than any other
supercomputer currently
available for cloud
research' - 14,400 of
them to be precise along
with 28TB of memory,
140TB of disk space, a
peak performance of 180
trillion calculations a
second and sustained
computation capacity of
120 teraflops.
Yahoo! founders Jerry
Yang and David Filo
received stupid advice
from their investment
bank advisers and blew
their chance to close the
deal with Microsoft as of
this Sunday morning.
Neither Yang nor Filo are
experts on how to sell a
company in a
multi-billion dollar
deal. They have relied on
their investment bankers
and advisers since the
negotiations started with
Microsoft. The difference
between the offered price
of $33 and the asking
price of $40 per share is
roughly $1.4b per share,
so it's not small
potatoes.
Thanks to court
disclosures stemming from
a suit against Yahoo
brought by two Michigan
pension funds invested in
the firm, Microsoft's
offer of 40 bucks a share
in January of 2007, when
Yahoo's stock was in the
mid-20s like now, has
been confirmed. Obviously
that puts still more
pressure on the Yahoo
board for Yang-toadying.
SYS-CON Media announced
today that it signed a
hosting contract with
DataPipe to host all
SYS-CON websites
effective July 2008. With
the new arrangement all
web hosting services
currently provided by
EV1servers will be moved
to Datapipe hosting
facility.
SYS-CON Media Website
(www.sys-con.com) and
email servers were
affected from Saturday's
explosion at The Planet
hosting facility together
with 9,000 servers which
belonged to more than
7,500 customers. SYS-CON
has been hosting its
image server and email
servers at the facility.
At the time of this
report on Monday, June 2,
2008, www.sys-con.com has
been rendering pages with
no images. There is no
word from EV1servers when
their service will resume
normally, after two full
days which affected
SYS-CON Website.
That anti-Microsoft pair,
IBM and Google, are
kicking in $20
million-$25 million
apiece for hardware,
software and services to
spread the gospel of
'cloud computing' in the
academe. They want
budding computer
scientists to learn how
to write Internet-scale
programs that process
trillions of secure
transactions a day and
master massively parallel
computing skills.
Google's Web Toolkit
Release Candidate 1.5
will be available later
this week. That's the
stuff programmers can use
to develop and debug web
applications in Java and
then deploy them as
highly optimized
JavaScript. That way
they're supposed to be
able to sidestep common
AJAX headaches like
browser compatibility,
and enjoy significant
performance and
productivity gains.
Friday morning the local
Fox television station in
New York City broke the
news - Apple was suing
New York City. Six out of
100 of their viewers
thought Apple had the
right to sue the City,
but 94 out of 100 viewers
are now calling for New
Yorkers to drop Apple and
its products, including
the iPhone and Macs. New
Yorkers are pissed off!
New York City,
universally known as The
Big Apple, is facing a
lawsuit from Steve Jobs'
Apple Computer Inc. for,
of all things, copyright
infringement.
The Yahoo board is one
short. Edward Kozel, a
former Cisco CTO and now
a VC and a Yahoo board
member since October of
2000, tendered his
resignation Thursday
saying he meant to leave
in February but stayed on
because of Microsoft's
unsolicited acquisition
proposal. Now he's going
to do what he intended
and spend more time with
his family, including
relocating them to Europe
this summer.
Google co-founder and
billionaire Larry Page in
Washington to speak at
the think tank where
Google CEO Eric Schmidt
is chairman of the board
- and apparently meet
with government officials
too - claimed that a
Microsoft-Yahoo merger
would 'monopolize online
communications, stifle
innovation and curb
competition' - according
to an AP report - but
doubted that a
Google-Yahoo advertising
deal would encounter an
antitrust obstacle.
Between the time
corporate raider Carl
Icahn notified Yahoo
chairman Roy Bostock
Thursday morning to
expect a proxy fight for
control of the company if
Yahoo didn't crawl on its
belly to get Microsoft to
buy it and Yahoo sent a
non-answer back, Yahoo
stock closed up 2.25% at
$27.75 on the apparent
assumption that Microsoft
is game - and not
overwhelmed by doubt
about the wisdom of the
whole idea.
Zoho is gonna try
rustling some of Google's
prized Apps users. It's
designed a unified login
to encourage Google and
Yahoo visitors to try
Zoho applications using
the user names and
passwords they use with
their Google and Yahoo
accounts.
Google has taken its
Postini investment and
turned out Google Web
Security for the
Enterprise, which is
supposed to protect
against spyware, viruses
and zero-hour threats in
real-time whether the
user is on the corporate
network or working
remotely like at a hotel
or in an airport. If it
detects malware it's
supposed to neutralize it
before it can reach the
company network.
Microsoft issued a short,
murky statement Sunday
afternoon saying it has
suggested a limited
alignment with Yahoo. It
does not explain its
proposal. Perhaps it's
thinking along the lines
of the deal Yahoo is
supposed to be
negotiating with Google,
perhaps a partial
acquisition (perhaps
Yahoo's Panama platform).
Corporate raider Carl
Icahn started his proxy
fight for control of
Yahoo this morning,
beginning with the
classic Icahn opening,
the letter of reproach to
the Yahoo board telling
them they have acted
'irrationally and lost
the faith of shareholders
and Microsoft.'
Late Thursday Yahoo
released the text of the
letter it sent to Carl
Icahn telling him he's
misguided and that the
current Yahoo board knows
better what good for the
company. It repeats what
Yahoo has said before -
that it is willing to
sell for the right price,
which lately has been $37
a share. Meanwhile,
Yahoo and Google are
reportedly still talking.
Zoho announced that it is
welcoming Google and
Yahoo users with a
unified login designed to
encourage those users to
try Zoho applications.
Now, Google and Yahoo
users who visit Zoho can
simply log into Zoho
using the usernames and
passwords associated with
their Google and Yahoo
accounts.
'Wikipedia is a great way
for us to showcase
Powerset's functionality
while giving people a
faster time to
satisfaction,' said
Barney Pell, co-founder
and CTO of Powerset, as
his company today
unveiled a publicly
available beta product
that according to Pell
reinvents how users
search and discover
information from
Wikipedia.
Microsoft, which spent $6
billion on aQuantive and
was chasing Yahoo for its
ads before it came to a
dead stop, has been
supporting - as in
helping write -
legislation in New York
and Connecticut that
would regulate the data
that companies like Yahoo
and Google collect for
targeted advertising. The
New York bill, which
Google, Yahoo, AOL and
Facebook oppose, would
let consumers opt-out of
tracking.
So how does it feel to
have witnessed one of
technology's little
miracles this week? I
mean Yahoo's stock price
successfully defying
gravity. It's as close as
any of us will ever get
to an apparition of the
Virgin Mary floating on a
cloud without any visible
means of support.
Apparently Wall Street
isn't convinced that
Microsoft has indeed
pushed on despite leaks
that it has reached out
instead to Facebook,
another company with an
inflated view of itself.
Yahoo's stock dropped
roughly 19%-20% this
morning at the open,
shaving $8.7 billion off
its value, its first
installment on the price
of its independence from
Microsoft. Yahoo, whose
position improved a
couple of percentage
points in the first
half-hour of trading, is
being held up by investor
confidence that Microsoft
will be back after the
stock sinks, a widely
held view, or
alternatively that Yahoo
will align with Google.
At around 10 o'clock it
was around $23.70.
The Ubuntu Linux-based
gOS operating system from
Good OS LLC
(www.thinkgos.com)
includes so many Google
applications like Gmail,
Google Docs, Google
Calendar, Google News
Google Maps and YouTube
that it's often referred
to as the Google
operating system. It also
includes Firefox, Skype,
Facebook and OpenOffice
2.3.
'I hereby formally
withdraw Microsoft's
proposal to acquire
Yahoo,' writes a
disgruntled Steve Ballmer
in this letter to Jerry
Yang. Yang's tactic of
cosying up to Google
seems to have been the
straw that broke the
camel's back. As a
service to SYS-CON.com
readers we bring you the
full text of the letter