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  • Social Networking to Push Mobile VOIP Users to 139 Million by 2014: Report

    The next several years are expected to be transformational as mobile operators and other associated players figure out how to respond to a forecast of nearly 139 million mobile VoIP users by 2014, according to a report from IT research firm In-Stat. Nearly five years since mobile VOIP services were first introduced, it is on…

  • Dell Streak 7 on Sale Feb. 2 at T-Mobile: Report

    The 7-inch Dell Streak will be available on the T-Mobile network starting Feb. 2, according to a report from Electronista. It’ll reportedly be priced at $200 with a two-year contract (and after a $50 rebate) or $450 without a contract and for use with a prepaid data plan. “As tablets change the way we consume…

  • Intel Chip Flaw Disclosed

    NEW YORK, Jan 31 (Reuters) – Intel Corp (NASDAQ:INTC) found a defect in one of its chips, hurting its credibility at a time when demand for microprocessors in personal computers is being threatened. Although the company said on Monday it is fixing the problem, it stopped shipments of the chip, which is used in PCs…

  • Tata Consultancy Declares Aggressive Hiring Plans

    Switzerland Jan 28 (Reuters) – Tata Consultancy Services (BO:TCS), India’s top software services exporter, expects to hire as many or slightly less than the more than 50,000 employees it hired in 2010 this year as the race for talent heats up in India’s technology outsourcing business. In an interview with Reuters, TCS Chief Executive N.…

  • Microsoft Executive: Tablet Concerns are Overdone

    (Reuters) – Concerns that roaring demand for tablets and smartphones like Apple’s iPad and iPhone will leave Microsoft in the dust are simply overdone, Microsoft International’s president told Reuters. "Devices are going to go and come," Jean-Philippe Courtois, president of Microsoft International, told Reuters at the World Economic Forum, adding that the company was making…

  • Microsoft Windows 7 Sales Fizzle, Kinect Strong

    SEATTLE, Jan 27 (Reuters) – Sales of Microsoft Corp’s (NASDAQ:MSFT) Windows software fell short of outsized expectations, rekindling fears that the spread of mobile gadgets will erode its main PC-focused business. Microsoft surprised Wall Street with a better-than-expected profit, helped by resurgent corporate spending after the belt-tightening of past years. But its shares stayed flat…

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