Archive for the 'Unfilled' Category

06
Apr
08

Apple to New York City: Bite Me

The Big Apple has a new logo, and Apple says: Drop dead.

At issue is the emblem for New York City’s GreeNYC campaign, which has started to appear around the city on bus shelters, hybrid gasoline-electric taxicabs and even Whole Foods shopping bags.

The GreeNYC logo shows a stylized apple with a stalk and a leaf. It bears a resemblance to Apple’s famous logo — a resemblance Apple says infringes on its trademark.

The city has applied for a trademark on the logo, but Apple has filed a formal opposition (.pdf) obtained by Wired.com.

The Cupertino, California, company calls for the trademark to be denied, claiming the city’s logo will confuse people and “seriously injure the reputation which [Apple] has established for its goods and services.”

New York says: Getdafugoutaheya.

“The city believes that Apple’s claims have no merit and that no consumer is likely to be confused,” says Gerald Singleton, the intellectual-property lawyer representing the Big Apple. “This well-known city is using its new design in a variety of contexts that have absolutely nothing to do with Apple Inc.”

Apple, of course, is no stranger to trademark disputes, but has typically been on the receiving end of infringement claims. Apple Corps, holder of the Beatles’ business interests, battled the company for years over its trademark. That legal spat was finally resolved last year, with Apple walking away with the entire brand and an apparent agreement to license certain trademarks back to Apple Corps.

Cisco Systems also filed suit over Apple’s use of the iPhone trademark last year, and both companies finally agreed to share the iPhone name.

“When you talk about trademark infringement, the key issue is likelihood of confusion,” says Beth Goldman, an attorney at Heller Ehrman and head of the firm’s San Francisco trademark group.

Trademark protection extends to sight, sound and meaning, Goldman says, and if a company can prove there’s confusion over such matters, it may very well have a case.

In the case of very famous marks or logos, there’s also the issue of dilution, she says, when someone else uses it in a manner that blurs or tarnishes the trademark.

Dilution is harder to prove with a logo, Goldman says, as it’s not usually descriptive of a product. Nevertheless, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office will consider such arguments.

NYC & Company, the nonprofit responsible for the city’s official tourism website, applied for a trademark on the new logo on May 14, 2007. The company and its lawyers have filed a counterclaim asking that Apple’s trademark registration for its apple logo be canceled.

Apple did not immediately respond to Wired.com’s requests for comment.

The GreeNYC campaign is intended to promote “environmentally friendly policies and practices” and “economically sustainable growth.”

The next step in the Apple-New York City trademark scuffle, according to trademark lawyers, will be to commission a series of independent surveys — what are known as mall-stop surveys — to gauge people’s reaction to the new logo, in order to see whether Apple’s opposition holds any merit.

“The ultimate arbiter is the consumer,” Goldman says.

Singleton says the dispute will play out over the next six to nine months, before a final decision is made by the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board of the patent office.

Image: NYC & Company partnered with Whole Foods last March to launch limited-edition 100 percent organic cotton shopping bags. The bags, which feature the new GreeNYC logo, are causing mass confusion and ruining Apple’s good reputation, the computer company argues in a trademark-infringement filing.
Source: Wired

06
Apr
08

Dell: Even More Layoffs to Come

Dell’s analyst meeting is over and the outlook is rough. Executives at the meeting seemed confident in the PC-maker’s ability to reach its $3 billion in cutbacks by 2011, but words were minced when it came to layoffs (and there are apparently more coming).

“We’re decreasing our head count,” CEO Michael Dell (pictured right) told the crowd of analysts. “It’s declined in the past two quarters and it will decline again in the first quarter. And we will go past the 8,800 target previously discussed as we achieve everything that I’m outlining today.”

Unfortunately, Dell didn’t provide a hard number for the additional layoffs.

Meanwhile, the market has cooled off on Dell’s rebound plans. According to Goldman Sachs analyst David Bailey, it may take the Dell longer to bounce back than most people think.

“With visible progress in Dell’s turnaround unlikely until later this year (at the earliest) and the macro environment making its transformation more difficult to execute,” says Bailey, “we think there are better opportunities in hardware — specifically Hewlett-Packard Co.”

Ouch.

Photo: Flickr/Charlie Brewer

[Via AP]

See Also:

Source: Wired

06
Apr
08

EBay Would Be Nuts to Sell Skype

If we’re to believe the rumors, Google is considering a Skype acquisition. Or partnership. Or something big!

And while we don’t doubt Skype would make a hot little trophy for Google, we’re not sure what eBay would get out of a deal right now.

TechCrunch’s Michael Arrington says he’s heard “low-level rumors” that the companies are talking. And while it’s not necessarily a new one (the rumor has been around at least since autumn 2007), Arrington predicts a partnership or outright acquisition will be announced in the “near future.” Most industry watchers think the move would make sense.

“I would suggest that Google is intensely interested in Skype, not only for the opportunity to revolutionize mobile telephony and the trillion dollar telecom industry, but as a foundational layer for scalable web services,” Steve Jurvetson, managing director of Draper Fisher Jurvetson told us by email. (Venture capital firm Draper Fisher Jurvetson was an early investor in Skype.)

But what’s in it for eBay? Okay, even if the company overpaid, and even if Skype hasn’t generated a fat return, the online auction site already took a $1.39 billion impairment charge on the deal; it cleaned house and shuffled management around (Josh Silverman was named CEO of Skype in late March) and eBay management seems to expect big things of the business. For the fourth quarter, Skype revenue was up 76 percent year-over-year, to $115 million, and the user base hit 276 million.

“While we were disappointed in the writedown we announced in October, it’s important to remember that Skype is an extremely successful four-year-old . . . During the last two months of the year, the new leadership team at Skype has done a fantastic job. Skype is exiting 2007 much stronger than it was even this summer and the team is excited about the year ahead,” said eBay CEO John Donahoe, during the last earnings call.

“I don’t expect them to sell it,” says Susquenhanna Financial Group analyst Marianne Wolk. “But I would expect them to partner with Google — that makes much more sense.”

Photo: Flickr/Malthe
Source: Wired

06
Apr
08

Sucks to Be MySpace, Facebook

Sucks to Be MySpace, Facebook It’s been a rotten day for social networks. Fox Interactive Media, parent company of MySpace, is kicking chief revenue officer Michael Barrett to the curb, and according to a couple reports, the division may not meet annual revenue expectations.

Just two months ago, News Corp. chief Rupert Murdoch said he was confident that Fox Interactive Media would meet its annual $1 billion sales target, based on second-quarter “momentum.”

“Another key to our unique positioning, Fox Interactive Media is experiencing accelerated operational and financial momentum,” he said during News Corp.’s conference call. “These results add confidence to our $1 billion revenue and 20 percent margin targets for this business this year.”

Now some loose-lipped FIM insiders tell TechCrunch and SiliconAlleyInsider that the division could fall short of projections by $100 million.

(Incidentally, Facebook is also short a chief revenue officer since Owen Van Natta left the company in February.)

It wasn’t a great day for Facebook, either. The company now has to defend itself in court in a lawsuit in which Mark Zuckerberg has been accused of stealing computer code from ConnectU, a similar social network, according to Bloomberg.

Photo: Flickr/benchilada
Source:
Wired

06
Apr
08

Adobe Partners With CBS, MTV for Downloadable Episodes

Adobe has partnered with CBS and MTV to finally bring its ad-supported video service to market, reports Reuters. The Adobe Media Player-powered project entered beta back in September, but with content providers lined up and public trials now underway, the service should be going live as early as the second half of 2008.

The setup is simple. Viewers will be able to use the service to download or subscribe to automated downloads for their favorite CBS and MTV shows like “CSI,” and “Real World”. The Flash-based interface then allows viewers to watch the encrypted shows at their leisure offline, complete with integrated ads. In short, the content providers get to monetize their offline content and users get the video-on-demand experience courtesy of Adobe’s player.

It sounds like a win-win, but in reality, projects like this are often riddled with issues. NBC launched a similar service (NBC Direct) not too long ago that was widely panned. Of the laundry list of problems, two of the biggest were how long content was available for download after airing (seven days), and the brief amount of time available to watch the downloads (48 hours).

Ironically, both of those issues had less to do with technological hurdles than with content licensing. So, if this joint venture is subject to the same labyrinthine licensing restrictions, then it’s likely to follow a similar path. However, if the content partners are able to leverage Adobe’s Media player to grant viewers liberal (and hopefully mobile) access to their ad-supported content, then they could be on to something. We’ll see at launch.

See Also:

Source: Wired

06
Apr
08

Microsoft Threatens to Go Hostile on Yahoo

Microsoft says Yahoo has three weeks to negotiate a decent deal, after which time Microsoft is going to get medieval on its ass.

The company sent out a letter to Yahoo’s board, whining about how there hasn’t been any meaningful progress in negotiations, and in the meantime, the equity markets are tanking.

From the letter:

If we have not concluded an agreement within the next three weeks, we will be compelled to take our case directly to your shareholders, including the initiation of a proxy contest to elect an alternative slate of directors for the Yahoo! board. The substantial premium reflected in our initial proposal anticipated a friendly transaction with you. If we are forced to take an offer directly to your shareholders, that action will have an undesirable impact on the value of your company from our perspective which will be reflected in the terms of our proposal.

But as we seem to recall, Yahoo did respond to Microsoft in February — its consistent message has been that the Microsoft offer “substantially undervalues” the company. And while Microsoft argues that a hostile bid will have “an undesirable impact” on Yahoo, a hostile proxy battle is the surest path to mutually assured destruction. Microsoft shares have already fallen more than 10 percent since the company first sprang its unsolicited bid on Yahoo, and market research has shown that it can take years before companies recover from a hostile proxy battle. Nothing good can come of it — it’s an expensive distraction that could result in a mass exodus and leave both companies worse off than they were before.

Photo: Flickr/TaranRampersad
Source: Wired

04
Feb
08

QNAP gets official with TS-409 Pro Turbo NAS


Believe us, we know just how foggy things get when trying to remember back to the 13th day of December 2007, but sure enough, it was on that fateful Thursday that we received our first sneak peek at QNAP’s (then) forthcoming TS-409. Today, however, we’re looking at the official product: a 4-bay, hot-swappable NAS that supports such beautiful features as online RAID capacity expansion and RAID level migration. Reportedly filled with “disaster-proof enhancements,” this unit also includes an HDD S.M.A.R.T. function that provides complete hard drive information including temperature and overall “health.” No concrete word on price, but a quick scan of the intarweb pegs it right around $600.

by Darren MurphEngadget

04
Feb
08

Digi Connect WAN 3G: yet another portable HSDPA / EV-DO router


Yeah, we’re starting to feel slightly bombarded with portable cellular routers, but we can’t help but crack a smile each time one of these wonderful creations rolls into the commercial realm. Today, we’ve got Digi unveiling its new Digi Connect WAN 3G, which is hailed as an upgradeable 3G WWAN router for “primary and backup connectivity to remote sites and devices.” Besides supporting both EV-DO and HSDPA standards, it also aims to provide “a fast and easy Ethernet-to-3G wireless connection” and even includes a built-in VPN. Sadly, no price is mentioned, but we’re sure the folks at Digi wouldn’t mind coughing up that information if you called up with the right tone of voice.

by Darren MurphEngadget

04
Feb
08

Eazo desktops offer ultra-luxe style at merely super-luxe prices

For those of you too cheap to pony up for that $700,000 diamond-encrusted Jupiter desktop we saw yesterday, China’s Eazo is willing to throw down the luxe for less than a tenth of the price — which still means the X70, pictured here, stil costs $45,500, but hey. The distinctive machine features a 3GHz Q9550 Core 2 Quad, two NVIDIA 8800GTX graphics cards, 4GB of RAM, light-up liquid cooling, a 10,000rpm 150GB drive backed up by a 7,200rpm 500GB drive, 7.1-channel sound, and Vista Ultimate, all wrapped up in an easy-access case with pneumatic door hinges. Of course, you can custom-configure systems well past the $70K mark (and down to just $9K), but if you’re not happy with this stock config, you might want to try yoga or something, Mr. Power Hungry. Check a bunch more shots in the gallery.

by Nilay PatelEngadget

04
Feb
08

RIM to unveil BlackBerry Remote Stereo Gateway


The Financial Post has uncovered evidence that Research in Motion will be unveiling a new music accessory called the BlackBerry Remote Stereo Gateway. The Gateway attaches to a stereo and then streams music files from a BlackBerry via Bluetooth. The information is available through an FCC filing, which has both the user manual and a photo of the Gateway. The device was filed by Cheng Uei Precision Industry Co., Ltd. out of Taiwan, but the BlackBerry brand is all over the place. This is obviously a big push into the consumer space for RIM, especially given the fact that, unlike iPod docks, it’s wireless. Between this and the increasing sizes of microSDHC cards, BlackBerry is becoming more and more viable as a media player.

by Devin KentBlackberry Cool