Showing posts with label microsoft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label microsoft. Show all posts

Friday, 20 July 2012

Microsoft in first loss to dat


Computing giant Microsoft has made the first quarterly loss in its history after it wrote off some of the value of its onlineadvertising business.
Microsoft logo
The loss came after it wrote down the value of Aquantive by $6.2bn (£3.94bn; 5bn euros), which failed to bring the profits expected by Microsoft.
The company has not made a loss since it joined the stock market in 1986.
It took over Aquantive in 2007 but it struggled to compete with rivalGoogle.
Microsoft paid $6.3bn for Aquantive.
Microsoft is doing well in other areas, despite the decline in popularity of its Windows operating system, which dominated the personal computer market for years.
Revenue for the three months to June rose by 4% to $18.06bn.
Mosaic
Excluding the adjustment for the asset write-down, and the holding back of some income related to the launch of its Windows 8 system, Microsoft profits beat those expected by investors.
Shares were up 1.6% after the results were announced.
Microsoft says the update of the Windows systems is the most important redesign in more than 10 years.
Windows 8, which will launch in October, will feature a new look that will present applications in a mosaic of tiles.
Importantly, it will also enable the operating system to work on tablet computers, which along with smartphones are the fastest-growing sector of the computing market.
Microsoft is also planning to release its own tablet, the Surface.
Earlier this week, Microsoft previewed its next version of the Office system, which is expected to be released next year.

Tuesday, 26 June 2012

Microsoft Office to get social after $1.2bn Yammer buy

Microsoft has bought the enterprise social network Yammer in a bid to boost the software giant's cloud portfolio.

The $1.2 billion (£769 million) cash deal was announced on Monday, confirming rumours of the imminent acquisition. Yammer will continue to run as a standalone service, both it and Microsoft said, but Microsoft will push its adoption as part of a range of cloud services that also include Office 365, SharePoint and Skype.

"As a Yammer customer, you will continue to get a secure, private social network — delivered with the same focus on simplicity, innovation, and cross-platform experiences," Yammer chief David Sacks, who will continue to head up the company as part of Microsoft's Office division, said in a blog post. "Over time, you'll see more and more connections to SharePoint, Office365, Dynamics and Skype."

Yammer gives Microsoft a rival to Salesforce.com's Chatter, also a social networking tool of sorts. Indeed, Microsoft has previously experimented with this sort of thing, notably with its OfficeTalk trial a couple of years ago.

However, according to a report in The Seattle Times, Microsoft chief Steve Ballmer is particularly keen on the 'grassroots' nature of Yammer's adoption.

"Consumerisation of IT is a trend which I think perhaps more than almost any other company out there, Yammer has gotten right with its viral adoption model," Ballmer was quoted as saying on a conference call. "Yammer now has a sales model that we like: viral adoption by the end user, the consumer inside some kind of professional organisation, with the option for IT to buy enterprise-level capability and management."

Yammer has itself been acquisitive in the recent past — in April it picked up the UK firm oneDrum so as to add file-sharing capabilities to its product.

Sourced: http://www.zdnet.co.uk/blogs/communication-breakdown-10000030/microsoft-office-to-get-social-after-12bn-yammer-buy-10026485/

Saturday, 23 June 2012

Microsoft’s Surface Tablet Said To Be Wi-Fi Only At First


Microsoft Corp. (MSFT)’s Surface tablet computer, unveiled this week to compete with Apple Inc. (AAPL)’s iPad, will initially go on sale without a connection to mobile-phone networks, according to two people familiar with the matter.
Steve Ballmer, chief executive officer of Microsoft Corp., speaks at a news conference launching the company's Surface tablet computer at Milk Studios in Los Angeles, on June 18, 2012. Photographer: Jonathan Alcorn/Bloomberg
Steven Sinofsky, president of Windows and Windows Live Engineering Group at Microsoft Corp., speaks at a news conference launching the company's Surface tablet computer at Milk Studios in Los Angeles, California, U.S., on Monday, June 18, 2012. Photographer: Jonathan Alcorn/Bloomberg
Microsoft is equipping the device with a Wi-Fi short-range connection, said the people, who declined to be named because the full specifications of the new product have yet to be made public.
Apple, the market leader in tablets, began selling a new iPad in March with the fastest cellular connection, known as long-term evolution, or LTE. Since it first went on sale in 2010, the iPad has had the option of a mobile-phone chip, which lets users access the Internet almost anywhere there is network coverage. Apple also sells a Wi-Fi-only iPad model.
Wi-Fi-only models are the larger part of the market right now and Microsoft’s decision may enable it to keep costs down, said Ben Bajarin, an analyst at technology consulting firm Creative Strategies. Still, it could curtail the company’s efforts to promote Surface as a device you can use anywhere and in any way, Bajarin said.
“The way that Microsoft is positioning this product --that it’s highly mobile but also has the functionality of a notebook -- that customer might be more interested in working from any location and not being bound by Wi-Fi,” said Bajarin.

Home Use

Most tablet customers are still using the devices mainly in the home, where they have Wi-Fi, and are avoiding mobile-phone connections on concerns about the cost of monthly data plans, said Carolina Milanesi, an analyst at researcher Gartner Inc. in a telephone interview.
“Wi-Fi-only is not a limitation for Surface,” Milanesi said.
Microsoft said earlier this week that it will begin selling the Surface later this year, altering the company’s long- standing practice of focusing on computer software and leaving the hardware to its partners.
Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft has contracted with Pegatron Corp. (4938), a Taiwanese company that assembles Apple’s iPhones, to manufacture the Surface, two people familiar with the matter said.
Catherine Brooker, a spokeswoman for Microsoft, declined to comment.
The shares fell 0.1 percent to $30.11 at 9:43 a.m. in New York. The stock had increased 16 percent this year through yesterday.

Wednesday, 20 June 2012

Microsoft's Surface tablet 'fails' during Los Angeles showcase


Since late Apple chief Steve Jobs made the hype around the unveiling of new gadgets akin to that surrounding a rock concert, rivals have been quick to follow the casually dressed blueprint for showing off their new wares.
Microsoft gave the launch of their new Surface tablet the same treatment in Los Angeles on Monday, only for Windows president Steve Sinofksy to suffer the moment that all technology executives must dread; when technical gremlins sink a hitherto slick product launch.
Attempting to show the Surface's capabilities, Mr Sinofsky manfully tried to carry on after the device refused to perform as he talked up how users could "browse smoothly" on the tablet using Internet Explorer and its touch-friendly Windows 8 operating system
After taking a deep breath and recovering from the initial setback the Microsoft executive finally admitted defeat when his carefully crafted speech called for him to showcase how "movies and entertainment look great" on the tablet that the company hope will rival Apple's market-leading iPad.
Mr Sinofsky quickly ran to the back of the stage where he substituted the malfunctioning Surface for a working model, before carrying on with his presentation.

Sourced:

Tuesday, 19 June 2012

With Surface, Microsoft picks a fight with its closest partners


Microsoft's Surface tablet and colorful covers.
(Credit: Microsoft)
You can almost picture Microsoft's longtime hardware partners offering up polite, but terse, applause for the newly unveiled Surface tablets. Most were mum yesterday after the event.
How else are they supposed to react? For companies such as Hewlett-Packard or Acer, which have depended on Microsoft and its Windows operating system for its PCs and laptops, this is a slap in the face.
At best, Microsoft's Surface is implicit commentary that the original equipment manufacturers can't cut it in the tablet arena. At worst, Microsoft means to stake a dominant position, leaving even less room in a business already dominated by Apple's iPad.
"The move is a vote of no confidence in these partners, who should rightly feel slighted...or challenged," said Jan Dawson, an analyst at research firm Ovum.
Here's the kicker: the Surface is actually kind of awesome.
With a history of hardware as varied as theXbox 360 and the Zune, the Surface could have been a hit-or-miss product. But the tablet (which comes in x86 and ARM versions), with a 10.6-inch widescreen display, magnesium case, built-in kickstand, and ultra-thin attachable keyboard cover, garnered the kind of excitement and buzz that's commonly found at an Apple event.
That Microsoft decided to enter the tablet market itself underscores the opportunity that comes from the business, as the technology industry begins to acknowledge the so-called "post-PC" era. Rather than let others cannibalize its PC business, Microsoft is showing a willingness to do so itself. The company likely sees the record-setting profits that Apple is posting, thanks in part to the iPad, and wants in on the action.
The growth expectations certainly support its enthusiasm. By 2013, nearly half of the U.S.'s 117.4 million Internet users will own a tablet, according to a report from the Online Publishers Association. Nearly a third of users already own a tablet this year, more than double the users from a year ago. While the iPad is still the breakout product in the group, analysts expect it to lose share as alternatives spring up.
Tablets a tough business 
The biggest problem with Microsoft's slight against its partners is that the software giant has a point. The tablets in the market -- virtually all of which are admittedly using the Android operating system -- look downright generic.
Commercial success has been elusive for pretty much of all of the companies who have entered the tablet arena. As the first Android 3.0 tablet, the Motorola Xoom flopped pretty badly. Hewlett-Packard's WebOS-powered TouchPad disappeared before it even got a chance to get on its feet. Research in Motion had to offer dramatic discounts to move its BlackBerry Playbook. The standout feature for Amazon's Kindle Fire was its $200 price point, but momentum has disappeared. The Asus Transformer Prime is an interesting tablet, but one that lacks mainstream appeal.

Hands-on with Microsoft's Surface tablet (pictures)

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Many were likely hoping to hop on the Windows 8 bandwagon when that came along, but it's unclear how enthusiastic many will be with Surface on the horizon.
LG is reportedly putting its tablet initiative on hold as it focuses on its smartphone business. Lenovo and Dell, meanwhile, said they would continue to support Windows 8. Acer and Hewlett-Packard declined to comment. CNET also contacted Samsung and HTC for comment. We'll update the story when they respond.
The companies are likely stay quiet as they digest the news.
Microsoft only told its partners on Friday that it was coming out with a tablet, according to a person at one of the hardware vendors who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Microsoft shared no specifics, knowing full well that details would leak, robbing Steve Ballmer of his Apple moment.
"We're all taking a wait and see approach," said the vendor contact.
Microsoft is believed to have been eager to move into tablets itself due to the lackluster results from Nokia on the smartphone side, according Sterne Agee analyst Shaw Wu.
Partners in a bind 
Microsoft is emulating Apple in its move to the integrated device business. The Surface is a marriage of the company's Windows 8 and hardware it designed.
Microsoft isn't the only one looking to offer its own tablet. Google is widely expected to unveil its own branded tablet at its Google I/O developer conference next week. Similar to its Nexus line of smartphones, it will likely hold up a "Nexus" tablet as a model for the latest version of its Android operating system.
Microsoft Surface tablet debuts (roundup).
With Google and Microsoft getting into tablets themselves, and Apple already perched atop the totem pole, the other companies could find themselves squeezed.
It's unclear what the vendors will do. Samsung Electronics' new CEO Kwon Oh-hyun has called for the company to focus on developing its own software to differentiate itself. Many will likely begrudgingly stick with Windows 8 and Android and attempt to compete against their partners.
Don't be fooled by the generic comments of support expressed by some of the partners; the companies are likely concerned.
Lighting a fire 
The flip side to the Surface as a competitor is the product as a catalyst for the development of new products. Microsoft could be looking to light a fire under its partners, pushing them to move beyond past generic attempts and toward more innovative designs and features.
"It would be good for (the hardware partners) to argue that Microsoft is unproven in hardware, so consumers and enterprises should buy the hardware from (original equipment manufacturers) that know what they're doing, using Microsoft's great software," Dawson said.
Microsoft's Surface could finally break the iPad lock and get people thinking about Windows 8 as a platform for tablets, which could open the door for other vendors. At least one OEM partner is holding out a bit of hope for that scenario.
The companies are likely hesitant to react too quickly because Microsoft, in typical fashion, didn't provide too much details beyond the device itself. There's no specific information on when the product would launch or how much it costs.
Judging by yesterday's reaction, consumers will be eager for Microsoft to fill in those details. The hardware partners can't be anywhere near as excited.

Saturday, 16 June 2012

Microsoft introduces a tablet


For decades, Microsoft has made the software that runs a majority of the world’s personal computers, leaving a gang of outside hardware companies to design the machines. Apple, its rival, makes it all.
Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg News
Steven Sinofsky at an event in February. The longtime Microsoft executive is leading the company’s tablet effort.
Microsoft is about to concede that Apple may be onto something.
On Monday, Microsoft is expected to introduce a tablet computer of its own design that runs a new version of its Windows operating system, according to people with knowledge of Microsoft’s plans who declined to be identified discussing confidential matters. It is the first time in the company’s 37-year history that it will offer a computer of its own creation. The device is aimed squarely at Apple’s blockbuster iPad, which has begun to threaten Microsoft’s hegemony in the computer business.
Microsoft’s move is another example of how Apple has demonstrated that the most effective way to create easy-to-use consumer gadgets is by building the whole package — upending the longstanding practice in the technology industry of companies’ devoting their energies to either hardware or software. Google, too, has made a big concession to Apple’s approach, signaling with its acquisition of Motorola Mobility last year that it will also design its own devices.
Frank Shaw, a Microsoft spokesman, declined to comment.
For Microsoft, the decision to make its own tablet would once have been almost unthinkable. Microsoft swallowed the PC market in the 1980s and 1990s by letting any hardware maker pay licensing fees to put Windows on its machines. That business was so lucrative for Microsoft that there was no reason for the company to make its own PCs and compete for computer sales with its own partners.
The stunning success of Apple, now the most highly valued company in the world, has shown its rivals that they can no longer rely entirely on the business models that were so successful during an earlier era of the tech industry.
With the iPad, Apple coupled hardware and software together in an elegant package, producing longer battery life, a more responsive touch screen and other features competitors have not been able to match.
“If it’s true that Microsoft is going to produce its own tablet, it’s a major turning point for the company and shows just how breathtakingly the landscape has changed in a just a few years,” said Brad Silverberg, a venture capitalist in Seattle and former Microsoft executive, who said he had no knowledge of the company’s plans. “The stakes are enormous.”
In the smartphone business, Google initially followed Microsoft’s playbook by making itsAndroid operating system available to any hardware maker who wanted it, a move that helped turn Android into the top operating system for smartphones. The search company’s hardware partners were far less successful, though, in selling Android tablets to the public, which were often criticized for being inferior to the iPad.
Last year though, Google announced plans to pay $12.5 billion to acquire Motorola Mobility, a maker of Android smartphones and tablets. That deal, which was completed last month, was seen as a big shift in strategy for Google that will help it create better Android smartphones and tablets.
Microsoft and Google are not entirely embracing Apple’s approach. Even as they design their own devices, they both will continue to make their software available to hardware companies that want to base their products on them. Microsoft has already publicly demonstrated devices from hardware makers like Samsung running Windows 8, the next version of its operating system.
Microsoft has invited the media to an event in Los Angeles Monday afternoon, where it is expected to show its tablet device. The entertainment industry Web site The Wrap earlier reported that Microsoft planned to announce a tablet at the event.
For Microsoft, making a tablet is a risky venture. Even with the emerging competition from the iPad, Windows remains one of the greatest franchises the technology industry has known, accounting for $4.6 billion in sales during the most recently reported quarter. Those sales are rooted in Microsoft’s alliance with its hardware partners. The plans could erode the commitment those partners have to Windows since Microsoft will effectively be competing with them for sales.
Also, Microsoft has a mixed track record in making hardware. It makes the popular Xbox 360, but that device sustained years of losses and manufacturing problems before it became a success. Microsoft failed with the Zune, a music player that was designed to compete with the iPod.
But there is also great risk for Microsoft in betting entirely on its old way of working with PC companies. The iPad has already begun to steal sales from low-end Windows laptops, though most people still aren’t using tablets for hard-core tasks like writing long documents and building big spreadsheets.
Timothy D. Cook, Apple’s chief executive, has repeatedly predicted that tablet computers will eventually outsell traditional computers in part because of their simplicity.
In its most recent quarter, Apple’s revenue from the iPad was $6.59 billion, more than Microsoft’s sales of Windows.
Microsoft’s move is a vindication of sorts for Steve Jobs, Apple’s late chief executive and long the technology industry’s most vocal advocate for making both hardware and software. Mr. Jobs often said that the only way to create superior technology products was to “make the whole widget.”
Many technology executives these days have come around to thinking like that, saying that conceiving hardware and software together is especially important with consumer devices like the iPad because of how things like poor battery life and unresponsive touch screens can ruin consumers’ enjoyment of the devices.
“In consumer technology, tight integration of hardware and software produces a demonstrably better platform,” said Roger McNamee, a veteran technology investor with Elevation Partners, a Silicon Valley private equity firm. “But that is only the first step in competing with Apple. Now Microsoft has to deliver functionality superior to iPad in a package consumers want to buy.”
A longtime Microsoft executive, Steven Sinofsky, is leading the company’s tablet effort. Mr. Sinofsky took over the company’s Windows division several years ago, helping to lead a turnaround in the business after the release of Windows Vista, which was widely criticized for early technical flaws.
Mr. Sinofsky’s first step in responding to the iPad was to oversee the most drastic change in the design of the operating system in years so that it could take better advantage of touch screens. That new version of the software, Windows 8, is expected to be released this October on an array of devices, including more traditional-looking computers.
The Microsoft tablet is expected to use a variation of Windows 8, known as Windows RT, that is designed specifically for tablet devices based on a class of microprocessors called ARM chips. That is the same class of chips inside the iPad and other mobile devices.

Friday, 15 June 2012

Review: Nokia Lumia 900


The Nokia Lumia 900 is one of the most exciting smartphones to hit the market yet, mixing the excellent Windows Phone operating system with a phenomenal screen that puts rivals to shame. It’s a great all-round package, and the first of the reviews are in. Read on to find out what the experts are saying.
CNET ’s Natasha Lomas points out that the Lumia 900 “looks big and bold in the hand.” It’s the huge 4.3-inch ClearBlack display that will attract most consumers, however, and Lomas adds, “the display generally looks bright and colourful, with blacks appearing velvety and deep.” “The touchscreen itself is nice and responsive,” says Natasha, “jumping around on cue to even light taps and swipes.”
Pocket Lint ’s Stuart Miles explains, “The Lumia design is different from the norm, is eye-catching and people will spot that and comment, so be prepared. The design is seamless with a clean curved look void of screws or panels.” We love the idea of watching films on the Lumia 900, but Miles highlights its ability as an eReader as well: “It’s perfect for reading a book via the Amazon Kindle app or watching a movie or TV show via Netflix.”
When compared to the Nokia Lumia 800, Stuart explains, “if you fancy the idea of a bigger screen this is the better of the two. It's more brash than the Lumia 800, but the experience is good. The screen's resolution is stretched to its limit at this size, but that's not enough to push it over the edge as in the Titan series from HTC.”
As with Lomas, Dave Oliver, from Wired , picks up on the sensitive touchscreen and deep blacks, adding, “it's beautifully sensitive, and Nokia's ClearBlack technology offers rich contrast with exceptionally deep, dark blacks offsetting the slightly oversaturated colours.”
Performance impresses, with Oliver pointing out, “it ain't slow, and the relative simplicity of the Windows OS certainly seems to be in its favour, since it whips through the apps with ease, even when you have a bunch of them open and running.”
The latest Windows Phone 7.5 Mango is the operating system,” explains Dave, “which is beautiful to look at, and easy to find your way around, even if you're a Windows Phone newbie.”
So far so good, then, and the positive reception continues over at Stuff , where the website says, “with beautifully bright Windows Phone live tiles to distract you, the AMOLED and ClearBlack screen is by far the most 'glanceable' of the 2012 pack so far.”
It's perfect if you want to view all of your social feeds in one place or take advantage of excellent bespoke software, such as Nokia Maps, Nokia Drive and Nokia Music. Like the iPhone, the Lumia 900 lacks Flash support.”
But what do you think of the Nokia Lumia 900? Would you opt for this larger than life handset – with a screen that’s perfectly suited to watching movies on the go or browsing the web – over the excellent Lumia 800? Leave a comment and let us know.

Sourced:

Thursday, 14 June 2012

Microsoft planning to buy Yammer?

Microsoft is in talks to acquire a leading social network for enterprises for more than $1bn.
According to Bloomberg the deal could happen as soon as today which would get Microsoft a social element to its business products.

The deal would also bolster competition with Salesforce.com which obtained social tools after purchasing Buddy Media for $745m earlier this month.

Buying Yammer would also give Microsoft a leg up against earlier which bought Virtue and Collective Intellect which analyze data on social networking sites.

Yammer was started in 2008 by David Sacks, the former COO at PayPal. The company is currently used by over 200,000 companies and is 100% cloud based.

Unlike Twitter and Facebook, Yammer offers an internal social network for companies where they own and control all their data on yammer.

In a 2011 interview, David Sacks told CBR how fast the company was growing.

"Salesforce claims four million users, we've got four million and we're a younger company," said Sacks.

He also pointed out that an examination by Forrester showed Yammer provided "a ROI of 365% in just over four months" to businesses.

Although Sacks said the company was not profitable at the moment he pointed out that their main focus was to keep growing.

Angelica Kemps, a spokeswoman for Yammer, declined to comment on the potential deal, telling CBR "We are not commenting on speculation but see this as a validation of the social network market and space."

sourced:
http://www.cbronline.com/news/microsoft-planning-to-buy-yammer-140612

Tuesday, 12 June 2012

Apple turns its back on Google


On the surface, this year’s Apple Worldwide Developers Conference in California marks the launch of major changes to the tech giant’s iOS operating system.


Apple CEO Tim Cook waves during the keynote address at WWDC 2012. It was the first WWDC keynote since the death of Steve Jobs and the first with Cook at the helm.


On Monday, amid whoops and yells from more than 1,000 Apple acolytes, the firm’s chief executive, Tim Cook, announced that the iPad and iPhone maker will now integrate Facebook for the first time. Users will be able to post photos, links and map locations directly to the social network from their Apple devices.
Meanwhile, iOS6 will jettison Google Maps, the navigation app that has been installed on the iPhone and iPad devices since their inception, and instead push users towards its own, new Maps app.
But the changes, which will have an impact on hundreds of millions of users around the world, represent more than just another gear shift in technological development. They mark a seismic shift in loyalties.
In “friending” Facebook, Apple has set aside its long-running feud with what is one of the few other technology firms big enough to take it on. The two businesses spent years locked in a tit-for-tat battle, where each one repeatedly failed to include the other into their latest product launches. It had been the corporate equivalent of two alpha males blanking each other.
Facebook refused to integrate Apple’s music-based networking app, Ping, into its website, prompting a public dressing down from Apple’s former chief executive and co-founder, Steve Jobs. Not long after, Facebook integrated Spotify, one of Ping’s biggest rivals, into its website instead.
Apple responded by integrating Twitter into its operating system, at a time when it was still studiously ignoring Facebook.
Mr Cook’s decision a year later to cosy up to the social network marks a major shift. It highlights Apple’s “pragmatic approach to alliances”, said analysts at CCS Insight. It is also a “tacit admission of failure” for Ping.
Either way, it has also helped to push aside some investors’ concerns about Facebook to $27.30 in early trading in New York yesterday, even as evidence emerged of an acute slowdown in its growth in the US.
The number of unique visitors rose just 5pc in April – the slowest rate since Comscore started collecting the data in 2008. One of the persistent doubts dogging the social network is about its longevity. Even the cynics who have been forecasting the end of the Facebook “fad” for years admit that its integration into what are arguably the world’s most successful handsets will give it another few years.
But, if an Apple alliance can give a leg up to a business the size of Facebook, it can also put a severe dent in one such as Google and, for many analysts, this was the real motivation driving Apple’s redrawing of alliances.
There was a time when the web search giant used to feel like Apple’s natural ally. Its cleanly designed homepage was almost the website equivalent of a sleek Apple device. But as Google got bigger it began encroaching on Apple’s turf. Its free Android operating system has overtaken Apple’s iOS. It has launched a music service to rival iTunes. Both firms are battling for valuable consumer data.
While Apple’s shift in allegiance was perhaps inevitable, it could not come at a worse time for Google.
In Europe, Google has been given until early July to come up with proposals to address its dominance of the web search or face intervention and potentially heavy fines from Brussels.
Meanwhile, mobile companies, including Vodafone and France Telecom, have been lobbying the European Commission to impose new taxes on the company, so that they can share the burden of investing in the broadband and telecoms infrastructures they rely on.
Closer to home, there is increasing concern about Google’s approach to privacy. The UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office this week wrote to the company’s senior vice president, Alan Eustace, demanding information about how much personal information it has collected, and why it has not been more open about it.
The business’s emerging hostility with Apple is being echoed with Microsoft, Oracle and across the music, telecoms and publishing industries. It already has a lot of enemies at its door.
By cosying up to Facebook and unfriending Google, Apple has made its own position clear.

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