| NYT > Technology | |
As Data Flows In, the Dollars Flow Out The average American is expected to spend nearly $1,000 this year on services like cable, Internet and video games. |
Publishers Win a Bout in E-Book Price Fight Publishers have managed to take some control — at least temporarily — of how much consumers pay for their content. |
Findings: Will You Be E-Mailing This Column? It’s Awesome A University of Pennsylvania study found that readers of news in print and online had more exalted tastes than might be expected. |
With Shake-Up, SAP Seeks Better Customer Relations The chairman of SAP, the German software company, said a decision to raise maintenance fees was wrong and acknowledged that he had been partly responsible for the move. |
Mobile Data Traffic Expected to Surge Mobile data traffic is expected to increase 39-fold in the next five years, according to a new report from Cisco Systems. |
Foursquare Signs a Deal With Zagat Foursquare, the hip social network whose software is on the phones of many young urbanites, is branching out. |
Available Soon at a Barnes & Noble Near You: The Nook Want to do more than look at a Nook? Starting Wednesday, Barnes & Noble will finally have its e-book reader available for sale in its bookstores. |
Job Postings Hint at Amazon\'s Plans for the Kindle While Amazon goes on a hiring spree for its Kindle division, hiring color LCD managers and Wi-Fi specialists, where does the company take the Kindle from here? |
China Announces Arrests in Hacking Crackdown Police officers also seized money and equipment worth hundreds of thousands of dollars during the crackdown, which occurred in November, state media reported over the past two days. |
Google to Add Social Features to Gmail Google will unveil add-ons to Gmail that let people post and view messages about their day-to-day activities. |
Making Solar Power Portable A growing number of business travelers are using portable renewable energy devices to power up their electronics when they work in places that offer little or no access to electricity. |
Insider’s Admission Deepens Galleon Case Rajiv Goel said that in 2007 he provided the hedge fund founder Raj Rajaratnam with confidential tips about Intel and Sprint Nextel. |
Electronic Arts Shrinks Loss, but Shares Fall on Forecast The publisher released its results, which analysts had expected to disappoint, after the regular market session ended. |
The Fight Over Who Sets Prices at the Online Mall Major brands and manufacturers — and now, book publishers — are deploying new tactics and tools to control how their products are presented and priced online. |
Media Talk: Kindle Books in Snack Sizes FT Press is selling stripped-down, 1,000- to 2,000-word versions of books, for $1.99, and a new series of essays of about 5,000 words, for $2.99. |
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