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Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Another Sad Day for Yahoo: Layoffs Begin, While Employees Vent

While layoffs have become all too common across tech and this country, today’s at Yahoo feel a little worse, coming after 18 unceasing months of painful changes and stumbles at the troubled Internet icon. As previously reported by BoomTown, about 10 percent of Yahoo’s workforce–1,500–are expected to get their walking papers, starting this morning. I have gotten more than a dozen impassioned emails from Yahoo employees, some of whom are there and some who have left, this week alone–all of whom truly care for the company, in spite of obvious anger.

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AOL Gets More Social With Renovation of Bebo (But There’s Much More to Come)

This morning, AOL will launch an updated look for its Bebo social-networking property, with a new “social inbox” profile for its users. It essentially gives its users a one-stop destination, with aggregated social feeds from across the Web, multiple email accounts and media recommendations. But, according to sources, the online service is preparing a more radical series of announcements after the new year, well beyond its release today. Interestingly, the changes to its social-networking and communications properties yet to be announced have been among the things that have impressed Yahoo in its recent merger talks with Time Warner about buying AOL.

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Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Microsoft Officially Facebooks, Oops, Socializes, Windows Live Internet Services

Microsoft officially rolled out its next version of its Windows Live Services tonight, with a heavy emphasis on socializing its online offerings and giving users better tools to share all sorts of information from across the Web within them.

Microsoft said the changes–similar to those made by Yahoo and AOL recently–would “begin rolling out to customers in the U.S. over the coming weeks and will be made available globally in 54 countries and in 48 languages by early 2009.”

You might call this the “Facebooking” of Windows Live, which is the brand name for Microsoft’s communications and other related online services aimed at consumers, especially because the much anticipated changes also include a new profile and a “What’s New” feed.

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Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Microsoft’s Steve Ballmer’s Entire Letter to Customers About Cloud Computing

With all the information Microsoft is releasing at its launchtastic Professional Developers Conference in Los Angeles this week, CEO Steve Ballmer sent out a honking long letter to customers who have opted into the software giant’s “Executive Email” program (who knew?).

Along with the Azure–at long last, a lovely and apt brand name from Microsoft–cloud services offering, the letter also outlines the inevitable and unavoidable path for the company, which has long struggled in getting its digital strategy right.

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The Deal Dance: AOL and Yahoo (and Even Google and Microsoft) Continue to Waltz

So–at this point–BoomTown feels it is not untoward in asking: What the heck is taking so long for Yahoo and AOL to decide whether or not to merge their struggling operations?

And, after talking to a dozen sources, inside and outside both companies, this week, I can tell you there is definitely one nagging problem: They’re just not that into each other.

Make no mistake, though, these arranged marriage negotiations are grudgingly advanced. Oh, they are talking, and how, now engaged in what another source describes as “very serious due diligence.”

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Wednesday, October 15, 2008

I Visited Yahoo and All I Got Was This Lousy Stock Price

Who let the dogs in at Yahoo?

It wasn’t BoomTown, for sure.

But it was another bad day for the troubled Internet company’s stock. By the day’s end, Yahoo’s shares had dropped to $11.75, down 90 cents or just over 7 percent.

Which means Yahoo has officially dropped down a rabbit hole and is headed to parts unknown.

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Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Angel Investor Ron Conway Speaks (About His Wise-Up-Silicon-Valley Missive)

Of course, the stock market had to come roaring back and it had to be extra sunny on the very day I was scheduled to have lunch with well-known Silicon Valley investor Ron Conway to talk about the worrisome state of the digital sector.

After all, it was Conway, as well as Sequoia Capital, who sent out a stink bomb of an email last week to his start-ups to deliver a simple message: The Web 2.0 party is over.

Say it ain’t so, Ron!

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Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Yahoo’s Scott Dietzen Speaks About Its New Online Calendar (Which Is About a Decade Late!)

In its ongoing renovation of its offerings–last month it began rolling out a new homepage–Yahoo is unveiling a new online calendar, with a passel of new bells and whistles, to a small group of users worldwide.

Overall, it is a good-looking, simple and clean design–which will eventually be extended to all of Yahoo’s 8.1 million calendar users worldwide.

And, incredibly, although Yahoo’s is the top online calendar in the world, it has been 10 years since the Internet giant updated it.

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Friday, September 26, 2008

“No Walls” Trademark Dispute (Maybe Microsoft Should Bring Back Seinfeld)

An unusual Israeli-Palestinian joint venture start-up, which makes a cloud-based Web operating system letting users access their desktops from any computer with an Internet connection, is alleging a trademark violation by Microsoft in its new $300 million advertising campaign.

G.ho.st, which stands for “Global Hosted Operating System,” claims it has a pending trademark registration for the tagline “no walls.”

Microsoft disputes G.ho.st’s contention.

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Monday, September 22, 2008

Reset: What’s Next for Yahoo? (Merging With AOL? New Execs?)

When Yahoo holds its first board meeting tomorrow–with three new board members, including shareholder activist Carl Icahn–there will be little time for getting-to-know-you chitty-chat.

In fact, it should be all business for the group, which needs to push the reset button hard for Yahoo.

In fact, Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang is acutely aware that he and his management team have only a few months to really show investors and employees that they can get things moving at the beleaguered company.

Thus, on deck: talks to buy Time Warner’s AOL, strategies to attract talent, and how to deal with the weak economy.

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Wednesday, September 17, 2008

The First Look at the New Yahoo Homepage Redesign: Apps Rule!

Yahoo will begin testing out versions of its new main homepage to a minuscule number of users starting tomorrow, employing a design that more significantly allows users to customize the starting page in a way that essentially amounts to a kind of My Yahoo-lite for everyone.

Making such a shift will also be a big perceptual deal for Yahoo, which needs to prove it has remained current and open, especially compared to faster-growing rivals like Facebook.

Thus, making a success of its new design is critical, and Yahoo’s CEO Jerry Yang has been touting the idea that Yahoo must be the “starting point” to the Web for users.

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Thursday, September 11, 2008

Liveblogging From Yahoo’s “Open House”: Sexy Email and Barbara Mandrell!

Okay, BoomTown arrived late to Yahoo’s media event to show off its “open” strategies across its properties (I had a most excellent excuse in that it was my youngest son’s very first day of school).

So it was kind of jarring to hear Yahoo Media Group head Scott Moore talk about an email demo about adding social elements that had preceded his presentation, which he had not seen himself.

“I always think of the media properties the sexy [part of Yahoo],” said Moore. “But that kind of made mail sexy.”

Sexy email! Yahoo is saved!

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Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Face(book)lifts All Around! And A Bit of Botox for AOL Too!

Although about one-third of its user base–30 million people–has already switched over to its new design, which has been opt-in since July, Facebook will now officially start to move the entire site and the other 70 million Facebookers.

The changeover–which is not optional–will be complete in a few weeks, Facebook said.

I do like the new look, which is definitely cleaner and simpler, although it makes the experience a little more disjointed, since everyone’s profile is now cut up into tabs.

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Thursday, June 12, 2008

Yahoogle: No Joy in Mudville

strike

Here’s an email I got from a high-ranking Yahoo employee today after the Microsoft deal was declared dead and the ad-outsourcing deal with Google announced hours later:

“Out of the frying pan, into the fire. At least, the frying pan was a slower death.”

And here’s an email from a major Yahoo investor–no, not Carl Icahn!:

“The Board and Jerry are idiots.”

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Sunday, May 4, 2008

Ballmer’s Out? When Pigs Fly!

The blogosphere immediately jumped all over the inevitable meme that after the Yahoo deal fell apart, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer’s job was at risk.

What with the problems with the new Vista operating system and the general feeling that Microsoft’s Internet strategy is in shambles, the argument that Ballmer would be shown the door by an impatient board and replaced by former CEO and Founder Bill Gates was clear.

Actually, not so such much at all, but that has not stopped all the noise.

Maybe Ballmer should go and maybe not, but I would like some proof that’s not in evidence as yet.

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About Kara

Kara Swisher started covering digital issues for The Wall Street Journal's San Francisco bureau in 1997 and also wrote the BoomTown column about the sector. With Walt Mossberg, she co-produces and co-hosts D: All Things Digital, a major high-tech and media conference. Read more »

Ethics Statement

Here is a statement of my ethics and coverage policies. It is more than most of you want to know, but, in the age of suspicion of the media, I am laying it all out.

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