Bartz holds court on Yahoo's 15th birthday

Bartz holds court on Yahoo's 15th birthday
Bartz has certainly gotten to know Yahoo quite well in the 14 months she has occupied the CEO's office. But Yahoo is an old company by the standards of this place, celebrating its 15th birthday Tuesday with purple cupcakes and foosball tables for founders Jerry Yang and David Filo to be awarded later in the day. It has been eclipsed in recent years by the likes of Google and Facebook on the Internet, and in many quarters is no longer seen as the innovator it once was.Such matters appear to bother Bartz less than they bother others, but she acknowledged that there's still room for improvement at Yahoo. In a 90-minute roundtable discussion Tuesday, she held forth on a wide range of issues, from Google and China to search and advertising.First off, Bartz wished to clarify remarks she made on CNBC's Power Lunch earlier on Tuesday suggesting that she'd be willing to sell the company if the right price came along. "The company is not for sale," she said, although had she been occupying Yang's chair in 2008 when Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer came knocking, she likely would have taken his offer.Yahoo is looking to grow this year through acquisitions and aggressive hiring, she said. Expect Yahoo to pursue smaller companies--100 employees or less--as that's an efficient way of getting a good technology and a good team in-house, she said.Of course, there's another Internet company in Silicon Valley buying up seemingly every start-up it can find: Google. Yahoo rarely finds itself in bidding wars with Google, Bartz said, adding that Yahoo did not pursue Flickr partner Picnik, which was acquired Monday by Google.Google came up several times during the discussion. Bartz said Yahoo has not complained to the U.S. Department of Justice about Google's behavior, the way Microsoft acknowledged on Friday that it had. Yahoo is a member of the Open Book Alliance, which opposes Google's Book Search settlement with authors and publishers, but that's different from lodging a general antitrust complaint against the company, she said."I'm not usually interested in government intervention about anything," she said. "I don't wish antitrust on anyone."She danced carefully around the issue of Google, China, and cyberattacks, refusing to confirm reports that Yahoo was hacked as part of a widespread attack against U.S. companies."We have always been hacked, and we have always had a policy to not disclose," Bartz said. "Shit happens all the time," she followed, explaining that Yahoo is under near-constant attacks from cybercriminals of one type or another.Count Bartz among those cynical of Google's intentions in China following its January statement that it was no longer willing to offer a censored search engine in China and would consider pulling out of the country. Nothing has happened since, as Google told a Senate committee hearing Tuesday that it is still evaluating its options in China."I actually thought that if they were that heartfelt, they should do it. Looks to me like it was more of a statement than an action," she said.She did sympathize with Google's plight in Italy, expressing concern about the European Union and the behavior of individual countries toward business and the Internet. It could have just as easily been a Yahoo property that was the target of Italian prosecutors, she said.When it comes to her own company, Bartz said she's getting increased interest from major advertisers whose purse strings are starting to loosen a tad, at least compared to last year. Yahoo wants to give its users more freedom to customize their Yahoo experience, which has the nice side benefit of providing greater targeting for advertisers.In addition, Yahoo plans to roll out more of its own content to attract users alongside new advertising formats, as it has been signaling for some time. "We're a company that wants to deliver great content, and I want our ads to be as interesting as our content," Bartz said.But when you consider the scale at which Yahoo operates in the U.S., Bartz said, money can be spent more efficiently courting existing users and instead trying to find new users outside the U.S. Yahoo's $100 million marketing campaign has been a dud in the U.S. but has produced better results overseas, she said, citing India and the U.K. as examples.By the time Yahoo's next birthday rolls around, Bartz wants the company to have made more progress on sharing user data across content sites and personalizing experiences for its users, whether that's through social networking, niche content, or some combination."That's aspirational," she said, noting that to really pull that off Yahoo would have to host a front door for each Web user on its network: something like 600 million people. Still, it seems that Bartz would prefer Yahoo chug along producing its own unique mix of content and technology, attracting big-name advertisers without getting into the industry squabbles so prevalent today."Everybody's pissed at everybody right now," she said, referring to disputes among Apple, Google, Microsoft, phone makers, the telecom industry, and governments. While she may be concerned about the EU, there's one country she wouldn't mind emulating: "We're Switzerland."


Pandora rival iHeartRadio hits 50 million user milestone

Pandora rival iHeartRadio hits 50 million user milestone
iHeartRadio, the online radio service from terrestrial radio giant Clear Channel, has hit 50 million registered users, a milestone only three years in the making. The pace of iHeart signups -- faster than that of rival Pandora, the biggest radio provider on the Web, as well as Twitter and Facebook -- reflects the growing popularity of streaming music as well as the promotional heft that comes from a giant like Clear Channel as the parent of the developing service. Related linksiHeartRadio retunes iOS, Android apps for more talk radioAmazon adds streaming Prime Music to play against Apple's BeatsApple finally confirms it's buying Beats for $3BApple hears the music on subscriptions with Beats. Now what? However, Clear Channel Chief Executive Bob Pittman said that horsepower -- 850 owned radio stations in the US, giving Clear Channel the largest reach of any radio company with 245 million monthly listeners -- wasn't necessarily a blessing that guarantees iHeart's success. "If you look at the history of traditional media companies, the heft alone isn't enough," he said in an interview with CNET. The annals of the Internet are littered with "traditional companies that don't make the leap," Pittman said. In the past few years, streaming music services have grown in popularity among consumers -- revenue from them rose to more than $1 billion last year globally -- and that, in turn, has made the online services increasingly adored by recorded-music labels as digital music downloads begin to slow. Like any burgeoning opportunity, the market is rife with intensifying competition, including the Web's biggest radio provider Pandora with 77 million monthly active listeners, startups like Spotify, marketing powerhouses like Beats, and giant technology corporations like Apple, Amazon, and Google. Pittman, who rose to prominence in the media world as the wunderkind who founded MTV, views iHeart's competition more simply: by not conflating radio with other options. "Let's not combine music collections and radio as one category," he said. "They rarely live together. Now it appears that downloads replace CDs, maybe subscription replace downloads, but it's still the same thing. It's still your music collection." "When you go to the radio, you want to hear what's going on in the world," Pittman said. Pittman added that the 50 million milestone puts iHeart in a top tier of online music services, competitively. "If you look at the marketplace, there's the four of us and then everybody else," he said, listing iHeart, Pandora, Apple's iTunes, and Spotify. "At 50 million, we're clearly in that league." iHeartRadio is a free, ad-based online service that combines the live and on-demand streams of Clear Channel's terrestrial radio stations with a Pandora-like online radio option: create a station based on an artist or song and iHeart serves up a radio channel with related tracks. Originally launched in 2011, it hit 97 million monthly unique users in May. iHeartRadio's strategy has been to take advantage of its assets as a longtime partner of the recorded-music industry and expand the brand into a talk-radio "audiosodes" feature, a nationally televised primetime awards show, and a yearly music festival with top acts like Justin Timberlake, Paul McCartney, and Katy Perry. "The future is some sort of electronic -- today it's digital, it's streaming," Pittman said. "We're doing open heart surgery on a beating heart...we're all trying to build this digital market in a intelligent way."


Could the future of iTunes be digital software downloads-

Could the future of iTunes be digital software downloads?
What I'm getting at is that Apple's in the perfect position to start offering digital software downloads to the masses, and tie it into a software system that millions of people are comfortable with giving their credit card information to on a daily basis. I'm speaking of course, about iTunes. Apple's got all the pieces in place to start offering people computer software the same way Valve's been doing with video games with its hugely successful Steam service for the last six years. I love Steam for many reasons, but primarily for its built-in updating tools and easy-to-navigate digital storefront that make it easy to buy software with one click and not have to worry about it again. If I could get the same performance from an app that's admittedly become a little bloated but already has a decent updating system, I'd be happy as a pig in mud.Two things stick out in my mind as being good signs such a service is in the works via iTunes:CNET Networks1. The Apple software updater for Windows. Apple snuck this into iTunes 7 as a better way to update itself and QuickTime at the same time without the user having to go to Apple.com and run an installer, but it could easily be checked against a database of other user-installed applications for patches and updates similar to what CNET's VersionTracker offers with its VersionTracker Pro service. Additionally, Apple had a similar standalone utility to update iPods, which it later built-into the iTunes iPod dialogue. Since iTunes and QuickTime both have self-checking updaters, why even start including this app in the first place if there isn't some larger plan at work?2. Apple's already got a directory of all sorts of free and shareware apps on the downloads section of its Web site but sells the bigger, more professional applications via its online and retail stores. While a good number of the software items featured through Apple's store have digital downloads at their home site, there's no such option through Apple's store.So what's next? If the iPod's move to Flash storage, and the original iMac's ditching of floppy drives have been any indication of how Apple moves a trend from one end of the spectrum to the other, we'll be seeing disappearing optical drives from Apple's other laptops in the next few years. Does that mean the digital downloads store is right around the corner? Probably not just yet, but with a year of Leopard under its belt and an iPhone SDK out in February, Apple might need something to get developers excited come WWDC later this year, and a digital distribution store might be just the thing.


The 404 541- Where we put Sweden on the map (podcast)

The 404 541: Where we put Sweden on the map (podcast)
Longtime 404 listener Ammi took some time out of her busy vacation from Sweden to drop by our studios this morning, so we invite her on the show to tell us about her first trip to the United States...and also to help us locate Sweden on the map, because we're geographically hopeless. Ammi's only been here a few days so far, but her observations on the chaos and consumerism of American culture are on point. Like many foreigners that visit our country, she can't help but notice the obesity epidemic that we can easily trace back to the cupcake stores on every block in the city.To Jeff's delight, Ammi also tells us that hockey gets much more attention in Sweden than it in the US, although I'm pretty sure Swedish cable subscribers can't watch their games in 3D. On March 24th, Cablevision will be broadcasting the New York Rangers vs. New York Islanders game in 3D, the first live 3D sports broadcast to hit the network. Don't worry if you're not one of the 11 people that actually own a 3D TV, Madison Square Garden will also host a viewing party on a big screen 3D projection TV for 2,500 guests on the night of the big game. Hockey fans that can handle the real dimension can also just buy tickets to the live game.Finally, a new study in the latest Retrevo Gadgetology Report (gadgetology?) anecdotally shows that one in 10 people under 25 would pause coitus to check their social networking updates, which begs the question: is Facebook better than sex?Short answer: No, dude. Long answer: Listen to the show!EPISODE 541PodcastYour browser does not support the audio element. Subscribe in iTunes audio | Suscribe to iTunes (video) |Subscribe in RSS Audio |Subscribe in RSS Video This content is rated TV-MA, and is for viewers 18 years or older. Are you of age?YesNoSorry, you are not old enough to view this content.PlayFollow us on Twitter!The 404Jeff BakalarJustin YuWilson TangAdd us on Facebook!The 404 Fan PageThe 404 GroupJustin YuJeff BakalarWilson Tang


Music sources- Phantom Yoko Ono-iTunes story untrue

Music sources: Phantom Yoko Ono-iTunes story untrue
Sky News, the 24-hour British news operation, apparently posted a story that cited Yoko One as saying the Beatles' catalog was coming to iTunes. The story disappeared not long after, but not before someone took a screen shot of the headline and a tease, which said: "The whole of the Beatles back catalog will be made available to buy on iTunes, Yoko Ono has told Sky News." Sky News officials would not comment and has yet to issue a correction. This is the kind of juicy what-if situation that Apple fans live for and the speculation that the Fab Four's music could finally arrive at iTunes hit overdrive Tuesday evening. But the problem is it's simply not true. The Beatles' catalog is not coming to iTunes, at least if one is to believe EMI officials and other music industry insiders with knowledge of the Beatles-iTunes negotiations. EMI owns the Beatles' sound recordings, while Sony/ATV owns the publishing rights. Ernesto Schmitt, EMI's global catalog president, told The Financial Times that that the catalog would not be part of Apple's press event on Wednesday. I checked with my music industry sources, some of whom have direct knowledge of the talks between EMI and Apple Corp., the company that represents the Beatles, and they also said the negotiations have not yielded an agreement. All Things Digital reported the same earlier.How about this? If Sky News did nail this kind of whopper scoop, the organization would most certainly be ballyhooing its sweet piece of journalism, not hiding it. But as of 5 p.m. PDT Tuesday, that's exactly what what was happening. The story was nowhere to be found on the site. What's far more likely at this point is that something went wrong at Sky News. Anyone who has followed iTunes news has seen these rumors come and go. In the past, regardless of how delicious they've sounded, they've all been debunked.


iPhone 5 sees mixed demand, says analyst

iPhone 5 sees mixed demand, says analyst
The iPhone 5 may not be quite as hot as its precedessors, at least according to a new report from Oppenheimer analyst Ittai Kidron.In an investors note out Tuesday, Kidron cited retail checks that indicate "steady demand for the iPhone 4/4S and mixed demand for the iPhone 5." And the analyst predicts the trend will continue. As a result, he now expects iPhone sales of 26 million for the current quarter, down from his prior forecast of 27 million.The September quarter may also be a bit dicey. Though Kidron still believes a new iPhone will debut in September, he doesn't think it will launch early enough to beef up the entire quarter."Our previous estimates also reflected a nearly full September quarter contribution from a new iPhone, which looks overly optimistic at this point," Kidron said. "We still feel a September month launch and QoQ [quarter on quarter] volume increase are possible, but with our checks already showing signs of delayed iPhone 5 purchases, there's still risk to our lowered estimate [of 29 million in iPhone sales]."Kidron doesn't see abigger-screen iPhone, an iWatch, or an Apple television (iTV) in the cards for September. But when and if it debuts, an Apple smart TV has the potential to rev up consumers and investors. "We see a larger iPhone as a [calendar year 2014] reality, but only mildly incremental to estimates/sentiment," the analyst added. "We're lukewarm on an iWatch, but view iTV as having more game-changing/innovation-reaffirming potential."


iPhone 4 nearing most popular camera on Flickr

iPhone 4 nearing most popular camera on Flickr
The camera in Apple's iPhone 4 is a popular option for Flickr users, a graph on the Yahoo-owned company's site shows.According to the graph, the Nikon D90 continues to be the top choice among Flickr users. However, the iPhone 4 has been gaining ground quite steadily and could overtake the D90 in short order. The Canon EOS Digital Rebel XSi, Canon EOS 5D Mark II, and the Canon EOS Rebel T1i are the other top cameras on the site.The popularity of the iPhone 4's 5-megapixel camera on the photo-sharing site doesn't necessarily mean that high-end cameras, like the digital SLRs included in the Flickr listing, are in trouble. However, it does speak to the iPhone 4's influence. It also highlights how point-and-shoot cameras are increasingly competing with smartphones.In fact, another Flickr graph shows that the percentage of Flickr members using point-and-shoot cameras is declining at a rapid rate. Several Canon models, including the PowerShot G10 and G11, are seeing their popularity among Flickr users plummet to extremely low numbers. It becomes all the more sobering for those devices when one considers that Flickr itself says that camera phones are "under-represented" in its tallies, since it is often times difficult to automatically detect when a camera phone was used to snap a photo.The iPhone 4 camera's capabilities are boosted by backside illumination, known as BSI, which helps improve low-light performance, thus creating an nicer pictures.CNET photographer James Martin last year said the smartphone's camera "is approaching point-and-shoot quality." Just after the iPhone 4's release, he tested out the camera and put together this slideshow.(Via The New York Times)


iPhone 4 hitting 17 more countries on Friday

iPhone 4 hitting 17 more countries on Friday
The iPhone 4 is expanding its reach to 17 more countries this Friday.Starting July 30, consumers will be able to buy the new model in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Hong Kong, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, New Zealand, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland. The iPhone 4 will sell through Apple's retail and online stores as well as authorized resellers.One country not on the list of recipients is South Korea. Initially slated to receive the iPhone 4 at the same time as the others, South Korea was dropped from the July 30 rollout reportedly over regulatory issues. At the July 16 press conference on the iPhone's antenna reception issues, Apple CEO Steve Jobs said it would take a little longer to get South Korean government approval for the new phone.However, that explanation has apparently upset government officials and the South Korean news media, which claim that Jobs misstated the reason behind the delay, according to The Wall Street Journal. One regulator said that neither Apple nor KT, the iPhone's South Korean carrer, have yet submitted the new phone for approval.In the meantime, Apple said that the white version of the iPhone 4 would be delayed until later this year explaining that the handset has proven more challenging to make than originally expected.The iPhone 4 is currently being sold in France, Germany, Japan, the U.K., and the U.S. at a price of $199 for the 16GB edition and $299 for the 32GB model. Apple plans to bring the phone to yet more countries later this year.


iPhone 4 has display supply issues, analyst says

iPhone 4 has display supply issues, analyst says
Apple's iPhone 4 boasts a high-pixel-density Retina display that uses technology called IPS, or in-plane switching.IPS technology is also used in the iPad. Screens for both products are made by South Korea's LG Display, according to Ashok Kumar, managing director and senior technology analyst at Rodman & Renshaw. "Low yields on the IPS LCD panel from LG Display have dramatically impacted the production volumes for iPhone 4," Kumar wrote in his research note."Our supply chain checks indicate that our earlier monthly shipment estimate of 4 million units have been reset by about half." Kumar continued: "The hope is that the LG transition to Gen 5 LCD capacity by late summer could help alleviate the production bottleneck. Meanwhile there is a non trivial risk in the September quarter whereby demand for the legacy 3GS iPhone drops off faster than production can ramp up for the iPhone 4." The IPS-based Retina display is one of the key features on the iPhone 4, according to Apple. "Thanks to the Retina display... images in movies and photos are stunning at almost any angle. That's because the Retina display's pixel density is so high, your eye is unable to distinguish individual pixels," according to Apple's iPhone 4 Web page. "Demand will be chasing supply through September," Kumar said in a phone interview, adding that display is the single most costly component in the iPhone.Correction at 11:00 a.m. PDT Saturday: the supplier of the display was incorrectly stated at the top of the post as LG Electronics.As stated further below, the supplier is LG Display, according to the research note by Rodman & Renshaw analyst Ashok Kumar.


iPhone 4 already in some customers' hands

iPhone 4 already in some customers' hands
"Xmas has come early because my #iPhone4 just arrived," Gil Cabrera wrote on Twitter on Tuesday.He was one of the few already reporting that their new iPhones are arriving via FedEx two days earlier than planned. The earliest iPhone 4 preorders were supposed to arrive Thursday, the first day the device is available to the general public. Earlier it was reported that some Apple customers have begun receiving notification that their iPhone 4 may arrive a day early, Wednesday. But some have clearly started arriving even earlier than that.Cabrera followed up his initial Twitter post about his iPhone 4 by noting that he can't actually activate and use the phone just yet."Oh cruelty! Apparently, the #iphone4 arrived in error early and I cannot activate it until tomorrow! That's just wrong!"The iPhone Download Blog is reporting that AT&T is texting some customers with instructions about how to activate their phones.Update 2:50 p.m. PDT: Cabrera e-mailed to say that after speaking with an Apple customer service supervisor over the phone, his iPhone 4 is now activated.It's still a mystery how he and several others received their iPhone shipments two days early. Cabrera said he received a call from FedEx Tuesday asking if he'd received a package that day. When he said that he had, the FedEx representative said, "OK, thanks," and hung up, Cabrera said.FedEx has not yet responded to a request for comment.


iPad, other iOS devices top kids' holiday wish lists, says study

iPad, other iOS devices top kids' holiday wish lists, says study
Apple's line of iOS portables are in the lead for products desired by kids ages 6 to 12 in the U.S. this holiday season, a new study from Nielsen has found.According to the research firm, the iPad, iPod Touch, and iPhone are the top three most desired products by that age group. Leading the pack is the iPad, which 44 percent of those surveyed listed as wanting to buy in the next six months, up from the 31 percent from the firm's same study this time last year. The iPad was also the most desired product by those in the "13+" age category, knocking "computers" down to the second-most wanted product. By comparison, last year's study had computers leading, with the iPad trailing in fourth place. Tablets from other manufacturers come in at fifth place in both age groups. Besides Apple products, other products in demand are gaming devices, with Nintendo's 3DS topping the list among the 6-12 age group, followed closely by Microsoft's Kinect hardware and older models in the Nintendo DS line. In the group 13 and older, the leading game hardware is the Kinect, trailed by Nintendo's Wii and Sony's PlayStation 3 consoles.Nielsen also pointed to growth in the interest of e-readers, which were the third-most wanted product among those 13 and older, topping televisions, Blu-ray players, and smartphones (including the iPhone). That product line was less desired by those in the 6-12 age group, where e-readers came in 13th.Nielsen said its study consisted of surveying 3,000 individuals in the U.S., and took place last month. Below is the full breakdown of interest in products by age group.Interest in buying over the next six months in the 6-12 age rangeNielsenInterest in buying over the next six months in the 13+ age rangeNielsen


Apple may need Samsung to make enough chips for iPhone 6

Apple may have to rely on arch-rival Samsung for a hefty percentage of processors to power the next iPhone.Samsung has been Apple's go-to manufacturer for the past several chip generations, most recently producing the A5, the A6, and this year's A7. Apple has sought to reduce that dependence by reportedly cutting a deal with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) to take on production of future A series processors. But Samsung is far from out of the picture, according to a story from The Korea Economic Daily.Samsung will manufacture 30 to 40 percent of the A8 processors needed by Apple next year, leaving TSMC to kick in the rest, claims the Korean news site. Apple reportedly wanted TSMC as its only A8 supplier. But creating enough quantity of the 20-nanometer chip is a difficult process, forcing Apple to keep working with Samsung.Apple has been looking to cut ties with Samsung for some time. Given the high demand for the iPhone and iPad, Apple continually needs to reduce its reliance on a single supplier. But Apple's quest to divorce itself from Samsung is largely due to the legal bad blood between the two companies, say analysts.(Via Engadget)

Apple may launch iPad 2 Plus in 2011, says analyst

Apple could hit the market with a new version of the iPad 2 this year, FBR Capital Markets analyst Craig Berger said today in the International Business Times .Detailing his forecast in a recent investor's note, Berger said he believes that a device dubbed the iPad 2 Plus could launch in late 2011. Citing "indications from the supply chain," the analyst said that Apple has sent out requests for quotes to different suppliers for the new tablet, though no specific schedule for production has been confirmed.Berger added that the display for the iPad 2 Plus could be anywhere from 250 to 300 pixels per inch (ppi) compared with the current iPad 2's 132-ppi resolution, IBT reported.Despite hints from the supply chain, the analyst is waiting for further proof before calling this a done deal."While we find this new commentary interesting, we await more confirming data points from other supply chain contacts before fully believing a new iPad device is coming in 2011," Berger said.Looking at the current iPad 2, the analyst is eyeing sales of 10 million units in the second quarter and 16.5 million in the third.Berger's report follows a recent story from DigiTimes claiming that Apple is gearing up an iPad 3 with a 250-ppi display. The iPad 3 would launch in October at the same time that a new iPhone would reach consumers, according to DigiTimes.