AOL sees revenues slide, profits rise

From CNET News.com: During the third quarter, AOL generated $563.5 million in total revenue, a drop of 26 percent from $763.9 million for the same period in 2009. The company's advertising revenue, which was $292.8 million on the quarter just ended, slid by 27 percent from the $402.3...

Apple confirms move to 90-second iTunes samples

From CNET News.com: An Apple spokesman confirmed for CNET this evening a report by Symphonic Distribution, a digital music distributor, that iTunes would soon be extending the length of song samples from 30 seconds to 90 seconds for songs that are at least two-and-a-half minutes in...

Lenovo Quietly Kills ThinkPad X301 Laptop

From X-bit Labs: Lenovo Group on Tuesday ceased to sell its premium ThinkPad X301 laptop on its web-site and while the system is still available from resellers, it is a yet another confirmation that the model is in the end of its life. The company plans to phase out one of its most...

HP to offer unlocked Palm Pre 2 to small business

From InfoWorld: Hewlett-Packard plans to sell the unlocked version of its Palm Pre 2 to small businesses as well as to mobile application developers.

The company disclosed plans for an unlocked Pre 2 for developers when it announced the phone on Oct. 19. Though the primary audience...

Twitter's Promoted Tweets to Poison User Timelines

From PC World: If you're hungry for more advertisements, Twitter is the place to go. Not content with just displaying Promoted Tweets in its search function, Twitter is rolling out an initiative to deluge your timeline with them as well. This campaign will annoy users, choke already...

Oracle to buy ATG for $1 billion

From CNET News.com: Oracle plans to spend about $1 billion to buy software company Art Technology Group.

The acquisition, announced today, will be a cash deal for $6 per share of Cambridge, Mass.-based ATG and is expected to close by early 2011, pending shareholder and regulatory...

Google offers cash for finding Web security holes

From CNET News.com: Taking a page from the Chrome playbook, Google has launched a program to encourage outsiders to find security vulnerabilities in its Web properties.

Under the Chrome vulnerability-finding bounty program, the company already has been paying varying sums to those...

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