Nobody wants to just sell phones, but broader ambition has its perils.
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Move to spread social features all over the Web could alter equation for destinations like Facebook and MySpace.
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New York cable firm outbids News Corp. and expects to exploit print/TV/online synergies in cross-media advertising and content distribution.
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Irish firm swoops in after founder of 1-year-old mobile browsing firm maxes out his credit cards.
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Highjump Software, developer of supply chain software, to be run as a standalone company.
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As cable operators continue to struggle with the incorporation of mobile communications, New York-based company offers subscribers free Wi-Fi in neighborhoods.
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Social network of PowerPoints closes on A round led by Venrock.
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A well-financed wireless broadband carrier with well-heeled backers motivated to innovate could jolt the WiMAX community out of its inertia.
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Media executives gathered at the Argyle Executive Forum on Leadership in Media in New York, where there was more lamenting over old media's lack of clear business model in the Internet age than forecasting at the confab.
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While making an abortive attempt to land Yahoo, Microsoft's bankers were checking out Facebook.
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Google, Intel, Sprint Nextel, Clearwire, Comcast, Time Warner Cable, and Bright House wager a fortune on an unproven but disruptive technology.
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Tel Aviv startup raises $20.4M for system-on-a-chip that lets digital devices see in 3D and respond to gestures and movement.
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Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang, stung by investors, says he would entertain new offer as company shares are buoyant.
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Despite lessons learned online, mobile spam is a growing problem and the government is having problems fixing liability.
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