FUJITSU AND SIEMENS CONSIDER SPLIT
Germany’s Siemens reportedly wants to end its PC joint
venture with Japan’s Fujitsu. The Financial Times reported that Fujitsu Siemens,
as the unit is called, has not competed effectively against Dell and HP, as had
been hoped. With revenues of €6.6 billion ($10.3 billion) in its last fiscal year
and a pretax profit of €106 million, the unit also makes minicomputers and servers.
The two companies have a 100-year history of working
together but management shakeups at Siemens and a sale of assets have led to a
closer look at the FSC unit. Analysts say that Fujitsu has a right of first
refusal on Siemens’ 50 percent stake in the venture. The unit could also be
sold to another PC maker, like Lenovo or Acer. Analysts estimate that a sale
would cost €2 to €3 billion.
HOW DO YOU SAY IT IN GOOGLE?
The world may be getting smaller but it is still a tower of Babel. Google is
working on a translation service that will include human intervention, reports French
tech site www.01net.com. There are a number
of automatic translation services on the Web. Google has long offered a “translate
this” button. But results are usually crude, giving viewers the gist of
messages rather than an accurate translation.
Google admits so in a FAQ on the translation service,
defining the machine translation as Google Translate and the human version as
Google Translation Service. While still undergoing tests, the service will
address 40 languages, covering 98 percent of the world’s Internet users,
according to Google. Translators will not be Google employees but will use
Google tools including the Translate service now available. Sounds like Google
is setting up a kind of exchange where translators and clients can negotiate on
terms. Anything to make the Web more
accessible.
NOT TOO GAUCHE TO BROWSE
While U.S. cities and telecom companies battle over free
Internet access, Paris has embraced and implemented municipal Wi-Fi. The
service was launched a year ago and is available in many city parks, gardens
and libraries. The city of Paris reported today that the city had a record
number of users of free Wi-Fi in May. Some 23,113 users connected to the
Internet using the city’s free service. Some 399 transmitters are located at 258
locations. This doesn’t include free Wi-Fi that is increasingly available in
bars, restaurants and other locations. So why is it that you almost never see
someone with a laptop open at one of the outdoor café? It must be considered gauche to Google.
ASIA U? NOT SO GOOD.
Asia is growing in importance as a new source of technology
innovation but its universities still get no respect. The latest ranking of the
world’s universities by Shanghai Jiaotong University ranks Asian universities
far below those in North America and Europe. The list, which uses such factors as
the number of Nobel Prize winners, highly-cited researchers and per capita
academic performance, gives eight of the top 10 spots to the U.S. and two to
the U.K. Harvard University is No.1,
followed by Stanford and UC- Berkeley. Oxford and Cambridge listed 4th and 10th
respectively, according to Singapore’s
Straits Times.
Tokyo University (picture) was the highest ranked Asian university at
No. 19. China’s Nanjing University was rated No. 223, two spots above Peking
University, usually considered China’s best. Taiwan’s National Taiwan
University was also rated higher at 159. Two universities in Hong Kong also won better ranks than those in China.