Eee PC with Windows launches in Japan, U.S. is nex

The Japanese launch is good news for potential U.S. buyers of the computer, a cross between an oversized Internet tablet and a notebook, because it means the U.S. version is coming very soon.

Asus originally promised we’d have the Windows version of the tiny Asus Eee PC in December. The Taiwan-based company now says we can expect it in late February or early March. Though the original date came and went, it certainly hasn’t stopped customers from ordering the Linux-based version: the company reportedly moved 350,000 units in the first quarter it was available.

Asus launched the first Windows version of its popular Eee PC in Japan on Thursday, according to a report in The Register.

The U.S. version of the Eee PC, pictured above, uses a Linux-based operating system. Next month we'll see the Windows XP version.

(Credit:
Erica Ogg/CNET News.com)

Called the Eee PC 4G-X, it will come pre-loaded with Windows XP Home Edition. It has the same specs as the original 4G model with Linux introduced last fall: 4GB of storage, Intel Celeron processor, 512MB of RAM, 802.11 b/g Wi-Fi, and more.

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Nortel shares sink after lackluster earnings

Shares of Nortel Networks sank as much as 17 percent on Friday after the company reported a wider second-quarter loss and warned that it faces challenges ahead.

The Canadian telecommunications equipment company posted a quarterly loss of $113 million, or 23 cents a share. That compares with a loss of $37 million, or 7 cents, a year ago. The results included $67 million in restructuring charges.

The company also warned that it faces increasing challenges amid concerns about the economy and lower spending by certain North American CDMA customers. But it asserted that revenue is expected to grow in the low single digits in 2008.

“In the second half, faced with a challenging business environment, we will continue our focus on execution and on delivering accelerated growth in key segments in order to achieve our financial objectives for the year,” CEO Mike Zafirovski said in a statement.

Meanwhile, Nortel’s competitors are facing hurdles of their own. Earlier this week, Alcatel-Lucent announced that CEO Patricia Russo and Chairman Serge Tchuruk are stepping down later this year as the company continues to struggle with losses and more competition from Asian suppliers.

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Kid Rock comes to Rhapsody

That changes today: you can now download the entire Rock and Roll Jesus album–and Kid Rock’s entire catalog if you’re so inclined–through the Rhapsody MP3 store. The albums are also available to Rhapsody subscribers. You still can’t buy the single on its own, as Kid Rock considers himself an album artist and wants you to hear the full package. And still no iTunes, as Apple frowns on album-only sales. It’ll be interesting to see if digital availability has any impact on sales, or whether fans keep preferring the CD.

Truck stop rocker Kid Rock has been one of the poster boys for the “ignore downloads” crowd.

Bawitdaba da bang a dang diggy diggy.

His latest album, Rock and Roll Jesus has not only sold more than 2 million albums, but has continued to sell lots of copies long past its release date–this week, nearly a year after release, it’s still at No. 7. That’s almost unprecedented in this day and age, when top-selling pop artists (think Mariah Carey) sell hundreds of thousands of albums in their first week then plummet off the charts. Why the staying power? Some argue it’s because the hit single from the album, All Summer Long (which is basically a reworking of Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Sweet Home Alabama”) hasn’t been available as a digital download on iTunes or anywhere else. If you want to own the song, the only way to get it has been to buy the full CD.

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NHL tries to break the ice online

The league has been streaming video for a while now, said Perry Cooper, the NHL’s senior vice president of direct and digital marketing. As it did last year, those that pay $159 a year ($169 after October 15) gain access to nearly all games, including the ability to watch up to four games at once.

“A lot of fans are displaced and don’t have regular or immediate access to their favorite team,” Cooper said. Not to mention all those hockey-crazed Canadians.

But the league reckons that many of the 20 million hockey fans in North America don’t live near their favorite teams. The league is hoping that improvements to its subscription video service will appeal to the diaspora.

(Credit:
National Hockey League)

The National Hockey League figures its teams do a pretty good job of connecting with the ice junkies in their own backyards.

“We’re working on that right now,” he said. “It’s a decision we are going to make soon.” Asked whether the league would work with all the major services or go exclusively with one, Cooper said that, too, is still being worked out. “There are advantages to both,” he said.

New this year, though, the league has moved to Flash-based video that it says more
Mac and PC users will be able to use, Cooper said. The league will also pick one game each day to offer with multiple camera angles, and offer added stats as well as the ability to play back games on demand.

“We have high hopes,” he said.

As for offering games for paid download, Cooper said to stay tuned.

Major League Baseball offers a streaming video service, MLB.tv, while the National Basketball Association offers online streaming as an added service for those that pay for its League Pass service on digital cable or satellite.

I tried to pin Cooper to the boards until he gave me some hard numbers on subscription projections, but was unable to get specifics.

Cooper rejected the idea that the new video service is destined to be a niche product. While hockey may not be as big as baseball or basketball in the U.S., hockey fans also lack the plentiful television options available to watch out-of-area games.

“It’s a common misconception among the marketplace, the media, and sports fans that hockey fans are something less than affluent,” Cooper said. “It’s the complete opposite,” he added, saying that hockey fans are more likely than other enthusiasts to have things like digital video recorders and broadband connections.

Among the new features that the NHL is adding to its video streaming service are added stats and a play-by-play "ice tracker."

And the idea that hockey fans maybe aren’t the most tech-savvy bunch? Also bunk, Cooper assured me. (I actually didn’t need all that much convincing, being both a hockey fan and well, reasonably tech savvy.)

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Knol and void The day I became a published Google

I just wrote a knol, a Web article akin to an encyclopedia entry, using Google’s new Knol publishing platform launched publicly on Wednesday.

This New Yorker cartoon, while it was appropriate to the subject matter, was removed when I learned I couldn't control where it appeared on the page.

(Credit:
The New Yorker)

I’m an expert on pit bulls! Really.

The difference is that while anyone can edit a Wikipedia entry, which can lead to pages and pages of edits and contradictory revisions and accusations of bias, knols have an author’s name attached. A knol author is responsible for the content and can choose to allow others to edit it, or filter suggested edits or even block public editing entirely.

With Knol, Google is encouraging people to create more authoritative content that can be indexed by its search engine and monetized with ads. Unlike blogs, which tend to be casual and opinionated in tone, knols are supposed to be fact-based, informative, and well-sourced articles on a specific subject.

It also took a few hours for the system to index my knol so it could be searched via the main Knol page and even then, it only initially showed up when I searched by subject (pit bulls) but not by author name. By the next morning, I could search also by author name. The knol has yet to show up on the Google search page using both subject and author.

It will be interesting to see how the Marsden-Wales fracas plays out on Knol. Google’s response didn’t give me any confidence that the system won’t be widely abused. And it’s likely that people who disagree with my knol will create one of their own with contradictory conclusions.

I’ve deemed myself an expert on pit bulls by writing the knol. We’ll see if the reader reviews and ratings suggest otherwise.

Adding a New Yorker cartoon was simple. I was directed to the online New Yorker Store where I searched for cartoons dealing with pit bulls and found one. But when I added it into the blog it automatically inserted it at the top of the text and above the other image I had chosen. It didn’t look right, so I removed it. If I had had the ability to determine where on the page the cartoon should go, I would have used it closer to the bottom of the page.

In an interview on Wednesday, Knol Product Manager Cedric Dupont said Google won’t be determining the legitimacy of knols or verifying the authority of their creators. “We are not editors in any way,” he said.

But what if I wanted to write something inaccurate or defamatory? Already that question has been put to the test with a knol written by Rachel Marsden, the ex-girlfriend of Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales.

A Google spokeswoman said it takes time for the company to index new knols, but didn’t say how long.

Her knol is titled “Jimmy Wales (Jimbo Wales)” and the summary describes Wikipedia as an “online libel board,” that “any loser can use to smear people who are more successful than them.”

“We think we make it very easy for the user to determine the trustworthiness of the content.”

Google is dismissing the notion that Knol is its Wikipedia killer, but both operate under the premise that Web users can collectively create a knowledge base that can be searchable and vast.

After some digging around I figured out how to add advertisements through Google’s AdSense program, but I won’t see any on the page for awhile (it can take up to two weeks, the system said).

I decided to try Knol out. First I had to figure out a subject I felt I knew enough about. I walk dogs as a volunteer at the local animal shelter where there happen to be a lot of pit bulls. I’ve learned a lot about the dogs and have become disturbed by the amount of misinformation that circulates about them. So I did some research and wrote a knol titled “The pitfalls of stereotyping pit bulls.”

The hardest part was the research. But given that I do that every day for my job, it wasn’t all that tough. I wrote the item in Microsoft Word and then cut and pasted it into the Knol page. It was easy to use the editing tools and add images. However, I think the page looks rather simple and dull. The system lacks the ability to add background colors and other stylistic flourishes that give blogs that individualistic panache.

I felt an odd sense of power, and responsibility, creating my knol. It gives me the ability to publish anything I want, without having to run it past an editor like I do at CNET News. And once it is published, it is a permanent record and has an air of legitimacy that editorializing and gossipy blogs don’t have. It’s a Google knol–”a unit of knowledge” as the Web site describes it, lending it at least the illusion of propriety.

Once I published the knol using the default “moderated collaboration mode,” a colleague logged into his Google account and suggested an edit to my knol. I, in turn, rejected that edit (it’s irrelevant that ex-Atlanta Falcons player Michael Vick, who I mention in the knol in reference to his dog fighting charges, wasn’t that great of a quarterback). The system didn’t notify my colleague that I snubbed his edit; he had to go to the page and keep checking the site for himself. It would be nice if the system were to notify people of the status of their suggested edits. Later, I found out that when an edit is accepted, the person who suggested it will be listed as a contributor in the contributor’s list on the page.

My colleague, Tom Krazit, suggested an edit to my knol, which I subsequently rejected.

The author's knol on pit bulls.

I asked the Google spokeswoman about this situation and her response was: “Knol will be subject to our general content policies and terms of service, and knol content will be treated under those policies like any other user-generated content for which we provide a distribution platform. In particular, we will provide community flagging tools and the usual legal notification processes, so that we can comply with applicable laws and regulations. In addition, because knols are attached to verified author names, we think that the structure of Knol will actually provide something of a disincentive to defamatory or other harmful content.”

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Apple pushes Safari on Windows via iTunes updater

(Credit:
Apple)

Apple has started offering Windows users its
Safari 3.1 Web browser through the same online updater it utilizes for iTunes and the QuickTime video player.

“Safari for Windows is the fastest and easiest-to-use web browser for the PC. It displays web pages faster than any other browser and is filled with innovative features — all delivered in an efficient and elegant user interface,” states Apple’s message in the pop-up screen.

In February, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer had a 74.9 percent share of the browser market in terms of usage, while
Firefox had 17.3 percent, and Safari had 5.7 percent, according to figures from Net Applications, which measures Web traffic and market share.

With the release of Safari 3.1 on Tuesday, Apple started giving Windows users the option of downloading Safari via the Apple Software Update pop-up.

“Jobs said that Apple plans to use iTunes as a distribution vehicle for Safari for Windows. He noted that there are a million downloads of iTunes a day, with 500 million of those going to Windows machines.”

Care for some Safari with your iTunes?

The move is a more aggressive play by Apple to snatch browser market share from Microsoft.

Mary Jo Foley at ZDNet notes that when Apple CEO Steve Jobs first unveiled Safari for Windows last June, he said that the main way Apple planned to get Safari on Windows is through its Software Update program.

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Powerset brings the Semantic Web to Wikipedia

Factz can be expanded to display more of the extracted verbs and their associated words and concepts.

The company calls it a first step in changing the way users search and consume Web content. “It’s a complete shift. You see this and you want to experience all content in this way,” Barney Pell, co-founder and CTO of Powerset, told me. “And, as an introduction, it will drive huge investment in semantic and linguistic technology, just as investments were made in information retrieval and scalable databases in the past. People working in this space will be very marketable.”

Powerset’s natural language search technology is based on patents licensed exclusively from PARC and its own proprietary indexing. Powerset’s engine has read 2.5 million Wikipedia pages and extracted “meaning” from the sentences, creating a navigation and semantic layer on top of the popular Web encyclopedia. Following is a pictorial tour of Powerset features:

Powerset’s Wikipedia search engine isn’t going to slow down the Google in the near term, but it will raise the bar on the search experience for all players. “There are implications beyond Wikipedia,” Pell said. ” Search is not done. You can see the emerging Semantic Web with our integration of Wikipedia and Freebase. We will add other components with structured data and ways to answers questions.”

Amid speculation that Microsoft is looking to make an acquisition, Powerset launched a public beta of its Wikipedia search engine. It brings a new, rich semantic dimension via natural language query processing to Wikipedia that greatly improves the search and reading experience.

Users can enter keywords, phrases, or simple questions in Powerset’s search box. Like many Web startups, Powerset is currently free of advertising.

Powerset has also indexed Freebase, Metaweb’s evolving, open database of structured information. The search result page presents Factz, a summary of key information extracted from Wikipedia pages.

Powerset also shows a tag cloud of things and actions found by its linguistic analysis engine on the page. Clicking on a word shows related Factz in the outline.

Powerset creates a summary of information, or Dossier, on the right side of the page with Freebase and Wikipedia to give users a quick outline view about a topic. Clicking on an item takes the user to the location in the article and highlights the reference.

Powerset generates a summary of the key Factz to create a kind of Cliff’s Notes version of Wikipedia article. Clicking on a summary item takes the user to the reference location in the article and highlights the key words. Powerset also includes a page for disambiguation of queries.

Powerset can provide direct answers to queries from its Wikipedia and Freebase index, and highlight the most relevant search results based on the meaning of the query. Hakia, another semantic search engine, as well as Google can also surface the date Picasso was born at the top of their results pages.

Powerset has said that the longer term plan is to read, linguistically analyze and index 20 billion documents on the Web, which will be a costly and ambitious undertaking. (Getting acquired by Microsoft would be helpful for that project. Powerset has received $12.5 million in Series A funding from Foundation Capital, Founders Fund, and angel investors in 2006.)

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Formula One design vet creating eco-smart city car

The Smart Car is already cruising European and American streets. And Think Global from Norway intends to market its all-electric city car, called the Think City, in Europe and the United States next year.

Compared even with existing compact cars, the T.25 will be small: it can be parked headlong against the curb, allowing three cars to fit in one parking space.

Designer Gordon Murray, best known for his work on Formula One racing
cars, detailed on Monday a new city car design called the T.25 that is aimed at reducing congestion and lowering pollution.

Compact cars are already more popular in Europe and Asia than in the U.S. Automakers have helped create demand for SUVs and trucks as passenger cars. But with rising fuel prices and growing environmental awareness, city cars appear to be staging a comeback.

No more driving around the block to wait for a space. Three T.25's fit in the space for one car.

The planned T.25 in green compared with (going left to right) a VW Golf, a Fiat 500, a Smart Car, and a Mini Cooper.

To lower the car’s carbon footprint, the company has rethought the cradle-to-grave lifecycle of the car. For example, many of the parts, including the capacity and body, can be recycled and the manufacturing process is being set up with a minimal number of parts to reduce energy use during fabrication.

(Credit:
Gordon Murray Design)

The styles from Europe this year are decidedly green and small.

Gordon Murray Design is about halfway through its two-year planning process and plans to have a prototype on the road early next year.

The company intends to work with outside manufacturers to lower the cost and sell the car to city dwellers in Asia and Europe for between $10,000 and $11,000, it told Greentech Media.

Overall, the car should have low or zero emissions, the company says.

The first versions of the car will run on either gas or diesel and get about 60 miles per gallon, the company told Greentech Media.

(Credit:
Gordon Murray Design)

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Tech layoffs The scorecard

If you want a real-time view into the world of layoffs, use this Twitter search. But we recommend having a stiff drink first.

Know of a layoff not listed here? Let us know on this form or e-mail us.

Company
Date
How many
Further reading MySpace
06/16/2009
30 percent
MySpace slashes head count by 30 percent
Seagate Technology
05/13/2009
1,100 (2.5 percent)
Seagate lays off 1,100 employees
Microsoft
05/05/2009
3,000
Microsoft sends 2nd wave of layoff notices
Hutchinson Technology
04/28/2009
2,000 in total (44 percent)
Hutchinson Tech to cut more jobs
Freescale Semiconductor
04/23/2009
900
Freescale to cut 900 jobs
Yahoo
04/21/2009
675 (5 percent)
Yahoo plans layoff after profit plunges
Toshiba
04/17/2009
3,900 More job cuts at Toshiba
IDC
04/17/2009
82 (5 percent)
Analysis firm IDC cuts 5 percent of staff
Sony Ericsson
04/17/2009
2,000
Sony Ericsson to lay off 2,000 more workers
Wired.com
04/02/2009
3 (12 percent)
Wired.com lays off 12 percent of staff
Agilent Technologies
03/27/2009
2,700
Agilent laying off 2,700
Google
03/26/2009
200
Google cuts nearly 200 sales, marketing jobs
IBM
03/26/2009
5,000
IBM job cuts hit applications services unit, says union
OptiSolar
03/23/2009
200
OptiSolar closes plant
Energy Conversion Devices
03/17/2009
70
Solar stocks go red as gear maker warns
Nokia
03/17/2009
1,700
Nokia job cuts become reality
Spot Runner
03/14/2009
60
Spot Runner…another 60 to lose jobs
National Semiconductor
03/11/2009
1,725 (25 percent)
National Semi to cut a fourth of workforce
Dell
03/11/2009
unknown
Layoffs to hit another Dell plant
RIAA
02/26/2009
Up to 25
Sources: RIAA cuts up to 25 jobs
Enfatico
02/25/2009
80 (8 percent)
Dell ad agency Enfatico lays off workers
Nortel Networks
02/25/2009
3,200
Nortel cuts another 3,200 jobs
Spansion
02/23/2009
3,000 (35 percent)
Spansion cuts 3,000 employees
Micron Technology
02/23/2009
Up to 2,000
Micron to cut up to 2,000 more jobs
Google
02/12/2009
40
Google scraps radio ads
Pioneer
02/12/2009
10,000
Pioneer leaving the TV business
Nokia
02/11/2009
410; 500-700 rotating
Nokia cuts production, closes facility
Forrester
02/09/2009
50 (5 percent)
Forrester to lay off 5 percent
MPAA
02/05/2009
unknown
Source: ‘Significant’ layoffs at MPAA
Cisco Systems
02/04/2009
Up to 2,000
Cisco: Making lemonade from economic lemons
Panasonic
02/04/2009
15,000
Panasonic to cut 15,000 jobs
Electronic Arts
02/03/2009
1,100 (11 percent)
EA cutting 1,100 jobs
NEC
01/30/2009
20,000 (13 percent)
NEC to cut workforce by 20,000
Novell
01/30/2009
100 (3 percent)
Novell lays off just under 100 workers
Teradyne
01/30/2009
532
Boston.com: Teradyne will shed 532 jobs
Citrix Systems
01/30/2009
490 (10 percent)
Citrix to reduce staff by 10 percent
STMicroelectronics
01/28/2009
4,500
STMicro reports loss, lays off 4,500
AOL
01/28/2009
700
AOL to lay off 700 employees
SAP
01/28/2009
3,000
SAP plans job cuts, despite solid earnings
News Corp.
01/26/2009
100
News Corp. lays off 5 percent at digital unit
Texas Instruments
01/26/2009
12 percent
Texas Instruments cutting jobs as profits plunge
Sprint Nextel
01/26/2009
8,000
Sprint Nextel to cut 8,000 jobs
Philips
01/26/2009
6,000
Philips to cut 6,000 jobs
IBM
01/24/2009
More than 2,800
IBM quietly lays off North American staff
Microsoft
01/22/2009
5,000
Microsoft cutting 5,000 jobs on weak results
Ericsson
01/21/2009
5,000 (6 percent)
Ericsson to cut 5,000 jobs
Logitech
01/19/2009
550 to 600
Logitech to cut up to 600 jobs
AMD
01/16/2009
1,100 (9 percent)
AMD to trim 1,100 jobs, initiate temporary pay cuts
Autodesk
01/15/2009
750 (10 percent)
Autodesk to cut 750 jobs, lowers earnings outlook
Cymer
01/15/2009
100 (10 percent)
AP: Cymer to cut jobs, spending as demand plummets
Motorola
01/14/2009
4,000 (6 percent)
Motorola plans another round of layoffs
Plantronics
01/14/2009
18 percent
Plantronics to layoff 18% of global workforce
PlanetOut
01/14/2009
50 percent
Sources: Heavy layoffs at PlanetOut
Google
01/14/2009
100
Google lays off 100 recruiters
Oracle
01/14/2009
500
Report: Oracle cuts workforce by 500
GreenFuel Technologies
01/13/2009
19 (50 percent)
Algae front-runner GreenFuel slashes staff
Lexmark
01/13/2009
375
Bloomberg: Lexmark sales miss forecast; 375 job cuts planned
Seagate
01/12/2009
800 (10 percent)
Seagate replaces Watkins as CEO
Dell
01/08/2009
1,900
Dell’s Ireland plant to shed 1,900 jobs
Lenovo
01/08/2009
2,500 (11 percent)
Lenovo to cut 2,500 jobs amid restructuring
One Laptop Per Child
01/07/2009
32 (50 percent)
OLPC slashes workforce in half, cuts salaries
Motion Computing
01/07/2009
30 (25 percent)
Motion Computing cuts about 30 workers
EMC
01/07/2009
2,400 (7 percent)
EMC to cut 2,400 from workforce
Turning Technologies
01/07/2009
31
Vindy.com: Turning Tech layoff hits 31
Borland Software
01/06/2009
130 (15 percent)
VMware hires away Borland CEO
HelioVolt
01/06/2009
15
Two Austin employers announce job cuts
LiveJournal
01/06/2009
About 12
LiveJournal deletes ‘about a dozen’ jobs
Logitech
01/06/2009
15 percent of salaried staff worldwide
Logitech to slash 15 percent of workforce
Lenovo
01/05/2009
200 staff in Beijing offices
Lenovo rumored readying layoffs
Microsoft
01/01/2009
Unknown
Microsoft planning big layoffs for January?
AMD
12/28/2008
100 additional, making 600 total since November
AMD cites $70 million in fourth-quarter costs
Unisys
12/22/2008
1,300; 4 percent
Reuters: Unisys slashes 1,300 jobs
Western Digital
12/17/2008
2,500; 5 percent
Reuters: Western Digital warns on revenue, will cut jobs
Midway Games
12/16/2008
180; 25 percent
Reuters: Midway Games to cut jobs, take charge
Laird
12/16/2008
5,000; nearly 50 percent
Reuters: Laird announces 5,000 job losses as sales slump
WebMD
12/16/2008
4 percent to 5 percent
PaidContent: WebMD to cut up to 5% of staff
Gaia Interactive
12/15/2008
13 percent
VentureWire: Gaia lays off staff
Alcatel-Lucent
12/12/2008
1,000 managers, 5,000 contractors
Big revamp for Alcatel-Lucent, with Web 2.0 spin
CBS Interactive
12/11/2008
Undisclosed
All Things D: CBS Interactive/CNET Re-Org: The Complete Memo
SGI
12/11/2008
225; 15 percent
Silicon Graphics adjusts business plan
Yahoo
12/10/2008
1,520
Yahoo pink slips issued, recruiters circling above
Sony
12/09/2008
16,000 total
Sony to lay off 8,000 full-timers, 8,000 others
Netflix
12/08/2008
50 people
Neflix cuts 50 tech jobs; streaming issues linger
Level 3 Communications
12/08/2008
450; 8 percent
Denver Business Journal: Level 3 cutting 450 jobs
BMC Software
12/05/2008
350 (6 percent)
AP: BMC Software to cut 350 jobs, 6% of workforce
RealNetworks
12/04/2008
130 (7 percent)
Sources: Layoffs hit RealNetworks
Viacom
12/04/2008
850 (7 percent)
Viacom lays off 7 percent of workforce
AT&T
12/04/2008
12,000 (4 percent)
AT&T lays off 12,000
Adobe
12/03/2008
600
Adobe warns of shortfall, job cuts
Carlyle Group
12/03/2008
about 100 (10 percent)
Bloomberg: Carlyle Cuts 10% of Workers, Including U.S. LBO Jobs
Analog Devices
12/03/2008
about 20
EE Times: Analog Devices shutters DSP design center Sage North America
12/03/2008
150
Sage North America Reports 2008 Results
Gawker Media
12/02/2008
“a few”
Gawker Media’s rolling layoffs continue
Intrinsyc
12/01/2008
95 (30 percent)
680 News: Intrinsyc cuts global workforce 30 percent
Fring
11/27/2008
10 (20 percent)
Fring cuts staff by 20 percent
Technorati
11/25/2008
6 (12 percent)
Technorati trims workforce, cuts pay
TiVo
11/25/2008
7 percent
TiVo profits from EchoStar litigation
Palm
11/21/2008
up to 10 percent of 1,050
Palm orders layoffs as Apple and RIM take toll
Buzznet
11/21/2008
10 (11 percent)
Valleywag: Music community Buzznet lays off 10
LodgeNet
11/21/2008
170
Argus Leader: LodgeNet cutting jobs
Lam Research
11/20/2008
600 (15 percent)
Reuters: Chipmaker Lam Research cuts 600 jobs
Akamai
11/20/2008
7 percent
Akamai to cut 7 percent of workforce
Lawson Software
11/19/2008
200 (5 percent)
AP: Lawson Software shares tumble after job cuts
Pillar Data Systems
11/18/2008
150 (30 percent)
SJ Mercury News: Pillar Data Systems lays off 30% of staff KLA-Tencor
11/18/2008
900 (15 percent)
SF Business Times: KLA-Tencor to cut 15% of people Sun Microsystems
11/14/2008
6,000 (15 percent to 18 percent)
Sun restructures, lays off up to 6,000 Rearden Commerce
11/14/2008
10 percent
Valleywag: Rearden Commerce cuts 50 people Applied Materials
11/12/2008
1,800 (12 percent)
Applied Materials cutting 12 percent of workforce National Semi
11/12/2008
330
Reuters: Nat Semi cuts revenue view, plans job cuts Wired.com
11/11/2008
3 of 28
Wired.com trims editorial staff by 10 percent Current Media
11/11/2008
20 percent
Layoffs hit Al Gore’s Current Media Six Apart
11/11/2008
8 percent
Six Apart: Changes at Six Apart Tucows
11/11/2008
15 percent
Restructuring at Tucows Circuit City
11/10/2008
20 percent
Circuit City files for bankruptcy BitTorrent
11/10/2008
50 percent
After a tough year, BitTorrent replaces CEO again Insight
11/10/2008
240 (4 percent)
East Valley Tribune: Insight Enterprises lays off 240 Honeywell
11/07/2008
700
Phoenix Business Journal: Honeywell moving 700 jobs out of Phoenix Zappos
11/06/2008
8 percent
Letter to Zappos employees Veoh
11/05/2008
20 (20 percent)
Veoh lays off 20 percent of workforce LinkedIn
11/05/2008
36 (10 percent)
LinkedIn slashes 10 percent of its workforce Cadence
11/05/2008
625 (12 percent)
Cadence Design cuts 625 jobs Anadigics
11/05/2008
100 (15 percent)
Anadigics cuts 15 percent of workforce AMD
11/05/2008
500 (3 percent)
AMD slashes 500 more jobs Nokia
11/04/2008
600
Hundreds of Nokia jobs under threat THQ
11/03/2008
4 to 5 studios
Kotaku: THQ Shuttering Four to Five Studios? Tektronix
11/03/2008
150
Tektronix announces fresh layoffs Spot Runner
11/03/2008
115 (about 30 percent)
TechCrunch: 115 people lose their jobs at Spot Runner Nortel Networks
11/03/2008
1,300 (5 percent)
Nortel earnings tank YouSendIt
10/31/2008
20 percent
VentureBeat: YouSendIt trims 20 percent of staff Aliph
10/31/2008
25 people
Layoffs hit Bluetooth headset maker Aliph Motorola
10/30/2008
3,000
Motorola’s struggle for survival Freescale
10/30/2008
2,400 (10 percent)
Freescale dragged to loss; will lay off 10% Symantec
10/29/2008
4.5 percent cost savings
Symantec layoffs coming Avalanche Studios
10/28/2008
77 of 160
Avalanche Studios lays off nearly half of staff Revision3
10/27/2008
9 people, 5 shows
Video start-up Revision3 joins the layoff club Helium
10/27/2008
30 percent of 110
F***dStartups: Helium.com huge layoff BroadSoft
10/24/2008
about 12
GigaOM: BroadSoft cuts jobs as sales slow Comcast Spotlight
10/24/2008
300+ of 3,500
Broadcasting & Cable: Comcast Spotlight cuts positions ADC Telecoms
10/23/2008
300-350
AP: ADC expects fiscal 2008 loss, plans job cuts Xerox
10/23/2008
3,000 Xerox to cut 3,000 jobs Avid Technology
10/23/2008
500
Form 8-K: Results of Operations and Financial Condition… Nokia
11/04/2008
600
Hundreds of Nokia jobs under threat Tektronix
11/03/2008
150
Tektronix announces fresh layoffs Spot Runner
11/03/2008
115 (about 30 percent)
TechCrunch: 115 people lose their jobs at Spot Ru Circuit City
11/03/2008
17 percent
Circuit City to close 155 stores THQ
11/03/2008
4-5 studios Kotaku: THQ Shuttering Four to Five Studios? Break.com
10/23/2008
11 of 80
Break.com lays off 11 Eons
10/23/2008
8 of about 33
The Boston Globe: Eons eliminates eight jobs Dell
10/22/2008
8,900
The Register: Dell: ‘We will out-pace the rest of the industry’ SanDisk
10/22/2008
TBA
SanDisk layoffs in the works ManiaTV
10/22/2008
20 of 70
NewTeeVee: ManiaTV lays off 20, to reduce orig iMeem
10/22/2008
25 percent of 80
Imeem jumping on the layoff bandwagon Mahalo
10/22/2008
10 percent
Calacanis.com: Tough times, hard decisions HP
10/22/2008
24,600 over three years
HP to slash 24,600 jobs following EDS buy Ticketmaster
10/21/2008
35 percent
F***edStartups: TicketMaster.com laying off 35% Comcast
10/21/2008
300
AP: Comcast to cut up to 300 jobs in eastern di Manhattan Associates
10/21/2008
6.5 percent
Reuters: Manhattan Associates hit by slump Softchoice
10/20/2008
6.5 percent of 958
Toronto Star: Softchoice cuts staff by 6.5 percent Veoh
10/20/2008
0
UPDATE: Layoffs at Veoh, or not? Wikia
10/20/2008
3
UPDATE based on personal interview with Jimmy Wales Autotrader
10/20/2008
69
Orlando Business Times: Autotrader to close c Texas Instruments
10/20/2008
possibly 300
TXCN: Hundreds face pink slips at TI Sony Ericsson
10/17/2008
2,000 globally
Bloomberg: Sony Ericsson Reports Smaller Loss Than Anticipated Sprint
10/17/2008
ongoing
KMBC-TV: Sprint plans ‘gradual layoffs’ Jaxtr
10/17/2008
13
13 employees laid off at VoIP start-up Jaxtr Zivity
10/17/2008
33 percent
Zivity lays off a third of staff Zillow
10/17/2008
25 percent
Zillow lays off 25 percent of staff SearchMe
10/17/2008
20 percent
Search engine startup SearchMe cuts 20 perce Heavy
10/17/2008
14 percent
Downturn strikes again: Heavy lays off 14% Lenovo
10/17/2008
50 in Morrisville, N.C.
WRAL: Lenovo to lay off 50 workers at Morrisville headq MPC Computers
10/17/2008
200
Idaho Business Review: Details released on MP Hi5
10/16/2008
10 percent to 15 percent
No Hi5′s today Sirius XM
10/16/2008
50
Sirius XM makes cuts to XM in D.C. Pandora
10/16/2008
20
Pandora cuts 20 employees Adbrite
10/16/2008
40 percent
‘Layoffs are not a statement about performance’ Actel
10/16/2008
10 percent
EE Times: Actel cuts 10% of workforce Tesla Motors
10/15/2008
Detroit office
Automaker lays off Detroit office with blog post SkyRider
10/15/2008
All
P2P start-up SkyRider has shut down Appcelerator
10/15/2008
6
Tough times, tough decisions Jive Software
10/14/2008
33 percent
Jive Software lays off 1/3 of staff Redfin
10/14/2008
20 percent
Redfin blames economy in layoffs Qimonda
10/13/2008
3,000
Qimonda: Qimonda announces global restructuring program… Seesmic
10/10/2008
7
Tough times. Tough decisions Lulu
10/09/2008
24
Lulu cuts jobs as revenues slow Micron
10/09/2008
15 percent
Micron to cut workforce by 15 percent, slash flash output eBay
10/06/2008
1,000
eBay buys Bill Me Later, lays off 1,000 Gawker Media
10/03/2008
14 percent
Gawker Media to lay off 14 percent of editorial Entellium
10/03/2008
95 percent
Workers get ax at software maker Entellium

With the overall economy slumping, the tech industry is taking its fair share of hits. We’ll keep updating the chart below as news of company changes comes in. See our complete coverage of how the tech sector is faring here: Tracking the tech downturn.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

A few angry men demand action from Dell

Is there a problem here?

(Credit:
CNET)

“Since the 630i’s release, some serious concerns have developed regarding the operation of the model. Issues concern the lack of the LightFX 2.0 feature (advertised but not delivered–and now slowly being removed from Dell’s advertisements and promo materials), problems with LED lights and system fans acting erratic (sometimes getting stuck at ear-piercing 100% speed).” – David Bowles, via e-mail.

“Dell advertised something called LightFX 2.0 with the XPS 630. Not one system shipped with this feature. Second, ESA, which was so highly touted with the XPS 630, is not completely compatible with the system. When one tries to adjust the speed of the front two fans via the nVidia Control Panel, one of two things happens. Either no speed adjustment is made or the fans spin up to 100% and cannot be slowed. Lastly, the HDD light on the front of the case flashes in a strobelike way unless autoplay is turned off in the OS.” – Ray Mitisi, via e-mail

“I was wondering if you would consider revisiting your very informative review of the Dell XPS 630i. The reason I ask is I posted a request for the same on PCPRO, and after a little research they decided to remove the recommended award they had given the system due to so many issues the owners were experiencing.” – Pete Smart, via email.

Developing. We’re asking Dell for a status report. We sent our review unit back a while ago, otherwise we’d try this stuff out ourselves. The folks having these issues have organized, and you can check up with them at the forum on My630i.com.

Posted in tamom.com | Leave a comment