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April 7th, 2010 by Steve

Daily News 07/04

BBC – Super-fast broadband tax scrapped

The broadband tax has been scrapped in the last-minute scramble to rush key legislation through before Parliament is dissolved next week.

IT PRO – Orange and T-Mobile merger finalised
It may have divided opinion in the telecoms industry but the merger between T-Mobile and Orange has been officially completed.

The Register – AOL to sell or shutter Bebo

It’s uncertain whether Bebo will or will not survive into June, but one thing is certain: the declining social-networking website will no longer be under AOL’s wing.

Computerworld UK – Apple set to reveal iPhone OS update

Apple will preview the next generation iPhone operating system, just a few days after the launch of the iPad tablet, which also runs on the OS. The company has sent out invitations for an event that will provide a “sneak peek of the next generation of iPhone OS software.” The event will be at Apple headquarters in Cupertino, California.

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July 28th, 2009 by Speed Budapest (Matt)

The Linux card: a new Web 2.0 revenue stream?

The Linux Foundation has today launched a branded credit card to help fund ongoing developments and marketing of the open-source operating system.

It is hoped that thousands of Linux fans and developers will sign up, and secure the organisation $50 per card, in addition to an ongoing contribution.

While it’s not unusual for charities, such as the RSPCA, to offer credit cards, this is the first time that I have heard of an organisation like Linux seeking funding in this way. It seems like quite a good idea, and one that could be easily replicated by other not-for-profit organisations such as WordPress or Wikipedia. Perhaps even presidential candidates in the US might start offering branded credit cards to help raise funding for their campaigns?

Would you sign up for an Obama credit card?

July 8th, 2009 by Chris Measures

Chrome OS – will consumers join the Cloud?

With the dust settling on Google’s announcement of its first PC operating system there are two main areas that stand out.

Firstly, it is not the threat to Microsoft that commentators are trumpeting – Google is targeting the netbook market with Chrome OS. While this is growing (21 million units this year according to Gartner) it is less than 10 per cent of the estimated 278 million PCs sold. And a large chunk of netbooks already use Linux, around which Chrome is based. So there’s a fair dose of hype in the ‘this drops a bomb on Windows’ comments.

The interesting thing behind Chrome is how it aims to bring Linux and cloud computing into the mainstream. Consumers generally haven’t got involved with Linux (even Firefox has only 20 per cent of the browser market) and if Chrome is to succeed it’ll need to change that. As a lean, web-based OS it’ll also need to convince people that the Cloud is the best place to store their data and applications. These are the challenges Google has to overcome – time to focus its PR on consumers if Chrome is to take off.
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