Archive for May, 2010

Download Office 2007 Ultimate for $59.95

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

Find more deals, coupon codes, and bargains on CNET’s Shopper.com.

(Credit:
Microsoft)

Microsoft’s “Ultimate Steal” deal is for currently enrolled students who have an e-mail address ending in “.edu” or who attend one of several dozen approved institutions. (Mouse over the “Am I Eligible” link for more details.)

Interestingly, each student can purchase up to four licenses, so anyone with an entrepreneurial spirit can…well, I’ve said too much.

Assuming that you qualify, this is a pretty incredible deal. In addition to Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook, Office Ultimate comes with OneNote, Access, Publisher, Groove, and other goodies.

Of course, some would argue that most students (and other users) can get everything they need from OpenOffice 3.0, a full-featured office suite that costs nada. Let me know if you’re in that camp, or if you think Microsoft’s offer is too good to pass up.

Believe it or not, you can score a legal and totally legitimate copy of Office 2007 Ultimate for just $59.95. What’s the catch? You need to shanghai a college student (or, you know, be one).

There’s one other small catch: Your 60 bucks buys you the download version of the suite. If you want discs (which I highly recommend), it’ll cost you another $13. Still a steal.

Here's your chance to score Office Ultimate 2007 for the unheard-of price of $60.

The list price for
Microsoft Office 2007 Ultimate is a whopping $679.95. The upgrade price? An equally whopping $539.99. For that kind of money, it better come with Megan Fox’s phone number.

Webware Radar Google Checkout stalls as Bill Me L

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Rosetta also found that 37 percent of the top 100 major retailers on the Web employ alternative payment options like those offered from PayPal and Bill Me Later, but just 7 percent of those retailers offer all three services.

Marketing agency Rosetta released a study Thursday that found Bill Me Later and PayPal are the most popular alternative payment options on the Web, capturing 26 percent and 25 percent market share, respectively. Google Checkout increased its share by just 1 percent in 2008 commanding just 11 percent of the market.

Enterprise microblogging service Yammer will announce a hosted version of its software Thursday that can be installed inside a corporate firewall, TechCrunch is reporting. Yammer customers will be able to switch from the SaaS version of the software to the hosted service and it plans to transfer network information between both iterations, the report claims. Yammer plans to charge $12 per seat per year.

Mixx, a Digg-like service “for the mainstream,” launched a new homepage Thursday called YourMixx and will allow users to decide whether they want the company’s new page to be their start page or their individual notifications page. The company also announced that users who write polls that are selected for publication on the site will be rewarded with “Karma and props.” The Mixx user who has the most polls published will be given a Pollster badge to add to their profile page.

iPhone developer Smule announced Thursday that it has secured $3.9 million of funding in a round that was led by Granite Ventures. According to the company, its apps have been downloaded by more than 1 million users and due to that success, it was able to raise the capital. It plans to use its funding to further invest in apps for the
iPhone and other mobile devices.

Sony Ericsson unveils new strategy

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

But it’s difficult to say if this “new” strategy will help the company much. The one bright spot in the mobile phone landscape for the next couple years appears to be smartphones. Market research firm IDC recently reported that while overall cell phone sales declined by 12.6 percent worldwide in the fourth quarter, sales of smartphones were actually up 22.5 percent.

On Sunday evening here on the eve of GSMA’s Mobile World Congress, the cell phone maker, which is a joint venture between consumer electronics maker Sony and telecom equipment maker Ericsson, unveiled a new strategy that it says fuses “communication and entertainment.”

Steve Walker, head of product marketing for Sony Ericsson, and Lennard Hoornik head of global marketing for Sony Ericsson show off the Idou phone at the company's press conference at Mobile World Congress.

(Credit:
Marguerite Reardon CNET News/CBS Interactive)

BARCELONA–Sony Ericsson has been hit hard by the global recession, but the company says it has a new strategy focused on services and entertainment that it hopes will get it back on track.

The details are still too scarce to know exactly how this will shake out. But Sony Ericsson needs a compelling and affordable smartphone that can take advantage of these entertainment and communication features. And to effectively compete in this market, it’s going to need to expand its distribution beyond Europe and Japan. Namely, it needs to bring an affordable and cool smartphone to North American consumers.

What’s interesting about this supposedly new strategy for the company is that it doesn’t sound terribly new. Sony Ericsson was formed in 2001 as a joint venture between a media company and telecommunications equipment maker. And since 2005, it has been selling its Sony Walkman phones, which allow people to listen to digital music on the go.

The problem that Sony Ericsson faces is that it’s not competing very well in the smartphone category. Last year at Mobile World Congress, the company made a lot of buzz with its first Windows Mobile device, the Xperia X1. As of November, the phone has been available in North America.

While Sony Ericsson’s strategy may not be revolutionary, adding more value to its products is likely a necessary move. The entire cell phone market took a beating in the second half of the year, as consumers bought fewer cell phones due to economic concerns. And that trend is expected to continue until the market starts to pick up.

As part of this strategy, the company announced MediaGo, which is an extension of its PlayNow Music service. MediaGo adds a service that lets users download movies onto their PC and then transfer them over to a Sony Ericsson device. The company announced the W995 Walkman phone, which will be able play the feature-length movies.

But now the company claims that its “Entertainment Unlimited” strategy takes things to a new level, where consumers can share and access media across multiple products from cell phones to PCs to their TV screens.

The company also gave a sneak peek at a new high-end, touch-screen phone, called the Idou. This 12.1-megapixel camera phone is supposedly designed for all kinds of multimedia functionality. But details about the product are scarce until it launches in the second half of next year.

Given that the smartphone market is where all the action is expected to be over in the next couple of years, it’s surprising that Sony Ericsson would choose high-end feature phones to anchor its new “Unlimited Entertainment” strategy.

(Credit:
Marguerite Reardon CNET News/CBS Interactive)

That said, executives alluded to the fact that these two new phones will play a much larger role in the company’s “new” strategy to better integrate entertainment on mobile devices and other devices throughout the home.

The Sony Ericsson Idou under lock and key at the press conference.

The recession hit Sony Ericsson particularly hard. For the fourth quarter of 2008, the company lost 187 million euros or about $248 million. This is compared with a profit of about 373 million euros in fourth quarter of 2007.

“Everything that we have done to date has brought us to this point,” said Lennard Hoornik, head of global marketing and a vice president at Sony Ericsson. “We created the music phone category in 2005 selling over 100 million Walkman phones, and we are now ready to unveil the next chapter in the evolution of the company.”

The service will also allow the transfer of other media, such as music, photos, and podcasts. The service will also allow users to sync their phone’s music library automatically, subscribe to podcasts, and auto-convert files for the best quality playback.

At the core of its new strategy is something Sony Ericsson calls “Entertainment Unlimited.” Executives were thin on details at the press conference here, but the company is planning a strategy that will bring together cell phones with PCs and the TV to share entertainment content.

But the problem is that it’s not offered by any major carrier in the U.S. And the $800 price tag for an unlocked and unsubsidized phone is way too high for consumers who can get an
iPhone 3G from AT&T, a BlackBerry Storm from Verizon Wireless, or a
Google Android G1 from T-Mobile USA for the subsidized price of $200 with a two-year contract.

The idea sounds like a good one, but it happens to be one that its competitors share. Nokia, the world’s largest cell phone maker, has been developing an entire service platform called Ovi for more than a year that allows users to share files from the PC to the phone and vice versa. And one of the things that has made Apple’s iPhone so successful has been its integration with the existing iTunes media store, where users get access to music, videos, and podcasts.

Got Chrome questions Ask us ‘live’ at 11 a.m.

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Join our live forum from 11 a.m. to noon Pacific Time on Thursday.

Join us at 11:00 a.m.

Seth Rosenblatt (from CNET’s Download.com) and I are co-hosting a CNET Ask the Editors live session, during which we’ll be answering questions about Google’s Chrome browser. So if you’ve got any, check in to join our chat forum. We’re here to help.

A ‘new and improved’ Kindle. So now, what

Saturday, May 15th, 2010

Taking another crack at Amazon’s Kindle

Kaspersky denies leaks after SQL hack

Webware 100: The official 2009 kickoff

PsyStar wins round in Apple suit

Download today’s podcast

Today’s stories:

The upgrades to Amazon’s e-book reader are pretty routine: faster, better battery life, better screen, bigger storage capacity. That still won’t be enough to make everyone rush to get one. CNET’s David Carnoy examines the changesand the likely impact on potential shoppers still wavering on whether to buy one. Listen now:

CNET News Daily Podcast What’s the link between s

Monday, May 10th, 2010

Blockbuster to offer video downloads

Today’s stories:

Mac at 25: Send us insanely great stories

That, and other headlines of the day, in Wednesday’s CNET News Daily Podcast. Listen now:

Download today’s podcast

E-waste looms behind solar-power boom

Solar is a renewable source of energy, which most people probably don’t associate with electronic waste. But the watchdog group Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition is warning that if the fast-growing solar business doesn’t plan ahead, it risks repeating the e-waste mistakes of the microelectronics industry. CNET News reporter Martin LaMonica elaborates.

Another medical professional sues over negative Yelp review

Report: Oracle cuts workforce by 500

Control your TiVo via text message with Kwiry

New browsing apps available for the iPhone

Nortel files for bankruptcy

Yahoo shifts to a new CEO

CNET News Daily Podcast Why e-voting’s still a me

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Listen now:

Download today’s podcast

Today’s stories:

He’s talking about widespread adoption of touch-screen machines in the aftermath of the 2000 election debacle. But as the U.S. heads to the polls on Tuesday, there’s a lot of anxiousness over the reliability of the e-voting systems which have since been put in place. This, and other headlines of the day, in Monday’s podcast.

CNET News’ Declan McCullagh calls it an expensive lesson in the law of unintended consequences.

Tesla Motors secures $40 million in funding

Obama campaign releases tech policy video

Circuit City to close 155 stores

E-voting worries linger as Election Day nears

Ethanol maker VeraSun files for bankruptcy