Amid all the buzz about the Sony Reader, I have a feature in today's National Post looking at why attempts to create a portable device to read books haves, for the most part, been a huge failure. Nevertheless, this could be the year of the iPod for books as several companies are intent on trying to finally get the eReader formula right.
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Saturday, June 24
by
Mark Evans
on Sat 24 Jun 2006 05:57 AM EDT
by
Mark Evans
on Sat 24 Jun 2006 05:42 AM EDT
In this week's podcast, we look at Nortel's strategic options in the wake of Nokia and Siemens' decision to create a joint venture with their carrier network equipment units. Does this force Nortel to make a major move of its own, or will CEO Mike Zafirovski stick with his restructuring plan and avoid the temptation to complicate matters?
Speaking of complicated, Vonage continues to go from bad news to bad news (class-action lawsuits, patent infringement allegations, stock price threatening to hit rock-bottom). Is there hope on the horizon for Vonage? If the stock keeps on dropping, will it eventually become a tempting takeover target? Finally, a quick look at Bill Gates' decision to step down as Microsoft's chief software architect. It's a win-win situation: Gates stays involved while Ray Ozzie gets the chance to move Microsoft more aggressively into the Web-based services world. |
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