mardi 12 juin 2012


Le groupe de photographie Eastman Kodak, qui joue sa survie dans un processus de redressement judiciaire, a lancé un processus crucial de vente d'un portefeuille de plus de mille brevets dans la photo numérique.

Ce pionnier des appareils photo a indiqué dans un communiqué qu'il avait demandé au tribunal des faillites devant lequel il a déposé le bilan en janvier d'approuver la procédure d'enchères de "plus de 1.100 brevets qui concernent la capture, la manipulation et le partage d'images numériques"

lundi 11 juin 2012

FB

Facebook's  member and usage growth is slowing sharply in the U.S., data from comScore shows, although that's partly because it's the most dominant site: Facebook has 71% of Internet users and draws them in for six hours a month. The main areas of expansion are mobile and overseas, although neither has yet proved as lucrative as Facebook's main business.

Apple MAP


When Apple Inc kicks off its annual conference for software developers on Monday, all the power players in the Apple universe will be on hand, save the one that is in many ways driving the agenda: Google Inc.
More than ever, the consumer electronics juggernaut finds itself in a pitched battle with the online search giant - in smartphones, cloud computing and the never-ending competition for the hearts and minds of the best software developers.
Apple on Monday is expected to announce its own mapping application, challenging the position of Google Maps as one of the most-valued features on the iPhone. It will unveil closer integration of its iPhone apps and iCloud storage service with all its devices, the latest riposte in its battle with Google's Android smartphone software.
It may promote the latest in Siri, the voice interface that the company thinks can continue to set the iPhone and the iPad apart from the Android pack.
And there will likely be a new line of Macintosh laptops too - underscoring the leverage that a full line of hardware products can bring to what is mainly a software war with Google.
Apple is looking to differentiate its mobile devices from Google's Android by further enticing consumers deeper into its app ecosystem, said Carolina Milanesi, analyst at Gartner Research.
"It's all about loyalty and basically leveraging the opportunity of selling more to them," she said. "I don't think the consumers in the mass market are necessarily tied into the Android ecosystem in the same way that consumers on the Apple side are."
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MACBOOK REDESIGN IN THE WORKS
Where Apple has the upper hand is in its hardware - groundbreaking in design, vastly popular with consumers for its ease of use.
The redesigned MacBook laptops to hit the stage next week are expected to include high-definition screens and Intel Corp's Ivy Bridge cutting-edge processors. Some even expect the iPad's "retina" display to show up on the MacBook line.
This would be Apple's first big redesign of the MacBook Pro since mid-2009. With the new lineup, it hopes to fend off budding competition from rival manufacturers who are pushing a spate of new, thinner laptops called "Ultrabooks."
Windows 8, a new version of Microsoft's flagship operating system that runs on tablet computers as well as PCs, will bolster PC makers' ability to offer premier computers rivaling Apple's MacBook line.
Already, about 20 touch-enabled ultrabook designs with various styles of foldable, detachable or sliding keyboards running the new Windows 8 system are in the pipeline.
The MacBook line generated 13 percent, or about $5 billion, of Apple's fiscal second-quarter revenue. Unit sales of the aging lineup were up 7 percent from the previous year but were down 23 percent sequentially.
Whatever the case, Apple fans and partners can look forward to a fairly action-packed week.
"Apple is very serious about getting far in front of Windows 8 and Ultrabooks," said Barclays analyst Ben Reitzes.

selon le Nobel d'économie Joseph Stiglitz .....


Le plan de sauvetage des banques espagnoles risque de ne pas permettre à l'Espagne de sortir durablement de la crise de la dette car l'Etat et les banques vont s'installer dans un cercle vicieux sans fin où chacun finance les déficits de l'autre, estime Joseph Stiglitz.
« Le système fait que le gouvernement espagnol renfloue les banques et que les banques renflouent le gouvernement », souligne le lauréat du prix Nobel d'économie.
Les ministres des Finances de la zone euro ont convenu samedi de prêter jusqu'à 100 milliards d'euros à l'Espagne afin de lui permettre de renflouer ses banques en difficulté, Madrid s'engageant à préciser le montant de ses besoins dès que seront connus les résultats d'audits indépendants en cours sur son système bancaire.
Si l'Espagne devait solliciter la totalité de la somme, cela accroîtrait encore de 10% son ratio dette-PIB, qui devrait déjà atteindre 80% fin 2012 alors qu'il était de 68,5% fin 2011. Et cela rendrait d'autant plus problématique et coûteux pour le gouvernement espagnol d'émettre des obligations souveraines sur les marchés internationaux.