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| Motorola Co-CEO Open to Microsoft Software Despite Suit Wall Street Journal By SHAYNDI RAICE And SPENCER E. ANTE The head of Motorola Inc.'s mobile-phone business said he is open to developing devices that run Microsoft Corp.'s new mobile operating system, despite the patent-infringement lawsuits the software giant recently ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
| Motorola Launches Droid Pro in Android Flurry PC World Motorola introduced the Droid Pro, an Android smartphone aimed at the BlackBerry market, along with several other Android handsets, at a Tuesday evening event in San Francisco. With the Droid Pro, which is due to come out on Verizon Wireless next month ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
| Linguists discover new language in India USA Today By Chris Rainier By Elizabeth Weise, USA TODAY In the midst of a period of rapid language extinction, with a language estimated to die every two weeks, linguists have found a small ray of hope, a language previously unknown to science in far ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
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| Skype launches on Android phones BusinessWeek Skype launched its Internet calling application on Android mobile handsets, the company said on Tuesday. Owners of Android-based mobile phones will be able to use Skype to make phone calls using either a WiFi or a mobile data connection. ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
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| News: Holy Timing, Batman: Apple Wins Coverflow Design Patent The Mac Observer In what may have been intended as a flambouyant exercise of bureaucratic irony, the US Patent & Trademark Office granted Apple a design patent for Cover Flow, one week after the company was found guilty of violating someone else's patents for the very ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
| Google spits back at Oracle's Android suit Register Google has responded to Oracle's lawsuit over the use of Java in Android, claiming that the mobile OS does not violate Oracle's patents – while accusing Ellison and company of a certain Java open source hypocrisy. In August, Oracle filed a complaint in ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
| Supreme Court debates privacy rights and government's role as employer Washington Post By Robert Barnes The Supreme Court seemed disinclined on Tuesday to impose strict limits on how the federal government can investigate the backgrounds of contractors seeking work, but the justices were more split over what a constitutional right to ... See all stories on this topic » |
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