Thursday, May 12, 2011

C.E.O. Of Sprint Bitterly Criticizes the Closing of AT&T’s Deal with T-Mobile

Image representing Sprint Nextel as depicted i...Image via CrunchBaseThe C.E.O of Sprint Nextel Corp, Dan Hesse, has provoked his competitive company AT&T Inc, which had fill intentions of acquiring of the USA based T-Mobile on this Friday. He addressed the incident, claiming that if this deal would have been signed between both the companies than it would have been fatal for the creativity of the two and would’ve definitely cost country's wireless industry a huge price.
The C.E.O of Sprint, which happens to be the third best U.S. mobile operator, was outrageous in aspect of this deal worth $39 billion, which us yet going through the regulatory scrutiny. He spoke opposing against all other executives of Sprint, when he said that "If AT&T is allowed to swallow T-Mobile, competition will be stifled, growth will be stifled and wireless innovation will be jeopardized." This was witnessed by all the reporters and industry executives in downtown San Francisco.

The YouTube sensation of ‘Annoying Orange’ Makes Its Way to Become a TV show

The YouTube sensation of the ‘Annoying Orange,’ will no longer be limited to YouTube any more. One of the most favorite web series of YouTube, designed by Dane Boedigheimer, will shortly be making their way to your television as a proper TV Show.
Boedigheimer has recently signed a contract with, a management/media/production company, The Collective, which has promised to finance the 6 initial episodes with the duration of half an hour. The writer of this show will be the same person who wrote Pinky and the Brain, Tom Sheppard, while the executive producer, Conrad Vernon, is known for his production in Shrek 2.

Oracle Finally Announces to Make OpenOffice.org a Community-Based Software

Last year few of the developers at Oracle, left the company to form their own alliance, to form the Document Foundation and design a totally new LibreOffice open-source office suite. It was not disclosed, despite being the very obvious question that will be the future of the renowned OpenOffice.org project. Finally today an announcement came on behalf of Oracle, that is suspending the OpenOffice.org as commercial software, and instead it intends to shift the office suite into a completely community-based open source project.
Edward Screven, The Chief Corporate Architect at Oracle reportedly claimed that, "Given the breadth of interest in free personal productivity applications and the rapid evolution of personal computing technologies, we believe the OpenOffice.org project would be best managed by an organization focused on serving that broad constituency on a non-commercial basis. We intend to begin working immediately with community members to further the continued success of Open Office. Oracle will continue to strongly support the adoption of open standards-based document formats, such as the Open Document Format (ODF)."
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