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Microsoft considers bidding for Yahoo!
b>NEW YORK:/bMicrosoft Corp is considering a bid for Yahoo! Inc, resurfacing as a potential buyer after a bitter and unsuccessful fight to take over the Internet company in 2008, sources said.
iPhone still the hottest ticket around
b>NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO:/bThe iPhone 4S wasn't exactly Apple's brightest moment. Yet it will probably still outshine the competition this holiday season.
Intel acquires Israeli mobile navigation firm Telmap
b>TEL AVIV/b>: Chipmaker Intel Corp has agreed to acquire mobile navigation software maker Telmap, the chief executive of the Israel-based company said.
Bing leans more heavily on Facebook
b>SAN FRANCISCO:/bMicrosoft Corp's Bing search engine is increasing its emphasis on the recommendations shared within Facebook's online social network to give people something they can't find on Google's dominant search engine.
Facebook sharing sending readers to big news sites
b>SAN FRANCISCO/b>: Facebook is influencing what news gets read online as people use the Internet's most popular hangout to share and recommend content.
Alcatel-Lucent to offer 40GbE network connectivity
b>KUALA LUMPUR/b>: Alcatel-Lucent has jumped onto the datacentre switching solution bandwagon with its 'future-proof' OmniSwitch 10K and OmniSwitch 6900 Modular Ethernet LAN Chassis.
When is location tracking too much?
b>SAN FRANCISCO/b>: If you're worried about privacy, you can turn off the function on your smartphone that tracks where you go. But that means giving up the services that probably made you want a smartphone in the first place.
Few queues as PlayBook arrives in US and Canada
RIM has hit the launch button on its newest gadget, the BlackBerry Playbook.
EU to probe ISP traffic management
b>BRUSSELS:/bThe European Union has asked the bloc's 27 member countries to probe whether Internet service providers (ISPs) block or slow down services in a way that harms consumers.
UAE policy on BlackBerry would apply to others
b>DUBAI:/bThe maker of BlackBerry devices says tighter restrictions on the popular gadgets proposed by Emirati authorities would likely apply to other smartphones too, raising new questions about data freedom in the Gulf Arab nation.