Broadband growth not offsetting wireline
declines
While growth in broadband wireline revenues remains
robust in the United States, it is not enough to overcome steady losses
in consumer wireline voice revenues, reports In-Stat. As a result,
wireline service revenues in the United States will decline by 3.3
percent annually, on average, from 2004 to 2009, the high-tech market
research firm says.
In-Stat found that traditional data services,
including frame relay, private line and ATM are sinking as businesses
increasingly seek lower-cost Internet solutions. The study also showed
that DSL and cable modem growth is strong, but bundling strategies are
pressuring revenue margins, and that business voice services are also
experiencing revenue declines, but significantly less than those of
consumers.
Itron to by Quantum
Consulting
Spokane technology services company Itron Inc.
agreed to buy Quantum Consulting Inc. for as much as $6
million.
Itron agreed to a cash payment of $4 million, with
additional payments adding up to as much as $2 million, based on the
company's ability to hit revenue, profit and staff-retention
targets.
Quantum, based in Berkeley, Calif., offers energy
consulting services. Its staff will work out of Itron's office in
Oakland, Calif.
Hidden City signs pact with
Marvel
Seattle-based Hidden City Games signed a deal with
Marvel Entertainment Inc. that will allow the Seattle game maker to use
Marvel Super Heroes, such as Spider-Man and X-Men, in its
products.
Terms of the three-year deal weren't
disclosed.
The deal will allow the game company to use Marvel
characters in its Clout Fantasy games, where players throw poker-sized
chips to score points.
Microsoft, Brown team
up
Microsoft Corp. and Brown University are teaming up on a
research center devoted to pen-based computing technology.
The
Microsoft Center for Research on Pen-Centric Computing is the nation's
first academic-research program devoted to this technology, Microsoft
and Brown said in a joint statement.
Microsoft Research, a unit of
Microsoft, will invest $1.2 million in the project over the next three
years.
Corbis buys licensing company
Seattle
image company Corbis said it's purchased Beateworks of Los Angeles for
an undisclosed sum.
Beateworks is an online licensing company of
photos of high-end homes, including photos of celebrities in their own
houses.
Privately held Corbis was founded by Microsoft Corp.
co-founder Bill Gates in 1989.
PopCap to open San
Francisco studio
Computer game maker PopCap Games will open a
game development studio in San Francisco.
The game provider also
has development studios in Dublin, Ireland, and at its Seattle
headquarters.
The San Francisco studio will initially be staffed
with five people, with expansion to 15 people planned, PopCap said. The
office will be headed by Dave Rohrl, formerly of Electronic Arts' casual
games service, and it will be located in San Francisco's SoMa
district.
Among PopCap's downloadable titles are "Bejeweled,"
"Zuma," and "Bookworm."
Zillow forms advisory
board
Seattle-based Zillow.com announced the formation of a
technical advisory board to provide independent advice on improving the
technology and algorithms that support the company's online services for
real estate consumers. Zillow launched its beta site in February 2006,
offering consumers free, unbiased information and valuations on more
than 60 million homes in the U.S.
The first members of Zillow's
TAB are three leading computer scientists--Oren Etzioni, Hank Levy and
Hanan Samet--whose combined accomplishments include research and
practical developments in data mining, Internet search, distributed
operating systems and spatial databases/geographic information systems
(GIS).
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