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YouTube to launch music streaming service, take on Spotify Exclusive: Google is planning to roll out service to capitalize on the power of YouTube. By Ryan Bradley and Jessi Hempel FORTUNE -- YouTube, the world's largest digital repository of streaming media, will launch a subscription music service later this year. The service has its own negotiating team and operating unit, but will likely have
Google CEO Larry Page envisions a future in which computers plan your vacations, drive your cars, and anticipate your whims. Audacious? Maybe. But Page's dreams have a way of coming true. FORTUNE -- When Sir Martin Sorrell, CEO of WPP Group, the giant advertising agency, visited Google this past fall, CEO Larry Page sent a car to pick him up at the Rosewood Hotel about 20 miles away. Only this was
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FORTUNE — This is a rumor we have no reason to believe except it comes from a major Apple (AAPL) investor who says he’s heard it from “multiple sources.” According to our source, who asked not be named, there appears to be some truth to the widespread rumors that Apple is preparing to launch a smaller and cheaper version of the iPad — often called the iPad mini or iPad air and usually described as
FORTUNE — There’s no shortage of embarrassing instances where Apple (AAPL) Maps “fell short” — as Tim Cook’s public apology put it — but on Friday Canadian reader John Garner pointed me to a particularly striking one. Jason Matheson, a fellow Canadian with a knack for Mac programming, ran a quick Xcode script that compared the iPhone 5’s map of Ontario with an official list of the province’s citie
Steve Jobs' successor is making his mark and trying to keep the Apple magic going. FORTUNE -- In February of this year, a group of investors visited Apple as part of a "bus tour" led by a research analyst for Citibank. The session started with a 45-minute presentation by Peter Oppenheimer, Apple's chief financial officer, and the 15 or so investors who attended the session were treated to Apple's
The prolific angel investor has rarely met an Internet startup he didn't like. When it comes to picking the next big thing, there's a right way and a wrong way. And then there's the Conway. Ron Conway, with Coco, his rescue dog, photographed at their San Francisco home FORTUNE -- The rooftop deck of Ron Conway's San Francisco apartment building is packed with a random and seemingly incongruous ass
Google’s OS is still more popular than Apple’s, but no more than it was in March Apple (AAPL), Google (GOOG) and Research in Motion (RIMM) have reached something like a three-way stalemate in the battle for dominance of the U.S. smartphone market, according to Nielsen survey results scheduled for release Tuesday. Smartphones are increasingly popular — they now represent 37% of all U.S. mobile phon
Adam Lashinsky’s “Inside” story in the new issue of Fortune is packed with juicy revelations After the simultaneous, and more-or-less disastrous, launch of the iPhone 3G and MobileMe in the summer of 2008 — the launch one Gizmodo reader dubbed “iPocalypse” — Steve Jobs summoned the MobileMe team to the Town Hall auditorium on Apple’s (AAPL) Cupertino campus for an obscenity-laden dressing down. “Y
Boardroom power plays, disgruntled founders, and CEO switcheroos are clipping the wings of this tech high flier. By Jessi Hempel, senior writer FORTUNE -- In March, shortly after Jack Dorsey went back to work for Twitter, the company he co-founded four years ago, he did a Q&A session with an entrepreneurship class at Columbia Business School. As students tapped away on their laptops (were they se
A new survey analyzes the pros and cons of writing for various mobile platforms On the heels of the debate played out over the weekend between Union Square Ventures‘ Fred Wilson and Instapaper‘s Marco Arment about whether it’s wiser to be writing apps for Apple’s (AAPL) iOS or Google’s (GOOG) Android come the results a survey of 250 working developers released Monday by Baird’s William Powers. Wil
A company that wants to bring online storage and sharing to the masses? Hardly original, but with numbers like these, Dropbox may do just that. The startup on every venture and angel investor's lips these days isn't a social media company or a site hawking coupons. No, the tech world is currently enamored with Dropbox, a four-year-old company that aims to bring cloud computing -- that catchall ph
In the land of the rising sun, a widespread early adopter mentality has encouraged tech companies to think outside the box. Way outside the box. Here are six of the country's craziest gadgets. When early adoption is brought up in American media, it focuses on the small, vocal group of consumers who need the latest tech products, and stat: the Apple faithful who queue up days before a product launc
© 2018 Time Inc. All Rights Reserved. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy (Your California Privacy Rights). Fortune may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website. Offers may be subject to change without notice. Quotes delayed at least 15 minutes. Market data provided by Interactive Data. ETF and Mutual Fund data provided
Hoping to apply technology solutions to solve the world’s problems, Google is hiring Washington technology insider Jared Cohen. A rumor surfaced last month which put Washington insider Jared Cohen on the fast track to Google-dom. Cohen is famous for his work as ‘Twitterer in Chief’ of the State department where he has lasted through two administrations. He’s a fascinating fellow. Cohen was hired
Yes, the company is still growing at rates that would be the envy of the rest of the Fortune 500. But its core business is slowing, its stock is down, its Android mobile platform generates scant revenue, and competition (hello, Facebook) is fierce. Can Google find its footing in this brave new world? By Michael V. Copeland with Seth Weintraub Stroll across the Googleplex in Mountain View, Calif.,
What constitutes tech savvy today? An alchemy of intellect, ambition, and that uncanny ability to peer around corners. Some of our choices may surprise you. “The empires of the future,” Winston Churchill once said, “are the empires of the mind.” Those words have never held more weight. Our greatest technological advances come not through physical might, tools, or cash but through intellect and ima
Apple (AAPL), for reasons known only to itself, does not report the number of iPod touches it has sold. But it lets you do the math, and on Tuesday COO Tim Cook casually mentioned, in response to a question about the App Store, that the total installed base of iPhones (26.4 million) plus iPod touches (X) is now 45 million. So where are those 18.6 million iPod touches? Nearly 12 million are in the
FORTUNE may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website. Offers may be subject to change without notice. Quotes delayed at least 15 minutes. Market data provided by Interactive Data. ETF and Mutual Fund data provided by Morningstar, Inc. Dow Jones Terms & Conditions: http://www.djindexes.com/mdsidx/html/tandc/indexestandcs.html. S&P Index data is the property of Ch
The servers slowed but didn’t crash in Tokyo Tuesday as customers queued up for hours For reasons that aren’t immediately clear, Japan didn’t suffer the nationwide meltdowns that brought Apple’s (AAPL) and AT&T’s (T) servers to their knees Tuesday, the first day of pre-orders for the iPhone 4 that goes on sale June 24. There were glitches that slowed the computers at SoftBank, Apple’s exclusive ca
In a press release timed with a Computex Tiawan unveiling today, Qualcomm published information on its next generation of Smartphone chips. Qualcomm's 1GHz Snapdragon processor powers some of the best high-end Android smartphones out there, including the HTC Nexus One, EVO and Incredible and upcoming products like the Dell Streak. Today's press release suggests that those phones are only the begi
The former head of MIT's Media Lab said the next OLPC device, the XO-3, would be a 9-inch tablet made by Marvell and running Google's Android OS. The first OLPC was an underpowered, 'designed-by-committee' laptop that cost at least double of what it was supposed to. Most importantly, didn't adapt to the needs of the children who used it. For instance, it didn't have a method for non-Latin charac
Also getting cannibalized: iPod touches, eReaders, desktop PCs and handheld videogames There’s an interesting chart in a report to clients issued early Thursday morning by Morgan Stanley’s Katy Huberty. The subject of her report is last week’s acquisition of Palm (PALM) by Hewlett Packard (HPQ). In Huberty’s bull-case scenario, HP builds a tablet computer around Palm’s WebOS that not only competes
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