Oracle prevails in $9.3 billion NetSuite takeover. Over the weekend, the software giant said enough shares were tendered under its offer to close the deal. This despite resistance from big shareholder T. Rowe Price, which believed the $109-per-share purchase price offered for the cloud business software company wasn't high enough. (Fortune, Bloomberg) Apple scrambles to remove fake shopping apps. Hundreds of "rogue" mobile applications, pretending to be from retailers ranging from Dillard's to Nordstorm, somehow managed to make it through the company's App Store review process. Many of them are annoying pop-up advertising engines, but some were designed to steal credit card information. And yes, most were released by Chinese developers. (New York Times) Add Microsoft to the list of big companies now using WeWork for office space. The software giant plans to use the co-working service for approximately 300 employees in New York. WeWork's corporate account list now includes Dell, Salesforce.com, IBM, General Motors, Marriott, and several dozen other giant U.S. companies. (Fortune) Expect Twitter to focus more on customer service applications. The social media service is testing new ways to automate company-to-customer communications. One Brazilian airline, for example, has developed a way for passengers to check in for flights via a direct Twitter message. (Reuters) Samsung is counting on artificial intelligence to revive its smartphone business. The next edition of its handheld, the Galaxy S8, will include voice assistant software that Samsung acquired through its buyout of Viv Labs, the startup founded by one of the co-creators of Apple's Siri. Viv's software will also factor in Samsung's appliance business, allowing consumers to control them via voice commands. (Reuters) At Snap Inc., it's the Evan Spiegel and Bobby Murphy show. According an analysis, the CEO and CTO of the parent company behind the Snapchat messaging service will control close to 74% of the voting rights after its initial public offering. For perspective, that's far more influence than the co-founders of Google or Facebook enjoyed when they went public. (Bloomberg) What drove Microsoft and Salesforce apart. Remember back in spring 2015 when the two software giants were mulling a merger? Apparently, they discussed combining forces twice. Now, however, their fight over Microsoft's $26.2 billion acquisition of LinkedIn—Salesforce was also trying to buy the social networking company—has strained their relationship almost to the breaking point. (New York Times) |
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