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Stocks on the Fence as Traders Weigh Jobs, Earnings


Stocks were in search of direction on Thursday as traders weighed disappointing earnings from ExxonMobil, better-than-expected jobs data and the ongoing U.S. debt debate. 
Today's Markets
As of 9:32 a.m. ET, the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 14 points, or 0.14%, to 12,319, the S&P 500 rose 1.6 points, or 0.12%, to 1,306 and the Nasdaq Composite gained 1.8 points, or 0.04%, to 2,766. 
The number of individuals applying for first-time jobless claims fell to 398,000 last week from 422,000, better than the 415,000 economists forecast. Jobless claims had been stuck above the 400,000-mark for weeks, which coupled with a dismal June jobs report, has many economists concerned that job growth is moderating. 
Later in the morning, markets are expected to get a report on pending home sales, which are expected to have fallen 2% in June after soaring 8.2% the prior month.  
Headlines from Washington, D.C. have captivated Wall Street in recent days as lawmakers have struggled to come to an agreement on how to begin cutting the deficit while also raising the debt ceiling.  
The Republican-controlled House of Representatives is expected to vote on Speaker John Boehner's bill late on Thursday.  The plan was revised on Wednesday after a score by the Congressional Budget Office found it would provide less spending cuts than expected.  The vote is expected to be tight, with most Democrats likely to vote against and divisions within the GOP.  
Even if the measure passes the House, it is likely to face strong opposition in the Senate, where theDemocratic Party has control. 
Economists and government officials have warned repeatedly that if the debt ceiling isn't raised, there could be severe consequences for the already fragile global recovery. Indeed, ratings companies have warned that they may downgrade the country's debt rating if lawmakers fail to craft a credible deficit-reduction bill. 
While this week's focus has been on the debt debate on Capitol Hill, several companies are posting earnings this week. 
ExxonMobil (XOM) unveiled profits of $2.18 per share, missing the Wall Street's view of $2.33.  The largest U.S. company by market capitalization posted revenue of $125 billion, beating estimates of $121 billion. 
DuPont (DD) posted earnings excluding one-time costs of $1.37 a share, topping analysts' forecast of $1.34 a share on strong growth across several of its product lines.  The chemical giant also boosted its full-year 2011 profit forecast to a range of $3.90 to $4.05 per share, from $3.65 to $3.85. 
Energy markets drifted higher after falling in the prior session. 
Light, sweet crude climbed 9 cents, or 0.09%, to $97.49 a barrel.  Wholesale RBOB gasoline jumped 3 cents, or 0.88%, to $3.17 a gallon. 
Prices at the pump continue heading higher.  A gallon of regular costs $3.71 on average nationwide, up from $3.55 last month, and well higher than the $2.75 drivers paid last year, according to the AAA Fuel Gauge report. 
In currencies, the euro fell 0.6% against the U.S. dollar, while the greenback gained 0.26% against a basket of world currencies. 
Gold has gotten a boost from the uncertain economic and political picture, hitting record highs several times in the last two weeks.  The precious metal recently gained $1.80, or 0.11%, to $1,619 a troy ounce.  Silver fell 31 cents, or 0.77%, to $40.26 a troy ounce. 
Corporate News
Cisco Systems (CSCO) shares got a boost after Goldman Sachs raised its view to "buy" from "neutral." 
Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMY) posted profits excluding one-time items of 56 cents a share, which topped estimates by a penny.  The company also reported better-than-expected sales of $5.4 billion, compared with the $5 billion estimate, and raised its full-year profit view. 
Foreign Markets
The English FTSE 100 fell 0.74% to 5,813, the French CAC 40 slid 1.3% to 3,685 and the German DAXslumped 1.6% to 7,139. 
In Asia, the Japanese Nikkei 225 dropped 1.5% to 9,901 and the Chinese Hang Seng rose 0.13% to 22,570. 

Debt Deal May Depend on Obama Staying Silent


Obama Talked His Way Into Trouble on Debt Ceiling
“We got rid of the tax increase, no naked debt limit increase and now we've got a bill that does what we said it should do. Is it perfect, like John said? No, it's not. But it's a good step on spending cuts.”
-- Rep Paul Ryan “On the Record w/Great Van Susteren” rising in defense of Speaker John Boehner’s alternate debt-ceiling legislation
Whether Congress can reach a deal on increasing the federal government’s $14.3 trillion borrowing limit may depend on whether President Obama can stay silent on the issue for the rest of the week.
House Republicans are getting ready today for a high-drama vote on an alternate plan to cut spending and increase the federal credit limit, and the best thing the bill may have going for it is Obama’s opposition.
Most House Republicans are disappointed with the fact that the bill doesn’t take on the main drivers of federal indebtedness, entitlement and welfare programs. The most crystalline conservatives in the caucus oppose it because it actually increases the debt ceiling. They would rather have an immediate 44 percent cut to federal spending than increase borrowing by a dime.
But the fact that White House and Democrats in the Senate keep dumping on the Boehner plan is a dynamite sales pitch for the speaker. As one of the biggest rattlers in the Tea Party Caucus, Rep. Allen West, tweeted: “Boehner Plan is not a perfect bill. However, the fact Pelosi, Reid and Obama hate it doggone makes it perfect enough- where is their plan?”
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has a plan, but it might be best described as a double, fake Boehner. The Reid plan is based on the same kitty of cuts as the Speakers’ plan, but rather than running for six months before a mandatory review of long-term spending reform and another vote it would carry the government through the next election.
Reid relies on putative savings from the fact that the war in Afghanistan will not continue until 2022, so he’s basically asking to get the final 12 months of borrowing for free.
Reid likely couldn’t get his plan through the Senate today, as Republicans will certainly give their House colleagues the deference of running their own legislation before Senate GOPers agreed to back Reid’s plan.
If Boehner can get his bill passed today, he will increase the odds that Republicans will get the advantage on the duration of the final debt increase.
While all Senate Democrats said in a letter that they would oppose the House bill, they didn’t say anything about amendments. And that’s what will happen if Boehner can get this duck off the pond. It will go to the Senate, where Minority Leader Mitch McConnell will start working in his wily ways, and produce something that can pass both Houses in an almost orderly fashion.
The question now is whether Obama can remain out of the debate until Congress can finish its work.
Obama has so far managed in speeches and press conferences on the debt debate to hand Republicans a series of big wins and to kill off hopes for a grand bargain.
Each time he scolded or lectured House Republicans on the subject since January, he strengthened their resolve to stand united against his requests for first an unconditional debt-limit increase and then later, tax increases.
As we are seeing repeated now, no matter how much outsiders bemoan and berate Boehner for failing to slay the government leviathan, House members understand that they are less than halfway through a two-year struggle with Obama and the Senate Democrats. Though the bonds may strain, the House GOP can still hang together against Obama.
But that may have been unavoidable. There may have been nothing that Obama could have done to sway the House on small-scale deals on debt. The president’s defeat on an unconditional increase and a tax increase may have been unavoidable. But as we saw with his Monday speech, he has certainly made Boehner’s job much easier.
What was certainly avoidable, though, was the derailment of a compromise plan that traded a debt increase for Obama now for changes to entitlement programs later on.
As one House Democrat told Power Play after the president surprisingly emerged in the White House briefing room to embrace the now-moribund Gang of Six plan: “He probably killed it right there.”
Had Obama stayed silent on the plan, conservative and moderate Republicans already on board would have had time to sell the package to their skeptical fellow Republicans. The same for the Democrats. Obama left Democratic budget hawks no time to work with suspicious liberals to assure them that the cuts were gradual and potentially reversible if the Democratic political position improved.
Obama’s support for the plan was the kiss of death for conservative support and possibly with liberals too. Obama has come to be seen as weak by many on the left. They still support him, but they believe that left unsupervised, the president will give away the farm.
Even with the public, the president has lost his ability to persuade on fiscal issues. Polls show that voters have concluded the president isn’t serious about the subject.
Obama’s endorsement of any plan is no longer a plus, and his opposition only tends to help Republicans.
Perhaps he knows it. After his blame gaming speech on Monday, Obama has mostly stayed out of the fray this week, emerging for a campaign speech to a Democratic Hispanic group and little else. He’s scheduled to talk about his 20-year plan on vehicle emissions and global warming Friday, but nothing that generates much heat on its own.
It’s hard for any politician to do, but to get the deal on debt he needs to avert a disaster, Obama may need to just hush.



Wall Street Starts Taking Washington Seriously
“We know he’s going to turn up the heat soon because fear mongering is the only thing that works for him.”
-- Aide to a senior House Republican talking to Power Play about President Obama
While Power Play has always held that there would almost certainly be a deal on debt, this is not the kind of political note that discounts the possibility of congressional crackups.
Wall Streeters, though, have mostly discounted the idea that a divided Washington would break under the pressure and cause a partial government shutdown when the Treasury runs out of rainy day funds.
As we get closer to the edge, which Treasury insists remains set for Tuesday, investors are starting to get kind of edgy. Because many bottom-line driven investors regard all the ideological differences and abstruse procedural rules of Congress as backwards or antique, they frequently fail to understand that lawmakers are playing for keeps.
Now it’s occurring to them that these people might just be serious.
We should also take care to separate the twin financial threats from the current debate. First, there’s the concern that a government shutdown will ensue and cause a short-term disruption to the already crumbling economy. This isn’t a concern that the U.S. will pay its debts, but instead a concern that federal spending could conk out.
A partial shutdown, aside from depriving contractors and government workers of checks, would also cause deepening anxiety and uncertainty among the capitalists who were anxious and uncertain already. The specter of that, plus some crummy economic news, is helping to keep the securities markets on the bearish tip.
But even if a debt ceiling impasse doesn’t mean that there’s no default on debt, that doesn’t mean there aren’t bond problems and bond-trader worries.
The ratings agencies have been at pains to point out that the looming U.S. credit downgrade isn’t over the debt limit, per se, but that the conflama over the debt limit has demonstrated what they’ve been maintaining all along: The current political climate will not allow the government to change its ways on the long-term debt that is threatening the future health of the nation’s economy.
Entitlement (i.e. Social Security and Medicare) and welfare (i.e. Medicaid and food stamps) programs constituted $2.1 trillion of federal outlays in 2010 – 66 percent of federal spending. There will almost certainly be no change to these issues in the final debt-ceiling plan, except for perhaps some kind of J. Wellington Wimpy solution in which a super committee will come up with a plan. Washington did that last year and has so far done nothing but talk about it.
The U.S. tax code is a rat’s nest of crony capitalist deductions and populist wealth transfers. This problem will go untouched too, save for a promise of future consideration.
U.S. bond ratings will drop not because of the debt ceiling, but the debt ceiling demonstrates the degree of political dysfunction on the subject. That’s embarrassing but not fatal. American debt will continue to look good compared to the fetid heaps of European debt and China’s crackpot jackpot of fiscal policies.
But it is the concerns over a government shutdown and economic disruption that will drive the final deal. As Washington sputters, Wall Street starts listening. And as investors panic, Washington will start listening to Wall Street.

L&T Finance IPO raises $36 mn from anchor investors

MUMBAI: L&T Finance Holdings has raised around Rs 1.6 billion ($36 million) by selling shares to cornerstone investors of an initial public offering that opens on Wednesday,IFR reported on Tuesday. 

The company sold shares to DSP BlackRock, and investment arms of Malaysia's Khazanah and U.S. private-equity fund Capital International at 56 rupees each, IFR, a Thomson Reuters publication, said. 

L&T Finance, a unit of Indian engineering conglomerateLarsen & Toubro , plans to raise Rs 12.45 billion ($280 million) in the public offering, and is seeking bids in the range of Rs 51 to Rs 59 a share. 

Earlier this month, L&T Finance had raised Rs 3.3 billion ($75 million) in a pre-IPO share placement to Capital International. Including the pre-IPO placement, L&T Finance is set to raise a total of Rs 15.75 billion.

After Aiding Republicans, Business Groups Press Them on Debt Ceiling

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which spent millions of dollars last year helping elect Republicans to Congressional seats, is struggling to convince the House it helped to build that the debt ceiling must be increased.



The chamber and other business groups have pressed with increasing urgency for Congress to raise the maximum amount that the government can borrow. They have cataloged the consequences of default at meetings, parties and dinners and over drinks.
On Tuesday, the chamber threw its weight behind the proposal of the House speaker, John A. Boehner, telling recalcitrant Republicans that a pending vote on the plan was a with-us-or-against-us moment that would be remembered during the next election campaign.
But as the government runs out of money, those efforts have not produced the desired result. The freshman class of House Republicans, along with longer-serving members, is balking at Mr. Boehner’s plan, let alone anything that Senate Democrats and the White House might be willing to accept.
The tension highlights the distance between the pro-business stalwarts of the traditional Republican Party and the populism of its newer representatives, many of whom seem to view Wall Street and Washington with equal suspicion.
“I think they’re very pleased with the antigovernment inclinations of the Tea Party Republicans when it comes to taxes and regulation,” said David Axelrod, one of the president’s chief political advisers. “But now we have a situation where the integrity of the economy and the U.S. financial system is at stake, and they’re being hoisted on their own petards.”
The chamber and its allies say that they remain confident that Congress will act to raise the debt ceiling, and moreover that they have supported the demands of House Republicans that the government should be allowed to borrow more only if it starts spending less.
“There’s nothing more important for financial stability than getting the debt ceiling raised and putting our nation on a prudent financial path, a message we have been delivering to lawmakers for weeks,” said Rob Nichols, president of the Financial Services Forum, which has joined with the chamber and the National Association of Manufacturers to press the issue.
The manufacturers’ association joined the chamber on Tuesday in endorsing the Boehner plan, which the White House has described as unacceptable because it allows only enough borrowing room to pay the government’s bills until early next year, when a new agreement would be required.
The chamber made a big splash during the midterm elections with advertisements that attacked Democratic incumbents, particularly those who supported the president’s health care legislation, for being antibusiness. It issued endorsements describing their Republican opponents as “invaluable” leaders on business issues who would support economic growth.
Among the beneficiaries was Daniel Webster, a Florida Republican. The chamber spent $250,000 on ads blasting the Democratic incumbent, Representative Alan Grayson. Mr. Webster won.
In July, Mr. Webster introduced legislation instructing the Treasury to prioritize interest payments, then military spending, then Social Security checks, then Medicare payments, “in the event the debt ceiling is reached.” Experts regard the idea as unworkable.
The chamber spent $436,953 helping to elect Steve Pearce, a New Mexico Republican, almost 20 percent of the total that he was able to raise and spend on his own.
This month, Mr. Pearce told the radio program “News New Mexico” that cutting federal spending was just as important as increasing the debt ceiling.
“We have talked a lot about Armageddon if we don’t pass the debt ceiling,” he said. “There’s an equal Armageddon on the other side if we don’t start curing the spending problems.”
In May, the chamber gave $2,000 to Representative Patrick Meehan, a Pennsylvania Republican already building up a war chest for the 2012 campaign.
A few weeks later, Mr. Meehan said he was “hopeful that we will reach an agreement that stops our massive borrowing and reckless spending without risking a default."
It has been clear since last fall that the government would hit the debt ceiling, the legal maximum that it can borrow, at some point during 2011. In May, the Treasury said that it had reached the legal limit and that it would begin to cancel obligations to other parts of the government, allowing it to borrow enough money to pay all of the government’s bills until early August.
The president asked Congress to increase the limit. House Republicans refused unanimously, insisting that Democrats first agree to cut spending by the same amount.
Business groups stayed mostly on the sidelines for months. The chamber orchestrated a May letter from business groups to political leaders calling for an agreement. In July, the groups sent a second letter, this time signed by several hundred chief executives. It was nothing in comparison with the efforts the same groups have made in recent years to oppose legislation on health care and financial regulation, or their recent advocacy in support of free trade agreements with South Korea, Colombia and Panama.
One reason for the relative silence was the assumption that the ceiling would be raised. Even now, there is widespread confidence that the parties will strike a deal — a state of affairs most clearly reflected in the ease with which the government continues to borrow money from investors.
“Also you don’t want to be on the wrong side,” said Tom Block, the longtime head of government relations for JPMorgan Chase and now a private consultant. “They had the confidence that this is going to be resolved without their participation, so why participate?”
Another difference has been the absence of a piece of legislation to hail or hammer.
Mr. Axelrod said business groups were constrained by their desire to win the support of House freshmen on other issues, including the trade agreements and efforts to roll back regulation.
“I just think that there was, at least on the part of the chamber, a reluctance to tangle with, or pressure, the same group in the House that they’re depending on to gut financial reform and undo environmental regulation and so on,” he said. “But I think the gravity of the situation is now clear.”
Business groups disputed that characterization, but agreed with the conclusion.
“We’ve worked with the broader business community over the last month,” said Aric Newhouse, senior vice president for government relations at the National Association of Manufacturers. “It’s the right thing to do to provide certainty for the country and the economy.”
J. P. Fielder, a spokesman for the chamber, said it the group was encouraging members to address the debt ceiling so they could return to other issues.

Wipro Recognized as a Leader in the Magic Quadrant for Comprehensive Finance and Accounting BPO, Global by Independent Research Firm


BANGALORE, India, Jul 26, 2011 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Wipro BPO, the Business Process Outsourcing arm of Wipro Technologies, the Global Information Technology, Consulting, and Outsourcing Business of Wipro Limited WIT -0.32% , has been recognized by Gartner, Inc. in the Leaders quadrant in the report, "Magic Quadrant for Comprehensive Finance and Accounting (F&A) BPO, Global," authored by Cathy Tornbohm and published June 29, 2011.
Gartner positioned Wipro in the leaders quadrant based on the evaluation criteria of ability to execute and completeness of vision. The report evaluated a qualified group of 16 vendors in the F&A BPO market. As described in the report, "Leaders are performing well today, both with a clear vision of market direction and by actively building competencies to sustain their leadership position in the market. The comprehensive F&A BPO players in this quadrant generally share superior market understanding, have a global client base, an extensive network of well-distributed and highly populated global delivery centers catering for multiple languages, a good balance of transactional and high-end F&A delivery and innovative well communicated and marketed sales offerings."
According to the report, "Gartner defines comprehensive finance and accounting (F&A) processes as the outsourcing of three or more finance processes to a single provider." The report also said, "This Magic Quadrant offers a deep analysis of the competitive positioning for comprehensive F&A BPO services by showcasing the relative placing of the main players in the market according to a variety of criteria, and by offering detailed strengths and cautions for each of the included vendors."
Manish Dugar, Sr. Vice President and Global Head, Wipro BPO, said, "We believe that our position in the Leaders Quadrant is testimony to our ability in the seamless delivery of end-to-end Finance and Accounting (F&A) services from multiple global locations. We have been able to leverage our extensive technology capabilities, clearly shaping the vision for the next generation of F&A outsourcing. With the right expertise and blend of talent, tools and methodologies, Wipro BPO has been able to deliver complex programs and consolidate operations, for our customers, to achieve upfront financial benefits. We feel this recognition validates our strategy and the significant investments that we have made in our F&A practice to improve our pipeline and add measurable business value to our clients."
To read the complete report, please go to: http://www.wipro.com/resource-center/analyst-speak/pdf/MagicQuadrantforglobalF_ABPO.pdf
Wipro has 6000+ dedicated employees delivering end-to-end services across the full spectrum of finance and accounting functions, including procure-to-pay, order-to-cash and record-to-report to support all the functions of the CFO's office. It operates from 16 centers in 10 countries including Poland, Romania, Brazil, China, Mexico, U.S. and India (Bangalore, Delhi, Chennai, Pune, Hyderabad and Mumbai). Vertical market strengths for F&A BPO include communications, financial services, retail and breweries.
Wipro BPO, the Business Process Outsourcing service line of Wipro Technologies, is one of the largest BPO service providers on a global delivery platform. Wipro BPO has the capabilities to provide onshore, near shore, offshore and hybrid delivery options with operations in more than 28 centers in 11 countries. The services portfolio spans industry specific solutions in Customer Contact center (technical and non-technical; voice and non-voice), Finance and Accounting outsourcing, Human Resource outsourcing, Supply chain management, Knowledge services including Data Management and reporting, Legal process outsourcing, and Sales and Marketing outsourcing.
About the Magic Quadrant
The Magic Quadrant is copyrighted June 2011 by Gartner, Inc. and is reused with permission. The Magic Quadrant is a graphical representation of a marketplace at and for a specific time period. It depicts Gartner's analysis of how certain vendors measure against criteria for that marketplace, as defined by Gartner. Gartner does not endorse any vendor, product or service depicted in the Magic Quadrant, and does not advise technology users to select only those vendors placed in the "Leaders" quadrant. The Magic Quadrant is intended solely as a research tool, and is not meant to be a specific guide to action. Gartner disclaims all warranties, express or implied, with respect to this research, including any warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.
About Wipro Technologies
Wipro Technologies, the global IT business of Wipro Limited WIT -0.32% , is a leading Information Technology, Consulting and Outsourcing company, that delivers solutions to enable its clients to do business better. Wipro Technologies delivers winning business outcomes through its deep industry experience and a 360 degree view of "Business through Technology" -- helping clients create successful and adaptive businesses. A company recognized globally for its comprehensive portfolio of services, a practitioner's approach to delivering innovation and an organization wide commitment to sustainability, Wipro Technologies has 120,000 employees and clients across 54 countries. For more information, please visit www.wipro.com .
Forward-looking and Cautionary Statements
Certain statements in this release concerning our future growth prospects are forward-looking statements, which involve a number of risks, and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in such forward-looking statements. The risks and uncertainties relating to these statements include, but are not limited to, risks and uncertainties regarding fluctuations in our earnings, revenue and profits, our ability to generate and manage growth, intense competition in IT services, our ability to maintain our cost advantage, wage increases in India, our ability to attract and retain highly skilled professionals, time and cost overruns on fixed-price, fixed-time frame contracts, client concentration, restrictions on immigration, our ability to manage our international operations, reduced demand for technology in our key focus areas, disruptions in telecommunication networks, our ability to successfully complete and integrate potential acquisitions, liability for damages on our service contracts, the success of the companies in which we make strategic investments, withdrawal of fiscal governmental incentives, political instability, war, legal restrictions on raising capital or acquiring companies outside India, unauthorized use of our intellectual property, and general economic conditions affecting our business and industry. Additional risks that could affect our future operating results are more fully described in our filings with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission. These filings are available at www.sec.gov . We may, from time to time, make additional written and oral forward-looking statements, including statements contained in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission and our reports to shareholders. We do not undertake to update any forward-looking statement that may be made from time to time by us or on our behalf.

Shriram Transport Finance reports 20 pc jump in PAT

CHENNAI: Non-banking finance companyShriram Transport Finance, flagship company of theShriram Group, has reported a 20.1 per cent jump in its profit after tax at Rs 347.30 crore for the quarter ended June 30, 2011. 

The Chennai-headquartered company had registered profit after tax (PAT) of Rs 288.94 crore in the same period of previous year, a company release said. 

For the year ending March 31, 2011, the PAT stood at Rs Rs 1,229.8 crore, it added. 

The total income for the quarter ended June 30, 2011, grew to Rs 1,393.22 crore as compared to Rs 1,233.51 crore, the release said. 

For the financial year ended March 31, 2011, the total income stood at Rs 5,259.71 crore, it said. 

A final dividend of Rs four per share for the financial year 2010-11, was approved by the shareholders and was paid on July 4, 2011, it added. 

As of June 30, 2011, the total assets under management stood at Rs 36,997 crore compared to Rs 36,182 crore as on March 31, 2011.

Microsoft gives manufacturers a taste of Mango


Microsoft announced this morning that the next version of the Windows Phone operating system, code-named Mango, has been delivered to manufacturers, which can begin testing it on their handsets.
The move is one of the final steps before the software arrives on new phones and is delivered to existing users as a software update.
"This marks the point in the development process where we hand code to our handset and mobile-operator partners to optimize Mango for their specific phone and network configurations," Terry Myerson, Microsoft's corporate vice president of engineering for Windows phone, wrote on a company blog. "Here on the Windows Phone team, we now turn to preparing for the update process."
The update, which brings multitasking and a complete overhaul of the built-in Internet Explorer Web browser, wasfirst discussed in February, at Mobile World Congress. Two months later, Microsoft took the wraps off all the planned features, promising to deliver it in the fall.
Mango is the first major system software update to hit Microsoft's Windows Phone 7 platform since an interim release near the end of March that added copy-and-paste functionality, improved marketplace search, and enabled faster app loading. Microsoft is not counting Mango as an all-out new version of the platform, something the company has not yet discussed.
Microsoft started dishing out a beta version of Mango to mobile developers at the end of last month so that they could test their applications for compatibility with the new features and back-end changes.

Al Franken: AT&T and T-Mobile Merger Will Kill Competition


Sen. Al Franken is urging regulators to pull the plug on a proposed merger between AT&T and T-Mobile.
The Minnesota Democrat says a marriage of the two companies would mean that only three national wireless carriers would remain.
The deal would leave AT&T in control of 43 percent of the market, with Verizon overseeing 39 percent of the industry. To the left-leaning legislator that’s a dangerous recipe.
“The merger of AT&T and T-Mobile would be a major step towards the creation of an entrenched duopoly in the wireless industry,” Franken writes in a 24-page letter to the Justice Department and the Federal Communications Commission. “It would concentrate enormous power over the entire telecommunications sector in the hands of only two companies, and it would incentivize AT&T and Verizon to coordinate prices to the detriment of consumers.”
Moreover, Franken says that the merger will result in decreased competition, less innovation and fewer jobs in a rapidly shrinking mobile landscape.
Franken says that the T-Mobile purchase continues AT&T’s pattern of attracting new customers through mergers rather than by innovation.
“American consumers rely on the DOJ and the FCC to protect competition,” Franken writes. “It is only through competition that wireless spectrum usage will become more efficient, handsets more innovative, customer service more responsive, network coverage broader, and prices lower.”
Franken’s objections second those of his fellow Democrat, Sen. Herb Kohl, but the merger between the two telecommunications companies has recently received corporate support from the likes of Facebook.

Mozilla building mobile OS to battle Chrome

Mozilla revealed preliminary plans today to take the Gecko engine that drives its Firefox browser and turn it into an open-source operating system that will eventually work on phones and tablets.



Called Boot to Gecko, it is known that the source code will be released to the public "in real-time," wrote Andreas Gal, a Mozilla researcher. Gecko is the rendering engine that powers Firefox and the e-mail client Thunderbird. By contrast, while Google's Androidmobile operating system is open source, the main development work on it does not become available until after Google has green-lit its publication--sometimes not until months afterward.
"We will do this work in the open, we will release the source in real-time, we will take all successful additions to an appropriate standards group, and we will track changes that come out of that process. We aren't trying to have these native-grade apps just run on Firefox, we're trying to have them run on the web," Gal said in a forum post. Mike Shaver, Mozilla's vice president of technical strategy, said that the Boot to Gecko apps won't use the Android SDK but instead run new and current Web app APIs
He also identified four areas for development. One is new Web APIs, which means building "prototype APIs for exposing device and OS capabilities to content." This is how the operating system would support current essential mobile features such as telephony, SMS, cameras, USB, Bluetooth, and near-field chips. A second area for development is to build a privilege model, which is a key security feature for ensuring that new features are "safely exposed to pages and applications," he said.
Boot to Gecko will include some low-level Android code for kernel and driver support so that it can run on Android devices. This does not exist yet, and porting it to a new system could prove to be extremely challenging. Then there is the final area of development--that of applications. The idea behind Boot to Gecko is to create a system where native Web apps can run just as well as the native apps for iOS do on that device.
Shaver added that the company is looking at Tegra 2 devices because they offer hardware acceleration of open audio and video formats.
For people who want to get a stronger idea of what Boot to Gecko will amount to, Gal noted that its "starting point" is a device running Firefox for Android as its homescreen, with some custom APIs thrown in. He also admitted in that post that there is an "ultimate goal" to the project, that of "breaking the stranglehold of proprietary technologies over the mobile device world."