Iliad shares drop 4 pct as mobile phone growth slows


PARIS (Reuters) - Shares in France's Iliad fell more than 4 percent after the low-cost telecoms operator founded by billionaire Xavier Niel reported slower growth at its mobile phone business Free.

Iliad said the number of new mobile customers fell to 640,000 in the third quarter from 720,000 in the second, suggesting that a price war with more established mobile operators is making it harder for Iliad's Free Mobile service to lure away their customers.

It was the slowest quarterly increase in customers for Free Mobile since its launch, although the third quarter is traditionally a slower period.

Some analysts had anticipated the slowdown and had expected Iliad to launch a new commercial formula to boost sales.

"Be patient. We will launch new offers in the months ahead, when the time is right," Iliad finance chief Thomas Reynaud told Reuters.

Iliad said in a statement that Free had 7,435,000 mobile customers at the end of September, for a mobile market share of more than 11 percent, up from 10 percent at the end of June.

Mobile now generates a third of the company's revenues, which rose 23 percent to 2.77 billion euros ($3.73 billion) in the January-to-September period.

Third-quarter revenue was up 15 percent to 944 million euros. Analysts from Barclays, Credit Suisse and JP Morgan had expected quarterly revenue of between 927 and 935 million euros.

"These solid results demonstrate Iliad's ability to deliver results, even if does not beat expectations by as much as in earlier quarters," a Paris-based trader said.

Free's no-frills deals - which cost 2 euros or 19.99 euros a month without a phone or long-term contract - have forced larger competitors France Telecom, Vivendi's SFR and Bouygues Telecom to cut costs to compete and accelerate construction of superfast 4G networks to offer a better service than Iliad.

"When the time is right, we too will offer 4G," Reynaud said, adding that competitors' 4G launches had no impact on Free mobile's growth.

Shares in Iliad are up nearly 30 percent this year, after a 36 percent rise last year, and are in line with a broader rally by a European telecoms sector index this year.

The company has a market capitalization of 9.7($1 = 0.7430 euros)

(Writing by Geert De Clercq; Editing by Mark Potter and Tom Pfeiffer)


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Microsoft finds favor with Highfields during third quarter


BOSTON Thu Nov 14, 2013 7:16pm EST

Jonathon Jacobson, Founder, Chief Investment Officer and Chief Executive Officer of Highfields Capital Management LP, speaks at the Sohn Investment Conference in New York, May 8, 2013. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

Jonathon Jacobson, Founder, Chief Investment Officer and Chief Executive Officer of Highfields Capital Management LP, speaks at the Sohn Investment Conference in New York, May 8, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Brendan McDermid

BOSTON (Reuters) - Jonathon Jacobson's Highfields Capital raised its stake in Microsoft sixfold during the third quarter to 31 million shares, a regulatory filing shows.

The Boston-based fund firm has been steadily increasing its Microsoft holdings over the last quarters, but this increase was particularly noteworthy because it was so dramatic.

Highfields oversees roughly $13 billion in assets and told investors that it would be returning some cash at year's end as it feels it can deliver better returns with less money.

In August, Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer told employees that he planned to resign the position within the next 12 months.

Hedge fund ValueAct, an activist investment firm run by Jeffrey Ubben and already a very large shareholder, also upped its investment by buying 9 million shares to raise its holdings to 66.8 million shares as of September 30. Microsoft shares now make up one-fifth of ValueAct's portfolio, according to the regulatory filing made by the hedge fund.

Microsoft offered ValueAct a board seat.

The software company's stock price has risen 17 percent in the last three months.

(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by Steve Orlofsky)


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PS4 Teardown: Beautiful Outside, Tidy Inside


The PS4 has landed and it's great—but what lurks beneath its slick, slanted frame? Fortunately that's not something you need to keep wondering, because iFixit has gone and torn the console down so we can all see the guts within.

In fact, iFixit is carrying out the teardown out live, overnight—that's how excited they are about finding out what's inside the box. So, we'll update this until things are complete but, in the meantime, here are some highlights:

The hard drive user-replaceable (it lurks beneath a simple plastic cover) and is just a standard 2.5-inch SATA drive. Upgrade away, so long as the new drive is no thicker than 9.5 mm and no smaller than 160 GB.On the downside, the PS4 will not support external USB storage.The thing is largely held together with Security Torx screws, so you better get some tools if you need to take the sucker apart.The power supply is rated at an AC Input of 100-240 volts: take it anywhere, it's universal!iFixit found that a potential problems with the HDMI port, similar to that spotted by our bros at Kotaku, where a small metal obstruction in front of the port can stop video output if you're not careful when you first plug in your cable.Weirdly, the PS4's motherboard is installed upside-down (and is very big and very green).Its EMI shielding is tough to remove, but seems to work well as a cheese grater.It has a very big fan—though we already knew that. It's designed to run smarter and quieter than the old PS3.Overall, it's incredibly tidy on the inside.Updating...

[iFixit]

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Software pioneer McAfee says he will testify about murder in Belize


By Barbara Liston

ORLANDO, Florida Wed Nov 13, 2013 6:03pm EST

Computer software pioneer John McAfee speaks with reporters outside his hotel in Miami Beach, Florida December 13, 2012. REUTERS/Joe Skipper

Computer software pioneer John McAfee speaks with reporters outside his hotel in Miami Beach, Florida December 13, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Joe Skipper

ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - Computer software pioneer John McAfee said on Wednesday he will testify willingly about the murder of his American neighbor in Belize last year, as he seeks to defend himself from a wrongful death lawsuit that blames him for the killing.

McAfee, 68, was named by police in Belize as a person of interest in the November 11, 2012, shooting of Gregory Faull, but he fled the small Central American country before he could be questioned.

McAfee denies involvement in the death of Faull, an Orlando contractor and restaurant owner. But he told Reuters in a telephone interview he would not fight a subpoena for deposition in the lawsuit.

"Of course not, because the deposition will be here in America. I've told the police in Belize that I will sit for questioning in any neutral country in the world ... I just will not go to Belize," McAfee said.

The lawsuit, which was filed Friday by Faull's estate in U.S. District Court in Orlando, accuses McAfee of shooting Faull in the head or having him shot.

The lawsuit also names two of McAfee's former girlfriends, Samantha Vanegas and Amy Herbert, describing them as McAfee's possible agents in the killing.

The estate is seeking a jury trial and damages in excess of $75,000 on behalf of Faull's 26-year-old daughter.

"While continuing to grieve, the Faull family intends to pursue all possible avenues to ensure the individual or individuals responsible for the death of Gregory Faull are brought to justice. They are confident that with the tools available in civil discovery cases in the U.S. federal courts and with the information obtained in the criminal investigation in Belize, the true facts will come to light as to how and by whom Gregory Faull met his end," wrote West Palm Beach lawyer Gary Roberts in a statement provided to Reuters on behalf of the family.

McAfee, who now lives in Portland, Oregon, also told Reuters he will file a counter-claim against Faull's estate for defamation of character and personal injury.

Faull was found dead in his home on Ambergrise Caye, the largest island in Belize. Residents of the island, where McAfee had lived for about four years, said McAfee and Faull, 52, had quarreled at times, including over McAfee's unruly dogs.

McAfee, who had previous encounters with Belize authorities and claimed to be in fear of them, sneaked illegally into Guatemala and went into hiding after the murder.

The eccentric tech pioneer, who made his fortune from the anti-virus software bearing his name, was arrested on immigration charges after being found in Guatemala. But appeals from his lawyers blocked his deportation to Belize and he eventually returned to the United States.

McAfee told Reuters he is protected at all times by a security team for fear of being kidnapped and returned to Belize.

"The Belize police have continued to say there is no evidence whatsoever linking Mr. McAfee to the death of Mr. Faull. That has been their consistent statement from day one. So there is no legal basis for them getting me back. Now kidnapping, of course I'm concerned about that," McAfee said.

Separately, in October, McAfee claimed that members of a congressional committee tried to get him to help fix the troubled Affordable Care Act software that is preventing thousands of Americans from signing up for new health insurance. But because of the government shutdown, McAfee said, the committee could neither pay him nor pay for his travel to Washington.

(Editing by Tom Brown and Ken Wills)


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Dropbox improves corporate features amid new competition from Amazon


By Gerry Shih

SAN FRANCISCO Wed Nov 13, 2013 6:37pm EST

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Dropbox Inc on Wednesday unveiled what it described as one of the most comprehensive upgrades to its service for businesses, including a feature that allows users to easily maintain both personal and corporate accounts.

The new features come at a time when large rivals like Microsoft Corp and Amazon Inc and smaller competitors are battling to win the cloud-storage market, which is widely seen as a strategic linchpin in the era of mobile computing.

The upgrades reflect the changing business focus at Dropbox - one of the most closely-watched privately held Internet companies - toward becoming a file-sharing solution for corporate customer, a critically important and lucrative market. Dropbox, valued at $4 billion by venture capital investors, is viewed as a hot prospect for an initial public offering within the next two or three years.

Dropbox said Wednesday it would let users store files in separate accounts in order to separate their personal and professional lives. The corporate Dropboxes, which are controlled by the user's employer's IT administrators, would also have additional security tools such as logs that track when files have been opened or moved. Administrators could also remotely wipe files from mobile devices connected to the corporate Dropbox.

The announcement came on the same day Amazon unveiled a similar tool called WorkSpaces for large enterprises at an event in Las Vegas.

Amazon's announcement, which sent shares of the Seattle-based giant 2 percent higher on Wednesday, underscores the intensifying competition in the area of file-sharing across multiple computers and mobile devices.

Reuters reported last week that Box, one of Dropbox's privately held competitors, had chosen bankers to lead a highly-anticipated initial public offering in early 2014. Box has positioned itself as an enterprise-grade alternative to Dropbox, with an emphasis on security and other features that corporate IT departments demand.

Conventional wisdom in Silicon Valley holds that Dropbox, which is praised for its ease of use and slick interface, needs to win over enterprise clients who are willing to pay hefty sums if it is to dominate its competition.

Dropbox offers limited amounts of storage for free to individual consumers, which had been its focus. The company said Wednesday it has 200 million consumer-grade accounts.

Dropbox for Business costs $795 a year for unlimited storage for five users and $125 for each additional user. The service has 4 million subscribers so far, Chief Executive Drew Houston said.

Ilya Fushman, the head of product for business, told Reuters that Dropbox identified its business products as the top priority for 2013.

"We don't think of Dropbox as a personal or business product anymore," Fushman said.

About 60 of Dropbox's roughly 200 employees worked for a year on the new business features, which drew resources from across the company, Fushman said. For the past half year employees have worn ties and blazers to the San Francisco office every day as a playful nod to the Dropbox for Business effort - a departure for a company with a famously geeky, unbuttoned work culture.

(Reporting by Gerry Shih; Editing by Bernard Orr)


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These Pencils Eventually Sharpen Into Spinning Tops


What do you normally do when you've sharpened a pencil down to a nub—just throw it away? That's the most likely outcome, but if you opt for these wonderful Spincils, you're instead left with a spinning top to add to your collection of desktop distractions.

These Pencils Eventually Sharpen Into Spinning TopsS

But the Spincils are beyond just recycled toys; they're individual works of art. Each one is actually a solid piece of wood that's been hand turned in a lathe to get that large bump on the end—there's no mass production done here. So don't expect them to come cheap. But on the plus side, the Spincils work like a top after just the first sharpen (albeit a little on the tipsy side) so you don't have to grind them down to a nub to play with them right away. [Ortie Design via designboom]

These Pencils Eventually Sharpen Into Spinning TopsS


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Become Internet Famous by Starring in Your Own GIF


OK, if you are one of those weirdos who thinks GIFs are irritating and pointless, this website that lets people insert their own faces into a variety of animated scenarios will not please you. Not one bit.

But if you are a sane human and love the bouquet of pop culture and pixelation that GIFs provide, then you'll want to head over to GIFyourself, where all you have to do is select a GIF, upload your face, and let them do the rest. As our own Eric Limer quickly demonstrated, it's a super easy way to creep out the world. The results are often less than perfect, sometimes an utter trainwreck, which is part of the beauty of it all. [Digg]


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