Sunday, January 2, 2011

Facebook tops Google in website hits: study (AFP)

NEW YORK (AFP) ? Facebook stole the thunder from Google this year as the most-visited website in the United States, according to a new study from Internet research firm Experian Hitwise.

The social-networking juggernaut's www.facebook.com was the top-visited website for the first time and accounted for 8.93 percent of all US visits between January and November 2010, Experian Hitwise said.

Google, the world's Internet search leader, slid to second place. Google.com drew 7.19 percent of visits, followed by Yahoo! Mail (3.52 percent), Yahoo! (3.30 percent) and YouTube (2.65 percent).

Facebook led arch-rival Google in the number of hits per month since March.

However, taking into account all of Google's websites, such as YouTube and Gmail, the Mountain View, California-based company drew 9.85 percent of the US visits, ahead of Facebook's 8.93 percent and the 8.12 percent garnered by Yahoo! sites, an Experian Hitwise spokesman said Friday.

Online tracking firm comScore last week ranked the Yahoo! family of websites as the most-visited in the US in November, ahead of Google, Microsoft websites and Facebook.

On a global scale, Google held the top position, followed by Microsoft, Facebook and Yahoo!, according to comScore.

But analyst Greg Sterling of the specialist site SearchEngineLand.com cautioned that the Hitwise study does not track website visits via mobile devices such as cell phones or tablets, and the number of searches on Google's Chrome browser, which avoids google.com, was uncertain.

"This is right now more symbolic than anything" to see Facebook overtake Google in the United States, Sterling told AFP, adding that the study confirms "Facebook growth has been dramatic."

The social-networking giant has more than 500 million active users per month in the world, and according to comScore attracted 647.5 million unique visits in November, a jump of 48 percent from a year ago.

Sterling highlighted the sharply different approaches between Google and Facebook.

"Google is a very utilitarian site, where people go to make a decision, whereas Facebook is for entertainment," he said.

But if Facebook "were to concentrate on search, they could do something that stands to really hurt Google."



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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20101231/tc_afp/usinternetitcompanyfacebookgoogle

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For investors, a gut-wrenching 2010 ended well (AP)

NEW YORK ? For investors, 2010 was a 12-month tug of war between optimism and doubt. Stocks initially strengthened, the job market didn't, and fears of economic collapse in Europe and a chilling "flash crash" left many investors almost too stunned to act.

The year ended with stock markets at their highest level since the 2008 financial crisis on signs of an improving economy. But those same signs are producing worrisome side effects: Interest rates are on the rise, gold now tops $1,400 an ounce and oil prices, poised to exceed $100 a barrel, could send pump prices to $4 a gallon.

None of that seemed possible in the spring when many investors became convinced that the economy would fall back into recession. Then starting in summer, the mood shifted.

Government reports started to show the economy was gaining some strength. Corporate profits surged. And Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke signaled that the central bank was prepared to pump hundreds of billions of dollars into the economy to stimulate demand.

By the close of trading Friday, double-dip recession fears seemed like distant memories. The Standard & Poor's 500's 15.1 percent gain for the year, after dividends, was 53 percent more than its average historical gain.

Whether the gains will continue into 2011 will depend in part on how quickly the unemployment rate, now at 9.8 percent, drops. That will, in turn, be driven by how likely consumers are to increase their spending and how likely corporations are to spend the more than $1 trillion in cash on their balance sheets.

Many on Wall Street are optimistic that the bull market won't end in 2011. "All of the economic indicators are pointing to stronger growth next year," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at New York-based brokerage firm Avalon Partners Inc.

Trading on Friday was quiet and marked by some of the lowest trading volume of the year. The Dow Jones Industrial average rose 7.8 points to 11,577.5. The S&P 500 fell less than a point to 1,257.64. The Nasdaq composite fell 10.1 to 2,652.87.

For the year, each index returned double-digit gains. Over the course of 2010:

_The Dow gained 1,149.46 points, or 11 percent. With dividends, its total return rose to 13.99 percent.

_The S&P 500 index gained 142.54 points, or 12.8 percent. Including dividends, its total return came to 15.1 percent.

? And the Nasdaq index gained 383.72, or 16.9 percent, to close at 2,652.87. After dividends, its total return came to 18 percent.

In other markets:

? Oil prices ended the year above $91 a barrel after surging 34 percent since May as demand increased from China and other emerging markets. That could push gasoline prices to $4 a gallon by summer in some parts of the country, experts say.

? Gold topped $1,420 an ounce, up 31 percent for the year. Grains and soybean prices also ended the year sharply higher. The reason: China's seemingly insatiable demand for raw materials and speculators betting that they could profitably ride the momentum higher.

? The yield on the 10-year Treasury note ended the year at 3.29 percent. That's low by historical standards, but up from an early October low of 2.38 percent that helped push mortgage rates to 50-year lows. Now mortgage rates are rising again.

? Economists are predicting the dollar will fare better in the new year after it fell against the euro and the Japanese yen in 2010.

For stock investors, the numbers mask the fact that it was a rocky year. The Dow reached 11,205 and the S&P 500 reached 1,217 in late April, then took a thrill ride downward after it became clear that Greece required an emergency bailout to deal with its debt crisis and fears of a double-dip U.S. recession grew.

Then came what came to be known as the "flash crash" on May 6. The Dow, already down about 400 points on worries about Europe, dropped 600 points in seven minutes. It rebounded 700, then fluctuated before closing with a loss of 347. The sudden drop was later attributed to a fund company that used a complex computer trading program. It had a profound effect on individual investors.

"The flash crash made retail investors take a step back and say, 'Is this really just a legalized gambling arena?'", said Scott Rostan, a financial consultant for investment banks and an adjunct professor at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

Stocks stayed in a funk through the early summer as economic reports kept pointing to an uncertain recovery, and as the battered housing market was hit again, this time by the end of tax credits for homebuyers. By July 2, the Dow bottomed out at 9,686.48.

What changed?

Shipping company UPS and construction equipment maker Caterpillar ? viewed as two bellwether indicators for the economy ? both said they saw signs of improvement.

Then just days after Bernanke promised to flood the economy with dollars, investors got unexpectedly good news on Sept. 1 about manufacturing in the U.S. and China.

"It was a market that needed stimulus and responded miraculously," said Quincy Krosby, the chief market strategist at Prudential.

The Dow rose almost 16 percent through the end of the year as investors grew more optimistic about the economy. Signs of stronger consumer spending ? including a solid holiday shopping season ? also helped.

By the end of December, investors began moving money back into U.S. stock funds after selling for every week since May.

That earlier pessimism helped other types of investments, including bonds and gold, flourish.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, rose to a yearly high of just under 4 percent in April and then plunged in October as investors kept buying the safety of U.S. government debt. That contributed to a historic drop in mortgage rates that brought 30-year fixed-rate loans to a low of 4.17 percent early in November.

A distrust of the stock market also helped fuel a boom in commodities, which finished 2010 at their highest levels in years. Gold closed above $1,400 an ounce after rising throughout the year on global economic worries. Oil prices rose from a low of $70 a barrel to close the year higher than $90.

In large part because of worries over the health of the euro, the currency shared by 16 European countries before Estonia adopted it Saturday, the dollar rose throughout the year against an index of six heavily traded currencies. It reached its peak in June before falling to nearly the level where it began the year.



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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101231/ap_on_bi_ge/us_wall_street

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Next iPad to boast flatter back panel, improved speaker? (Ben Patterson)

The curved back panel of the original iPad might be getting a lot flatter in version 2, according to a Japanese rumor site, which also speculates that a mysterious notch seen in spy shots of purported iPad 2 cases might be intended for a pumped-up speaker, not an SD card slot.

The report comes from a Japanese-language blog called MacOtakara that was spotted by AppleInsider, which passes along the pertinent (translated) details, including word that the new iPad might be a tad smaller, thanks to a trimmer front bezel.

Needless to say (but I'll say it anyway), MacOtakara's story, based on the word of an "anonymous Chinese source," qualifies only as rumor. After all, Apple has yet to even confirm that a sequel to the iPad is in the pipeline.

That said, let's get to the good stuff, starting with MacOtakara's claim that the back panel iPad 2 (or whatever it ends up being called) will be "flat like an iPod Touch."

The current iPad has a curved back, similar to the iPhone 3G and 3GS, which makes for a somewhat wobbly experience when you set the iPad on the flat surface of a desk or tablet.

MacOtakara also raises an interesting possibility for a head-scratching detail spotted in leaked case photos for the new iPad: an inch-long notch right next to the opening for Apple's standard 30-pin connector port.

Some Apple bloggers had speculated that the notch could be for a much-requested SD card slot, which would be perfect for those looking to supplement the iPad's internal storage or transferring photos to and from the tablet.

But according to MacOtakara, the notch might in fact be for a new, "wide-ranged" speaker with a "metal mesh" covering ? good news for those wanted better sound from their iPads, bad news for photographers or anyone else hoping for an adapter-free way to plug in an SD card.

The blog also claims that while the iPad 2's display would be the same size (9.7 inches) as that on the original iPad, the new iPad's front bezel may be about three millimeters smaller than that of its predecessor �?? meaning the revamped iPad might be a few millimeters shorter and narrower than the iPad 1.

MacOtakara goes on to repeat a few details that had been rumored in the past, such as the possibility that the new iPad will have both front- and rear-facing cameras, with the front lens intended for FaceTime video chat and the rear sensor capable of shooting video (although that's "unreliable information," the blog warns).

The post adds that production for the new iPad is already underway, with delivery of finished units slated for next month ? a prediction shared by industry observers, who believe that Apple will probably hold off on shipping the iPad 2 to stores until April, a year after the first iPad went on sale.

All in all, interesting reading (although again, none of this is confirmed). Personally, I'd be all for an iPad with a flatter back and a smaller front bezel, but I'd happily trade in a new speaker for an SD card slot. Thoughts?

In any case, I'd expect Apple to make some iPad announcement after the Consumer Electronics Show, where we're expecting to see a slew of pumped-up Android tablets, including Motorola's much-anticipated, dual-core Tegra 2 slate.

Related: Apple's next-gen iPad to get iPod touch-like back, wide-range speaker - rumor [AppleInsider]

? Ben Patterson is a technology writer for Yahoo! News.

Follow me on Twitter!



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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/techblog/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20101223/tc_yblog_technews/next-ipad-to-boast-flatter-back-panel-improved-speaker

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Saturday, January 1, 2011

World Of Warcraft Meets Kinect, WoW Players Get a Serious Workout (PC World)

Being a nerd's nerd, I of course put in my time running the gamut of MMORPG (Massively Multiplayer Online Roleplaying Games) titles, culminating in a 20-odd hour a week part time job raiding in World of Warcraft. 40 of us would spend long evenings night after night trying to kill various and sundry monsters for loot. Needless to say, this wasn't a very healthy hobby.

Until now?

Wired.com recently reported a Kinect hack via OpenNI (an open source framework tool for Kinect) constructed by Evan Suma, a researcher at the University of Southern California and his team. It's called FAAST (Flexible Action and Articulated Skeleton Toolkit), and it allows for basic commands and movement to be done via body motion and sound in the game.

While the current iteration allows for the most basic of commands to be sent to the game, (check out the video here) one can hope for something more intricate to come of this awesome creation. I'm not saying I want to step foot in Ragnaros' hallowed Core with 39 of my friends anytime soon (or ever again), but if I can't get a new generation of gamers away from their PC's with sordid tales of my raiding days, maybe I can support them by showing them that you can get excercise AND slay the dargon.

I think in some cases users will want to splurge on a really nice wireless headset with noise dampening tech, though. Why, you ask?

To mask the sounds of excercise induced heavy breathing.

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/videogames/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/pcworld/20101231/tc_pcworld/worldofwarcraftmeetskinectwowplayersgetaseriousworkout

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Hangover or afterparty for stocks? (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? A bout of profit taking seems likely early next year after the S&P 500 ended its best December in almost two decades, but stocks may have further to run at the start of 2011.

Technical indicators are pointing to a strained market, though recently stocks have been maintaining the momentum of late 2010.

The potential is certainly there for shares to derail next week with some important economic reports due. A repeat of last month's disappointing U.S. jobs number could spark a sell-off.

"We think in the near term markets are getting ahead of themselves," said Zahid Siddique, portfolio manager for Gabelli Equity Trust in Rye, New York. "The data has to be good for the markets to continue to go up, and if there is any weakness in the data, we think we could have a sell-off."

Analysts in a Reuters poll expect the economy added 126,00 jobs in December, up from 39,000 the prior month, but still not enough to significantly dent unemployment.

A series of global purchasing managers indexes are also due next week, including the Institute for Supply Management's two monthly surveys. They are expected to show growth quickened in December in the U.S. services and manufacturing sectors .

An array of technical factors show the market may be at the top end of its recent trading range, but strongly trending markets often produce false signals.

"There is no denying the fact that the market is overbought," said Paul Hickey, an analyst at Bespoke Investment Group in Harrison, New York. "The entire month of December the S&P 500 has closed in overbought levels everyday."

Hickey considers the S&P 500 overbought when it moves one standard deviation above its 50-day moving average. But looking at prior months where that has occurred he found performance the next month was above average instead of reverting to the mean.

"Momentum tends to carry the market further," he said.

BEST S&P DECEMBER SINCE 1991

Signs of an improving economy, tax breaks and loose monetary policy helped spur a near 20-percent rally in the S&P 500 since the end of August. The index rose 6.5 percent in the last month of the year, its best December since 1991.

The gains stalled in the last week of the year with indexes finishing essentially flat.

Siddique, who helps manage a $1.3 billion equity fund, says his firm raised cash as equities rose by paring positions in strong performing consumer discretionary and industrial sectors.

He says that worries over Europe's sovereign debt crisis, global growth and political tensions may resurface. He is looking at defensive sectors such as utilities, consumer staples and healthcare, which have lagged.

"In some of our fund we have been increasing cash allocations," he said. "So if there is a sell-off, we can reallocate that cash into the relevant sectors."

The S&P 500 relative strength index, which compares price gains to losses over a given period, has been near or above the overbought 70 level for nearly two weeks.

The index's slow stochastic and moving average convergence- divergence (MACD) levels indicate that S&P 500 may be coming to the top of its recent trading range.

Although strongly trending markets can continue in an overbought condition for some time, a convergence of those three indicators in early November heralded a 4 percent correction.

Analysts at UBS point to an 80-90 point uptrend channel for the S&P 500 with a support line linking August and November lows and a resistance line linking peaks in the same months.

That would currently place S&P support at around 1,222 and resistance at 1,314, giving the potential for a 3 percent pullback if the channel holds.

MIDTERM ELECTIONS BECKON

In 2011 the United States is also entering the third year of a presidential cycle. This theory holds that after the midterm elections presidents push less controversial legislation that could hurt markets as their sights are set on reelection.

Since 1914 the Dow Jones industrial average has gained an average of 49.3 percent over 15.5 months from its low in the midterm election year to it high in the following preelection year, according to UBS.

Transposing that onto the S&P 500 for next year could see the index peak at around 1,430 in mid-October.

But some investors who focus more on the economy and corporate results are not convinced.

Rob Russell, president of Russell & Co in Dayton, Ohio, said he expects equities to sideline in 2011 as higher corporate earnings are offset by a stagnant economy.

"Unemployment will continue to be that 800-pound gorilla," he said. "We will continue to see, like we have for a good part of this year, a sea of contradicting economic data."

(Additional reporting by Chuck Mikolajczak; Editing by Padraic Cassidy)



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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110101/bs_nm/us_usa_stocks_weekahead

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Skype could be designated illegal in China (Reuters)

BEIJING/NEW YORK (Reuters) ? The popular Internet telephone service Skype could be dealt a major setback in one of the world's largest markets as the Chinese government cracks down on what it called illegal Internet telephone providers.

A Chinese government circular from the powerful Ministry of Information and Industry Technology called for a crackdown "on illegal VoIP (voice over Internet protocol) telephone services" and said it was collecting evidence for legal cases against them. It did not name any phone companies.

Skype was still available in China on Friday evening through its joint venture partner TOM Online.

Skype had not yet been contacted by Chinese government officials, a Skype spokesman said on Friday in the United States.

The timing of a ban in one of the world's fastest growing markets could dampen investor enthusiasm for Skype as it prepares a 2011 initial public offering. The Luxembourg-based company, which has about 124 million users worldwide, is expected to be valued at about $1 billion in the IPO.

The Chinese move appeared to be aimed at protecting three government-controlled phone carriers -- China Telecom, China Unicom and China Mobile -- that provide the bulk of China's telephone services.

The South China Morning Post quoted an unidentified ministry official on Thursday as saying VoIP services could only be provided by the big three Chinese operators.

China has been known to play hardball with foreign businesses. After a months-long stand-off over censorship, China finally gave Google approval in July to keep operating its Chinese search page.

Skype has 20 million users in Asia Pacific, or 16 percent of the company's total users as of the end of June, according to a U.S. regulatory filing. The filing did not break out China's user numbers and a Skype spokesman in the United States said he did not know how many Chinese users it had.

No single country other than the United States represented more than 7 percent of Skype's average monthly user, according to the filing.

The latest news is another setback after Skype's global service outage last week, which cast doubts on the reliability of the service.

In 2005, Skype was blocked in parts of China as the government sought to ban phone calls made over the Internet.

Skype, partly owned by Web retailer eBay Inc, has been growing in popularity among Chinese users and businesses to make cheap or free international phone calls over the Internet.

"Nearly 1 in 6 people in the world live in China, and a great many of them rely on Skype to connect with families and friends, run businesses, and call people around the world," wrote Skype's Josh Silverman in an October blog post about Chinese privacy.

The Chinese circular, dated December 10, did not say what amounted to illegal services and did not name any VoIP providers it considered to be breaking the law.

Representatives of the ministry and the ministry's office gathering information for the campaign did not answer telephone calls on Friday.

Representatives of China Telecom and China Unicom did not answer phone calls on Friday. A spokeswoman for China Mobile, reached in Beijing, referred calls to the firm's Hong Kong office. Attempts to reach the Hong Kong office were not successful.

VoIP calls allow users to make international calls for much less than commercial providers, or even for free if both parties are using VoIP. Many businesses that use VoIP services to cut down on their international telephone costs could lose access to the cheaper alternative.

(Additional reporting by Sui-lee Wee; Editing by Alex Richardson, Derek Caney, Gary Hill)



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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/internet/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20101231/wr_nm/us_china_skype

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