News Category

New & Updates

1.Live from New York, it's Founders Club--with M.C. Hammer

2.Mass production kicks off for XO laptops--finally

3.Alibaba IPO eclipsed by Yahoo's bad day at Congress

4.Microsoft unwraps Windows Live desktop suite

5.While Shi Tao rots

6.Hot deal: Amazing floating house for $4 mil to $5 mil

7.Now on Google Earth: Map where Congress spends your tax dollars

8.New advertising strategy is a big gamble for Facebook

9.Sony Ericsson unveils new phones for North America

10.ABC: Target stores won't sell 'Manhunt 2'

Highest Hits 10

1.No need for a Fake Marc Fleury

2.Notebooks continue to drive growth in worldwide PC market

3.Survey says: Microsoft ecosystem is biggest

4.MySpace platform opening up. Finally.

5.Radar Networks' Twine: Semantic Web meets information overload

6.Flickr getting a geography revamp

7.At NYC Flickr party, you're always on candid camera

8.Web 2.0 Summit Twittercast

9.Hakia launching new spin on social searching

10.What do 16,000 people do at Google?

Microsoft and Facebook: The $240 million poke


It's official. Facebook decided to ignore the friend request from Google and instead clicked "OK" to one from Microsoft.

The deal, reported first in this spot earlier Wednesday, gives Microsoft a much-needed win against its Silicon Valley search rival. As noted over at Caroline McCarthy's blog, The Social, Microsoft is paying $240 million for a stake in Facebook, in a deal that values the social networking company at $15 billion. That's at the high end of what had been rumored.

Under the deal, Microsoft will also get an expanded role in Facebook's ad sales, becoming "the exclusive third-party advertising platform partner for Facebook," and also beginning to sell ads internationally. The two companies' prior deal covered only banner ads and only in the U.S.

So how important is the deal for Microsoft? Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster put it this way earlier Wednesday. "They've been beaten by Google since the beginning of time," Munster said. "They may want to make a statement that they aren't going to sit on the sidelines."

Well, it's definitely a statement. Let's see what Wall Street and the industry make of that statement. A conference call with analysts is due to start shortly.