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Battle to sell the iPhone heats up in Japan
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Oct 7, 2011

YouTube launches online movie rentals in Britain
San Francisco (AFP) Oct 7, 2011 - YouTube on Friday began letting people in Britain rent movies for viewing online at the Google-owned video-sharing website.

"We've got some cracking films to keep everyone entertained through the upcoming winter months and beyond," YouTube business product manager Matteo Vallone said in a blog post announcing the launch in Britain.

More than a thousand full-length films from studios in Hollywood or Britain are available for streaming online as rentals at youtube.com/movies, according to Vallone.

Titles in the film library ranged from Batman blockbuster "The Dark Knight" to Monty Python's "The Meaning of Life."

YouTube launched online film rental services in the United States and Canada earlier this year as it continued to expand from an online locale for sharing homemade videos to a commercial site for online movie and television streaming.


Japan's third-largest mobile carrier Softbank on Friday unveiled a lower monthly fee for the new iPhone than bigger rival KDDI, as competition for smartphone users heats up among the nation's mobile firms.

Softbank's exclusive grip on the iPhone in Japan ended with KDDI having struck a deal to also sell the popular device. Both firms began taking advance orders Friday ahead of the iPhone 4S's October 14 launch.

Softbank had enjoyed a monopoly on the iPhone as Apple's only carrier in Japan since the phone was released in the country in 2008. It also carries the iPad tablet computer.

On Friday, the company unveiled a fixed monthly data communication fee of 4,410 yen ($58) for the iPhone 4S, undercutting the 4,980 yen announced earlier by rival KDDI.

Softbank announced the plan at a hurriedly arranged press conference less than four hours before the two firms began taking advance orders, helping its shares close up 6.50 percent at 2,456 yen on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

KDDI shares closed up 1.42 percent at 568,000 yen.

Competition in Japan's smartphone market is to heat up with Softbank and KDDI battling to win iPhone users on top of challenges from other phones such as the Galaxy made by South Korea's Samsung, offered by top carrier NTT DoCoMo.

The iPhone 4S features a speedier processor, a built-in "personal assistant" that responds to voice commands and a more powerful camera.

Its unveiling on Tuesday was met with disappointment that it was not the revamped next-generation iPhone that many Apple fans had hoped for.

However, some analysts say consumer demand could be shaped by an outpouring of emotion surrounding this week's death of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs.

Yusuke Tsunoda, telecom analyst at Tokai Tokyo Research, said "it is difficult to see a clear positive" for both Softbank and KDDI.

"It is surely negative for Softbank that its iPhone monopoly has broken down with users now having another option," he said.

Friday's jump in Softbank shares "does not necessarily determine the future direction of the stock," he said, arguing Softbank's fees were not low enough to sway those loyal to KDDI's 'au' network.

Offering the popular smartphone will be sure to "benefit 'au' as the iPhone helped Softbank snatch customers in the past," Tsunoda said.

"But it is still uncertain how many new subscribers KDDI can win," he said.

"I do not expect the benefit would show in (sales) figures soon as many consumers are likely to take a wait-and-see stance" before they decide which company they will choose, he said.

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EU approves Microsoft's Skype takeover
Brussels (AFP) Oct 7, 2011 - European anti-trust officials approved on Friday US technology giant Microsoft's $8.5-billion takeover of Internet voice and video leader Skype.

"The deal would not significantly impede effective competition across the single European market" of half a billion consumers, the European Commission said in a statement.

Microsoft's purchase is aimed at boosting its presence in an online arena dominated by Google and Facebook, both of whom were also believed to have been interested in Skype alongside computing giant Cisco.

Skype users can make low-cost or free phone calls over the Internet using their computers or smartphones. Skype bypasses the standard telephone network by channelling voice and video calls over the Web.

One of the top applications on Apple's iPhone and on smartphones powered by Google's Android software, Skype has some 170 million users who will now be able to "Skype" using Windows-powered phones or even Xbox game consoles.

"In the area of consumer communications, the investigation found that the parties' activities mainly overlap for video communications, where Microsoft is active through its Windows Live Messenger," the European Union executive said.

"However, the Commission considers that there are no competition concerns in this growing market where numerous players, including Google, are present.

"For enterprise communications, the investigation confirmed that Skype has a limited market presence for these products and does not compete directly with Microsoft's enterprise communication product Lync, which is used mostly by large enterprises," it added.

Skype was founded in 2003 and acquired by online auction giant eBay in September 2005. It was sold to an investment group led by Silver Lake in November 2009 in a deal that valued the company at $2.75 billion.

Microsoft's biggest acquisition until now had been its 2007 buy of digital marketing firm aQuantive for $6.3 billion. Microsoft unsuccessfully tried to buy Yahoo! in 2008 for $47.5 billion.



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