Google officially acquires AdMob

It was only a (brief) matter of time once it cleared the FTC’s final approval last week (with a special thanks to Apple’s iAd): Google is now the proud owner of one AdMob. According to Product Management VP Susan Wojcicki, the company is now integrating all the teams and products together. Full details are at the Official Google Blog, and after the break, check out an email purportedly from AdMob CEO Omar Hamoui.

Continue reading Google officially acquires AdMob

Google officially acquires AdMob originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 May 2010 18:15:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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FTC approves Google’s AdMob buy, cites Apple’s iAd competition

Google’s attempt to swoop in and buy AdMob out from under Apple was looking like a Pyrrhic victory for a second there, as Federal Trade Commission approval of the deal hung in the balance based on concerns that El Goog would control far too much of the online advertising market. It’s ironic, then, that Apple’s acquisition of Quattro Wireless and the introduction of the iAd platform in iPhone OS 4 is what convinced the feds to let Google’s acquisition go through — the FTC says that Apple’s entry into the market will provide significant competition to AdMob, regardless of whether or not it’s owned by Google. That means Google’s free to pursue all the ad-based initiatives in Froyo it announced yesterday at I/O, and it means we should see the already-heated rhetoric between Mountain View and Cupertino get another notch hotter. It’s going to be a wild summer, folks — get ready.

Update: Here’s a statement from AdMob founder and CEO Omar Hamoui on the deal — he’s got a fuller piece on his blog, linked below.

“We are extremely pleased with today’s decision from the Federal Trade Commission to clear Google’s acquisition of AdMob. Over the past six months we’ve received a great deal of support from across the mobile industry – and we deeply appreciate it. Our focus is now on working with the team at Google team to quickly close the deal.”

FTC approves Google’s AdMob buy, cites Apple’s iAd competition originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 May 2010 12:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Brad Stone (Twitter)  |  sourceFTC, Google, AdMob blog  | Email this | Comments

Cisco buys MOTO Development Group to beef up consumer design chops

Cisco’s already taken some big steps into the consumer market by buying the Flip cam line and releasing the Valet routers, but the company isn’t done yet — it’s just acquired the MOTO Development Group, a San Francisco design house that’s worked on a variety of high-profile products like Zune 2.0 and the LiveScribe Pulse. MOTO’s also done some work on Android-based e-readers and MIDs that never really went anywhere, but you probably know the company best for its controversial smartphone touchscreen linearity test, which caused so much ruckus the firm actually re-did the whole thing with a robot in charge. Cisco says the MOTO crew will live in the consumer products division, alongside Linksys, Valet, and Flip, so we should see some interesting cross-pollination soon — and based on Cisco’s middling recent efforts like the Flip Slide HD, we’d even say MOTO might do well to lead a total revamp of the company’s approach to consumer design. We’ll see how it goes.

Cisco buys MOTO Development Group to beef up consumer design chops originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 May 2010 14:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink GigaOM  |  sourceCisco PR  | Email this | Comments

Motorola rumored to have acquired Azingo, part of some grander OS plans?

This one isn’t official just yet, but if some changes in employment status on LinkedIn is any indication, it looks like Motorola may have recently acquired mobile Linux OS company Azingo. It may not exactly be a major player in the mobile OS field, but its Linux-based Azingo Mobile OS does look to be capable enough (complete with a Webkit-based browser and Flash runtime), and the acquisition is especially interesting in light of some recent comments made by Motorola co-CEO Sanjay Jha. Back during Moto’s Q1 earnings call, he said that he has “always felt that owning your OS is important, provided you have an ecosystem, you have all the services and you have an ability and the scale to execute on keeping that OS at the leading edge,” adding that he continues to believe “that at some point, if we have all of those attributes, that owning our own OS will be a very important thing.” Is Azingo Mobile that OS? Probably not, but it’ll certainly be interesting to see where this leads — as long as it doesn’t lead to something called MOTOZINGO.

Motorola rumored to have acquired Azingo, part of some grander OS plans? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 May 2010 14:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple acquires virtual assistant search app maker Siri

Apple has acquired Siri, a company that makes a virtual assistant app. Siri was inspired by DARPA’s CALO — the Cognitive Assistant that Learns and Organizes — project. Originally designed to help streamline military personnel’s activities, the consumer app focuses on helping you find things like restaurants, making use of speech recognition to boot. Essentially a smart search, there’s plenty of speculation of course as to what this means about the direction that Apple might be taking… and that direction seems to lead towards Google-y territory. Now we don’t want to speculate too much, but we’ll be watching to see how this plays out over the next few weeks. The terms of the acquisition aren’t known, meaning we have no idea how much Apple paid for the small startup, but Business Insider guesses the deal could be worth somewhere in the neighborhood of $100 to $200 million.

Apple acquires virtual assistant search app maker Siri originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Apr 2010 19:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP buys Palm: the liveblog

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Well, we can’t say we were expecting HP to step up and be the one to buy Palm, but here we are, getting ready to liveblog the conference call. The deal is worth some $1.2b, and we’ve heard that HP is “doubling down” on webOS, so we’re eager to find out what’s in store — and, quite frankly, we’re excited to repeatedly hear that it’s really, really true. It’s about to start at 5PM EST, keep it locked right here.

Continue reading HP buys Palm: the liveblog

HP buys Palm: the liveblog originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Apr 2010 16:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP buys Palm

HP has just announced that it’s acquiring Palm to the tune of $1.2 billion, which works out to $5.70 per share of Palm common stock. The deal is planned to close by July 31, which marks the end of HP’s third fiscal quarter of the year. Current Palm CEO Jon Rubinstein is “expected to remain with the company,” though it’s not said in what capacity. Press release after the break. There’ll be a call to discuss the acquisition in more detail (well, we hope in more detail) at 5PM ET, so we’ll keep you abreast as we learn more.

Update: PreCentral‘s managed to grab a copy of Rubinstein’s letter to Palm employees.

Continue reading HP buys Palm

HP buys Palm originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Apr 2010 16:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple purchases Intrinsity, just 498 more ARM licensees to go

With P.A. Semi under its belt, and now “people familiar with the deal” reporting to The New York Times that a purchase of Intrinsity is a go, Apple’s march to ARM preeminence is becoming much more clear. A rumor about an Intrinsity purchase surfaced a few weeks ago when the processor design firm’s website went down and a few of its employees switched their LinkedIn employee status over to Apple, but now we’ve got some solid confirmation — though Apple and Intrinsity are still staying tight-lipped about the deal. Intrinsity’s rumored contribution to the iPad’s A4 chip is a modified A8 core it designed dubbed the Hummingbird, which squeezes 1GHz of performance out of a chip regularly limited to a mere 650MHz. It’s unlikely that this acquisition will shed much more light on the internals of the iPad or future Apple devices — in fact, it might help obfuscate them — but it’s clear that Apple is dead set on owning as much IP and “smart people” in relation to ARM as it can muster. Of course, the next big rumor on this front is a purchase of ARM itself, but that’s an entirely different can of worms.

Apple purchases Intrinsity, just 498 more ARM licensees to go originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Apr 2010 17:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC decides against bidding for Palm, kills our buzz

Don’t tell us we didn’t try. In spite of all our pleading for HTC to acquire the troubled Palm, Inc. and produce a sparkling union of awesome, Reuters is this morning reporting that the Taiwanese hardware manufacturer has decided against the idea. According to an internal source, there “just weren’t enough synergies to take the deal forward.” Then again, this conclusion was reached after HTC reviewed Palm’s numbers, so maybe that’s just a nice way of saying that Palm’s financials are worse than we might think. We’re also told that now only Lenovo remains as a serious contender out of Asia, following the stalling of talks between Huawei and Rubinstein’s crew. Such a deal would make plenty of sense given Lenovo’s cash reserves and mobile aspirations, but it’d be nowhere near as exciting for our geeky imaginations.

[Thanks, ninellec]

HTC decides against bidding for Palm, kills our buzz originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Apr 2010 02:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Palm CEO still thinks company can go it alone, open to webOS licensing deals

In the face of a near-constant stream of buyout rumors the past couple weeks, Palm boss Jon Rubinstein is holding the line he’s held ever since he’s taken the helm — well most of the line, anyway. In a chat with Financial Times today, the CEO said that he still believes that “Palm can survive as an independent company” and that he’s got a plan to get the company spitting black ink rather than red, but that “if someone comes to the board with a reasonable offer of course it’s something [they’d] have to consider,” which isn’t anything materially different than he’s said in the past — it’s just good business sense, and it’s a very cautiously-worded soundbite.

Rubinstein did say a couple things of note, though. First, he mentioned that they’re working “fast and furious on new handsets” with a “strong pipeline” of new goodies, which gives us great hope that we’re finally going to see something that doesn’t look like a Pre or a Pixi soon. He’s also opening up to the idea of licensing webOS to third parties, confirming sentiment we’d heard a few days back; he’s looking at it from a pretty objective business perspective, saying that “if there’s an appropriate strategic relationship or business deal that makes sense to us then of course we would license webOS because obviously the more scale we get the more the benefit there is to us.” That sounds good from our end, especially thinking back to the overwhelming awesomeness of the mighty Sony NZ90 back in the Palm OS days. Any way you look at it, though — independent or acquired — it sounds like Rubinstein has every intention of making more waves in 2010.

Palm CEO still thinks company can go it alone, open to webOS licensing deals originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Apr 2010 20:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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