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INTERNET SPACE
Yahoo builds mobile muscle with Flurry buy
by Staff Writers
San Francisco (AFP) July 21, 2014


Netflix earnings double as membership tops 50 million
San Francisco (AFP) July 21, 2014 - Netflix said Monday the number of subscribers to its online television service now tops 50 million in over 40 countries as the company reported stronger-than-expected earnings.

Netflix shares were up slightly to $453.40 in after-market trading that followed release of earnings figures that showed profit in the three months ending June 30 more than doubled from the same period a year earlier.

The Los Gatos, California-based online streaming television titan reported that profit in the quarter jumped to $71 million as compared to $29.5 million in the same quarter last year on revenue that climbed about 25 percent to $1.34 billion.

"Fifteen years after launching our subscription service, we have over fifty million members enjoying Netflix in 40 countries," Netflix chief Reed Hastings and chief financial officer David Wells said in the letter.

"As we gain new members, we are investing to further improve our content and member experience, and to expand the global availability of our service."

They credited original programming such as "Orange is the New Black" with helping drive a rise in subscriptions that it predicted will continue through the current quarter with the addition of 1.3 million more members.

The company reported growth in all of its markets, saying the number of members outside the United States grew to 13.8 million in a 78 percent increase from the same period a year earlier.

Netflix is set to launch in Germany , France, Austria, Switzerland, Belgium, and Luxembourg in September.

The company said that later this year it will also introduce gift cards to be sold in stores in Canada, Mexico, Germany, and the United States to make it easier to join Netflix.

Since it launched its streaming service in 2007, Netflix has become the world's leading Internet television network. Netflix says it streams more than a billion hours, collectively, of digital films and television shows to online viewers each month.

Facebook lets users squirrel items away
San Francisco (AFP) July 21, 2014 - Facebook on Monday began letting people squirrel away online tidbits such as links to chew on more thoroughly later.

"Now you can save items that you find on Facebook to check out later when you have more time," software engineer Daniel Giambalvo said in a blog post on the leading social network.

"You can save items like links, places, movies, TV and music."

The feature is being added as Facebook users increasingly connect with the social network from mobile devices while on the go, with only snippets of time to explore Internet offerings.

Letting people save items for later scrutiny encourages people to return and spend more time on Facebook, increasing opportunities for the social network to cash in on money-making tools such as advertising.

California-based Facebook said users have the option of keeping saved items private or sharing them with friends via the social network.

The "Save" feature will be rolled out during the next few days to those using computer browsers or mobile devices powered by Apple of Android software, according to Giambalvo.

Yahoo continued its quest for renewed relevance with the purchase of a startup specializing in analyzing and making money from mobile applications.

Yahoo did not disclose how much it paid for San Francisco-based Flurry, but online reports valued the deal in the hundreds of millions of dollars for the startup founded in 2005.

"Yahoo is committed to being a part of consumers' daily life on mobile," Flurry chief executive Simon Khalaf said in an online post.

"More importantly, Yahoo knows that it can't do this alone."

The take-over will provide Flurry resources to ramp up platforms for developers to build applications, target users, and explore ways to make money, Yahoo said in a release.

Yahoo maintained that 170,000 developers use Flurry analytics tools and that Flurry sees app activity from 1.4 billion devices each month.

- Courting coveted app makers -

Application creators are seen as crucial allies by technology firms eager to have fun, hip, or functional mini-programs that attract users to their products.

The Sunnyvale, California-based Internet pioneer saw more than 450 monthly active users reaching out to it using mobile devices in the second quarter of this year.

"We want to harness our collective innovative spirit and bolster the mobile ecosystem by providing developers the analytics and monetization solutions to drive their success,"Yahoo senior vice president of advertising technology Scott Burke said in a release.

Yahoo has been on a buying spree since former Google executive Marissa Mayer took the helm two years ago.

Money from a shrewd investment Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang made early on in Chinese Internet powerhouse Alibaba has pumped significant cash in the California company's coffers.

Earlier this month, Yahoo announced it bought an Israel-based startup specializing in streaming high-quality video to computers and mobile devices.

Financial terms of the deal to acquire RayV were also not disclosed. RayV was to become part of Yahoo's research and development team in Tel Aviv.

Along with tuning into mobile devices, Yahoo is ramping up its offerings for streaming video live or on demand.

Yahoo last week launched a Live Nation Channel on Yahoo Screen promised to serve up a new live music concert daily for a year.

Yahoo has been shedding its online search engine past in favor of a future as a venue for premier digital content and services, particularly aimed at smartphones and tablet computers.

The company has enlisted news, music and television stars for online magazines focused on technology, film and food.

Facebook lets users squirrel items away
San Francisco (AFP) July 21, 2014 - Facebook on Monday began letting people squirrel away online tidbits such as links to chew on more thoroughly later.

"Now you can save items that you find on Facebook to check out later when you have more time," software engineer Daniel Giambalvo said in a blog post on the leading social network.

"You can save items like links, places, movies, TV and music."

The feature is being added as Facebook users increasingly connect with the social network from mobile devices while on the go, with only snippets of time to explore Internet offerings.

Letting people save items for later scrutiny encourages people to return and spend more time on Facebook, increasing opportunities for the social network to cash in on money-making tools such as advertising.

California-based Facebook said users have the option of keeping saved items private or sharing them with friends via the social network.

The "Save" feature will be rolled out during the next few days to those using computer browsers or mobile devices powered by Apple of Android software, according to Giambalvo.

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New York (AFP) July 18, 2014
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