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Verizon reached a deal to buy Alltel for $28.1 billion, which would make the combined company the largest wireless carrier
in the U.S. over AT&T. While that was, arguably, the week's biggest news, it couldn't match the jaw-dropping word that Broadcom
co-founder Henry Nicholas is accused by the government of storing drugs in a warehouse for more than nine years, and of spiking
drinks of industry executives and customers with ecstasy. An indictment also charged him in an alleged stock option back-dating
scheme.
1. Verizon Wireless to buy Alltel and In Alltel deal, Verizon bolsters Western front : Verizon wants to buy Alltel in a $28.1 billion deal that would leapfrog Verizon over AT&T to become the largest wireless
provider in the U.S. Alltel is the fifth largest wireless carrier in the country and its 13 million customers would give Verizon
80 million subscribers compared to AT&T's 71 million or so. AT&T picked up more than a few of that total when it merged with
Cingular in 2004.
The weeks top news and analysis, July 28-Aug. 1 - MarketWatch:: Technology. Health Care. Retail. Automobiles. Economy More Top Ten stories. 7:25 PM 8/8/08. The top stories of the week from MarketWatch. 4:47 PM 7/25/08 http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/weeks-top-news-analysis-julD-4326-80CD-EC88F8BCD163}HOME |
2. Broadcom co-founder drugged drinks, indictment says : Broadcom co-founder Henry Nicholas maintained a warehouse for more than nine years where he kept drugs including ecstasy,
methamphetamine and cocaine, according to a federal indictment charging him with possession and distribution of drugs and
backdating stock options that led to the largest write-down in a backdating scandal at a U.S. company. Nicholas put ecstasy
in the drinks of industry executives and Broadcom customers, the indictment alleges. Former Chief Financial Officer William
Ruehle was also indicted in the alleged stock-option backdating.
3. Nvidia goes after Intel with Tegra processors, Intel, Via face off over low-cost laptops, and AMD lets cat out of bag with puma launch : At the giant Computex trade show in Taiwan this week, AMD unleashed its Puma laptop chip platform. And Nvidia got into
the mobile Internet device market with its Tegra processor family based on the Arm core, which puts it in competition with
Intel's Centrino Atom. Meanwhile, the heightened rivalry between Intel and Via was evident at the show. The two are squaring
off as big guns in the thriving low-cost laptop market.
Techs Top 10 Hot Growth Companies:: Apple and Google continued to log big gains this year. Suppliers to chipmakers and companies in the telecom sector also scored robust growth in 2006 http://images.businessweek.com/ss/06/12/1221_techgrowth/index_01.htmHOME |
4. Google loses big in H-1B lottery as Congress gets new visa push : Senators Barbara Boxer, a California Democrat, and Judd Gregg, a New Hampshire Republican, introduced a Senate companion
bill to a House of Representatives proposal that would allow foreign students who graduate from U.S. universities to have
permanent resident status as long as they have a job offer. Meanwhile in H-1B visa news, Google officials said on a public
blog that 90 of its 300 applications for such visas were denied in a lottery the government conducted after U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services received 163,000 applications for 85,000 visas. Google is among the tech companies pushing hard for
the U.S. to raise the cap on H-1B visas for skilled workers.
The weeks 10 best Personal Finance stories -- Feb. 18-22 - MarketWatch:: them, here are the top 10 Personal Finance stories from MarketWatch for the week of Feb. 18 See the weeks Top 10 news and analysis stories. E-mail. Print http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/personal-finance-daily-weekA-4549-BB40-79AA0AAED1FB}HOME |
5. Adobe offers Acrobat 9 : Adobe unveiled acrobat.com, featuring beta versions of hosted document services. Adobe also provided details about Acrobat
9.0 document-sharing software, which is due out in the next few weeks and includes support for Flash multimedia technology.
6. New crypto virus a looming threat : A variant has emerged of the Windows-based encryptor virus Gpcode, which hasn't been around for more than a year. This
is the virus that encrypts a victim's data and then demands a ransom to unscramble the data. This variant uses 1,024-bit algorithm
that security researchers have not been able to crack, making it a potentially major threat, according to Kaspersky Labs,
which discovered the variant. "Up until now, we were able to crack the algorithms," says Roel Schouwenberg, senior antivirus
researcher at Kaspersky Lab.
Nortel Unveils Vision, Strategy for Israeli High-Performance Net
Busy Friday Leads to Strong Close for Net Stocks |