Sunday 20 March 2011

AT&T's stunning $39B buyout of T-Mobile raises regulatory and competitive questions

AT&T's takeover of T-Mobile creates largest U.S. carrier | AT&T CEO's compensation slips 6% to $27.3 million

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AT&T's stunning $39B buyout of T-Mobile raises regulatory and competitive questions
AT&T's surprise buyout of T-Mobile USA for $39 billion has industry watchers scrambling to figure out what the deal means for subscribers, the U.S. cellular industry and investors. Read More



AT&T's takeover of T-Mobile creates largest U.S. carrier
AT&T will buy T-Mobile USA for $39 billion in cash and stock, easily making AT&T the nation's largest wireless carrier, ahead of top-ranked competitor Verizon Wireless and reducing the number of major national wireless carriers from four to three. Read More

AT&T CEO's compensation slips 6% to $27.3 million
AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson received a smaller bonus and the company slashed the value of his executive perks in 2010, as the telecommunications carrier reported a slight uptick in revenue and a giant leap in net income compared to a year earlier. Read More

T-Mobile USA loses subscribers but gains smartphones
T-Mobile USA suffered a net loss of 23,000 customers in the fourth quarter but gained 1 million smartphone users, which helped to increase the data revenue that the carrier pulled in from an average subscriber. Read More



GOODIES FROM THE SUBNETS
Up for grabs from Microsoft Subnet: a Windows 7 Enterprise Technician class for three people. From Cisco Subnet: 15 copies of VMware ESXi books. Enter here.

SLIDESHOWS

Perks drive up pay for tech CEOs
Many tech vendors have shied away from extravagant perks, but there are still plenty worth highlighting. Like a $1.5 million tab for home security. Or how about the $36,619 one company paid to reimburse its CEO for the taxes he had to pay on the $106,589 he gained by using company aircraft for personal flights? Read on to find out which tech CEOs enjoyed the priciest perks in 2010 and which ones went to work perk-free.

First look at Microsoft Internet Explorer 9
Microsoft has a real competitor once again with IE9, released at midnight Monday night on Windows 7 and Vista after several months of beta testing. The focus is on speed, privacy and simplicity, with a stripped-down interface, tracking protection, pinned sites, jump lists and enhanced support for HTML5.

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