Courier

Links 3/23/2010

Posted by Steven Russolillo on March 23, 2010
Banks, Economy, Federal Reserve, Financials, Housing, Internet, Markets, Media, S&P 500, Technology, Treasury Department, Unemployment, Washington / Comments Off

- “Here we are, up 70% or so from the lows of over a year ago, and there is no uniformity of thought – which is probably a good thing,” Barry Ritholtz says.

- Treasury’s Geithner insists a resolution authority will help manage a failure of a large cross-border financial institution. “It simply will not,” former IMF chief economist Simon Johnson writes. “Mr. Geithner wanted to sound tough. But is he really coming out to fight? Or did he and his colleagues already throw in the towel?”

- Palm hopes distribution deal with AT&T (T) will boost sagging smartphone sales, but analysts aren’t so sure, John Paczkowski reports.

- “The home buying tax credit expires at the end of April and time is running out,” Miller Tabak’s Peter Boockvar says. “Bottom line, the next big test for this phase of the housing recovery is just ahead.”

- February existing home sales are proof the home buyer tax credit “has run out of gas,” Karl Denninger writes at the Market Ticker.

- Year-over-year decline in housing inventory is getting smaller. “This is something to watch,” Calculated Risk says. “This slow decline in the inventory is especially concerning with 8.6 months of supple in February – well above normal.”

- “Once upon a time, you could set your watch with the Google-Goldman super-tell duopoly,” Todd Harrison says at Minyanville. “As both are pointing due south today, it’s worthy of a mention.” Google (GOOG) drops 1.5% to $549; Goldman Sachs (GS) drops 0.8% at $174.83, but the Dow Jones Industrial Average rises 103 points.

- UK authorities arrested of six men, including an employee of hedge fund Moore Capital and another from Deutsche Bank, in what’s being billed by the government as a major crackdown on insider trading, WSJ reports.

- Solar stocks, which got hit hard during the bear market, have been really struggling during the recovery, Bespoke notes. For solar stocks over the last six months, “it’s not a pretty sight,” firm says. “Is now the time to buy or will solar continue to trade lower?”

- Jeff Saut, Barry Ritholtz, Bob Doll and Mike Santoli all correctly called the bull market, Josh Brown writes at The Reformed Broker.

- Microsoft (MSFT) doesn’t want to talk about the Courier, a rumored response to Apple’s (AAPL) iPad, but it’s willing to concede the blogosphere is a great way to read about it. All Things Digital says MSFT’s JobsBlog tells those looking for a job to check out “online chatter” about, among other things, “the upcoming Courier digital journal.” The JobsBlog links to a post on Engadget that claims exclusive pictures and details.

(UPDATE: Looks like someone at Microsoft’s (MSFT) JobsBlog might be in trouble. MSFT has now deleted a reference to its rumored Courier tablet from a JobsBlog post. “Hilarious,” All Things D’s Peter Kafka tweets. The post is still on JobsBlog but no longer mentions the Courier.)

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Microsoft’s Tablet Looks Great, But Keep In Mind It’s A Microsoft Gadget

Posted by Steven Russolillo on September 23, 2009
Markets, Technology / 1 Comment
It does look pretty snazzy

It does look pretty snazzy

While the tech world eagerly awaits the tablet Apple’s (AAPL) reportedly developing, Microsoft (MSFT) may be readying its own tablet-like device. Images and specs of its version stormed the blogosphere late Tuesday night.

Microsoft’s reportedly developing a device called “Courier” and is currently in the “late prototype” stage of development, Gizmodo reports.

“It’s not a tablet, it’s a booklet,” blog says. “The dual 7-inch (or so) screens are multitouch, and designed for writing, flicking and drawing with a stylus, in addition to fingers.”

The fact that the Courier can fold like a book represents a stark contrast from reported designs of Apple’s tablet. “The Courier user experience presented here is almost the exact opposite of what everyone expects the Apple tablet to be, a kung fu eagle claw to Apple’s tiger style,” Gizmodo says.

Microsoft said it does not comment on rumors or speculation.

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