As Ballmer continues pursuit of Yahoo, former AOL chief sees burst of consolidation.
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WiMax pioneer sees churn rate increase; lenders, shareholders are last hurdles for joint venture with Sprint Nextel.
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The way to blunt Tina Fey’s YouTube hit impersonation is to join her on the show.
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Board, now with Icahn contingent, said to OK new talks with Time Warner’s online unit.
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Unlike its rivals who chose WiMax, New York's maverick cable operator picks Wi-Fi for the largest free wireless mesh network in the United States.
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Subscription revenue falls 29% in second quarter, dragging down results at parent Time Warner.
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The aging software giant and the fading Internet pioneer are looking at other options beyond a merger.
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Microsoft said to have approached Time Warner and News Corp. about a plan to split Yahoo assets.
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Analysts say Microsoft could revisit the merger, though budding Yahoo-Google partnership could present a roadblock.
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Media company moves from potential third-round investor to owner of ad-network creator.
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Real money goes to 23 companies that oversee virtual worlds in the first quarter, according to a research firm.
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Time Warner unit seeks to charge up social networker with its AIM instant messaging service; Balderton Capital reaps windfall.
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CEO Robert Iger says company has no appetite for Time Warner unit; sees big digital future.
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As talks reportedly progress with Time Warner on a combination with AOL, company moves to forestall a proxy fight with Microsoft.
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Time Warner unit, in need of Harry Potter magic, pursues 'Platform A' advertising strategy with acquisition of venture-backed firm.
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Time Warner's Internet division says it will let people opt out of online advertisements that are presented based on the web sites users have visited.
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AOL plans to cut deeper into its work force in move to slash costs and maneuver toward ad-based model.
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Internet portal consolidates its online advertising units, part of the company's final push to transform itself into an ad-supported business.
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CFO says cable firm is not just winning the war with the phone companies, it is escalating it.
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Wireless carriers let customers use their cell phones to set up TV shows to record.
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