Nintendo will slash the price of its key new 3DS handheld videogame device by nearly 50% -- a stark admission that a product Nintendo has placed a huge bet on has failed to take off.
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Twitter is rolling out a new advertising offering that ensures that "promoted tweets" are seen by followers.
Groupon has attracted scrutiny from regulators over a newfangled accounting metric it is using to market itself to investors ahead of its IPO.
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Sony said it slipped to a net loss in its fiscal first quarter, squeezed by the impact of the March 11 disasters, and lowered its earnings forecast for the fiscal year, citing weak sales of televisions as well as the yen's strength versus the euro.
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Chinese E-commerce company Alibaba Group Holding said the first mobile phone using an Alibaba-developed operating system will go on sale in China at the end of the month, kicking off competition with Apple, Google and Microsoft.
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Motorola Mobility pulled itself out of a deep dive last year by turning out some of the first real competitors to the iPhone, but missteps have handicapped the company this year amid a growing battle with formidable Asian giants.
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Sprint Nextel reported a wider loss in the second quarter and lost more contract customers than expected as it faced heightened competition from its rivals who carry the Apple iPhone.
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Amazon is getting even bigger at a staggering—and costly—rate. The company reported that its second-quarter revenue jumped 51% to $9.9 billion, but the increased sales came at a high cost, as the company spends to add warehouses and digital offerings
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The popularity of Apple devices in Japan continued to underpin earnings at Softbank, the country's third-largest mobile carrier, which saw quarterly net profit rise nearly five-fold.
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Hackers accessed computer databases of SK Communications, which runs South Korea's largest social network and may have obtained private details of 35 million people.
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Japan's Fujitsu swung to a net loss in the latest quarter, hurt like most of its peers in the technology sector by absorbing costs related to the March 11 disasters.
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Logitech's CEO resigned after the Swiss computer-peripherals maker swung to a quarterly net loss and lowered its outlook for full-year profit and sales.
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German chipmaker Infineon Technologies reported a 51% increase in third-quarter net profit as sales growth beat expectations, driven by demand from the auto and industrial sectors.
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Time Warner Cable's earnings rose 23%, boosted by strong results in its business services and higher revenue from residential users.
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Alcatel-Lucent looked to reassure investors that demand for telecoms equipment in the U.S isn't tapering off, after the company's share price plunged despite it posting a second-quarter profit.
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Toshiba's profit rose slightly, as lower restructuring costs and solid energy-saving appliance sales in Japan lessened the sting that the March 11 disaster had on its operations.
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An accounting metric used by Groupon has attracted the attention of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Also: Nick Wingfield explains how EA's taking into account holiday sales boosted the videogame maker's earnings
The Director of National Intelligence says it's “difficult to answer” whether the government has the right to track Americans' location through cellphones for intelligence purposes.
Anonymous, a group famous for its computer attacks, is now asking followers to participate in an old-fashioned boycott of PayPal.
At yesterday's earnings meeting, Amazon refused, yet again, to reveal the numbers behind its best-selling Kindle e-reader.
Mountain View is pushing back against Google as the company expands its physical footprint.
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Parents fret all the time about protecting their kids on Facebook. Walt Mossberg tests a service that strikes a good balance between a parent's peace of mind and a teen's sense of freedom.
HTML5 is not scheduled for official approval by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) until 2014. So where does that leave the would-be app developer now?
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Katherine Boehret offers some tips and shortcuts to making the most of Apple's new operating system.
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Multitouch technology—which turned smartphones, iPads and other tablet computers into consumer sensations—has a new function: as physical and social therapy.
Metropolitan Transportation Authority officials offered a glimpse Monday morning at the Apple store proposed for the train station's main concourse.
Ditch the dock and cut the cord. It's never been easier to untether your music and spread those tunes around your home.
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The phone-hacking scandal at News Corp exposes how vulnerable phones remain to illegal snooping, partly because of easy-to-guess passwords.
The ninth annual D: All Things Digital Conference was packed with insight, innovation and, most of all, optimism and excitement.
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Law-enforcement agencies across the U.S. are about to adopt controversial hand-held facial-recognition devices—raising fundamental questions about privacy and civil liberties.
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Google, Apple and Facebook defended their privacy practices to lawmakers considering how to update privacy laws to include more protections for Internet users.
The smartest companies are letting employees use their personal gadgets to do their jobs. It's an arrangement that can benefit both sides but has pitfalls, too. Here's how some businesses are making it work.
From a handy way to store a range of passwords to an application that will help keep track of ongoing alcohol consumption, The Wall Street Journal Europe presents 10 apps you can't live without.
It's been likened to the Industrial Revolution in terms of its potential to change lives. But just what is cloud computing and how can companies turn it to their advantage?
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