Corporate & legal

RIM Q3 as expected, but confidence is soaring

Updated 3:30 p.m. PST with details following the conference call.

Research In Motion's third-quarter results were a little disappointing, as expected, but a strong holiday season is giving it reason to be very optimistic.

The company had already revealed that it expected third-quarter revenue and profit to be lighter than originally expected, and the official numbers released Thursday were in line with those revised expectations at $2.8 billion in revenue and net income of $396.5 million. Adjusting for the tax complexities involved with RIM's Canadian base of operations and its heavy U.S. presence, … Read more

Tech M&A down 40 percent in 2008

Technology companies seeking a white-night buyer had a long wait this year, according to a study released Thursday by research firm The 451 Group. And 2009 isn't looking any more promising.

During 2008, tech mergers and acquisitions fell 40 percent across virtually every sector of the industry, with $290 billion in deals getting done to date. And deals worth $1 billion or more dropped even further, with only 32 megadeals getting done so far this year, compared with 80 last year.

Corporate tech titans that have historically had a large appetite for snapping up companies left and right went … Read more

LCD TV revenues to dip for first time ever

Next year is shaping up to be a nightmare for LCD TV makers.

Revenues for LCD TVs sold worldwide in 2009 are expected to fall 16 percent from 2008, to $64 billion, according to an update to DisplaySearch's Quarterly Global TV Shipment and Forecast Report, released Thursday. Next year will be "the most difficult year yet for the TV industry and supply chain," DisplaySearch writes in the report.

The culprits are rapidly declining prices of LCD TVs and lower shipments to retailers due to slackening demand. DisplaySearch expects 2009 LCD shipments to drop to 205.3 million … Read more

Cable to temporarily pause digital switch

The cable TV industry is pausing its transition to digital TV to reduce consumer confusion over the broadcasters own transition to digital happening early in 2009, according to letters sent to members of Congress Wednesday by the industry's trade association.

Kyle McSlarrow, president of the National Cable & Telecommunications Association also said in the letters that cable operators planned to offer free equipment to analog customers who asked for them for a year. The program will be available to these customers until June.

Cable operators have been migrating their channels from analog to digital for over a decade. Some … Read more

Working overtime for venture capital funding

Editor's note: This is part of a series of stories about the recession's effect on the tech industry.

Entrepreneur Treb Ryan remembers in vivid detail the day the Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted nearly 700 points and dropped below 9,000 for the first time in years.

He was visiting a major computer maker on that day, October 9, waiting to meet with a potential investor about funding his start-up OpSource.

"I was about a half an hour early for the appointment and was sitting in the lobby, where they have a big screen TV," recalled … Read more

Motorola cuts compensation and benefits package

As the recession takes its toll, Motorola announced Wednesday that it is cutting compensation and benefits packages for its employees, including top executives.

Co-CEO Greg Brown will forgo a 2008 cash bonus earned under his incentive plan, while co-CEO Sanjay Jha will forfeit his cash bonus at a similar level as Brown's and take the remainder of his cash bonus in restricted stock.

Beginning in the new year, Motorola plans to suspend its matching 401(k) contributions, leaving employees to be the sole contributors to their 401(k) plans.

And a number of Motorola employees will face a salary … Read more

Best Buy earnings drop 77 percent, offering buyouts

This blog was corrected at 3:35 p.m. PT to clarify the number of Best Buy employees offered buyouts.

Although Black Friday sales were better than expected, Best Buy's third-quarter earnings brought another heaping of bad news for the embattled electronics retail industry.

For the third quarter of 2008, Best Buy reported earnings Tuesday of $52 million, or 13 cents per share, on revenue of $11.5 billion. Wall Street had been anticipating earnings of 24 cents per share and revenue of $11.09 billion. It's a 77 percent drop from the same quarter a year ago, … Read more

Liquidated at Circuit City

Editor's note: This is part of a series of stories about the recession's effect on the tech industry.

Note: This article has been corrected to reflect that Ultimate Electronics is not going out of business, as previously stated.

When Circuit City management told employees to arrive at their respective stores one hour before opening in early November, everyone knew something was up.

Except T.K. Campo.

The 21-year-old wasn't able to go in early, and arrived at his job stocking shelves at the Scottsdale, Ariz., store to find his fellow employees just standing around, looking generally shocked and upset--and, conspicuously, not working.

That's when he got the news. "They told me we were closing down. From then, there was this giant, somber mood throughout the whole store. Everyone was going to lose their jobs, and people were really upset. At least one person was crying."

Campo's store was one of the 155 stores that Circuit City announced it would be closing to get the struggling retailer back into good financial health. Overall, 17 percent of the workforce was to be cut. Just a week later, the chain filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

The recession has claimed hundreds of thousands of jobs here in the U.S., but unemployment is having a secondary effect on retailers. It has killed consumer confidence, and hawkers of expensive gadgets like Circuit City, and Tweeter, have been hit hard.

As disappointing as it was for Campo to lose a job that he liked, this 21-year-old has more responsibilities than most of his peers working retail. He's a single father who recently won joint custody of his 2-year-old son. Campo is also putting himself through school, studying math with hopes of becoming a high school calculus teacher.

But his priority right now is making his child support payments.

"I can always take little break from school, but (working is) always to provide more for my son," he said during a telephone interview. "At Circuit City, I would have been able to move up, and eventually get more money. But that opportunity's kind of gone now."

Campo has been working at the Scottsdale store since May--he'd been laid off from his previous job as a line cook after he went on disability leave with a broken arm. But he took a liking to his work stocking shelves at Circuit City, updating prices, and interacting with customers. But most of all, he enjoyed his 40-some co-workers.

"I befriended just about everyone that works there. For the most part, everyone that's left is a tight group."

Over the past month the group has found more ways to bond since the news of their store getting shut down. Knowing that there is a definite end date to their employment, the store "became this relaxed environment," Campo said. If they can't help a customer, nobody stresses out. Some phones go unanswered, and just "general messing around" ensues.

But they know they still have work to do.

The liquidators--the company that bought up the store's debt and inventory--came in a few days after the announcement, put up store closing signs, and changed all prices to the MSRP (manufacturer's suggested retail price), then marked them down a bit more.

Once the signs went up, a frenzy of bargain hunters descended on the store. But not everyone liked what they saw.

"Some (shoppers) got rude, some got really nasty," Campo recalled. "Some people would come in and tell us we deserve to lose our jobs because they're not happy with our prices, and unhappy we couldn't alter prices or return things anymore that had been purchased after liquidation. Some were unsure what to do if they had purchased (extended) warranties. I don't know...it seemed like some people enjoyed being unpleasant to us. There wasn't a lot more we could do for people." … Read more

Hasbro drops 'Scrabulous' lawsuit

Hasbro is apparently content to call its contest with the makers of Scrabulous a draw.

The toy maker on Friday withdrew its copyright and trademark lawsuit filed against the creators of the ad-supported online application, according to court documents cited in an Associated Press report.

The game, which rose to fame when its creators turned it into an embeddable Facebook application, was a word game that resembled the classic board game Scrabble. The game boasted an astonishing half-million daily users on Facebook, but was removed from the social-networking site not long after the lawsuit was filed in July.

The game … Read more

Gartner lists top 30 offshoring hot spots

New contenders are emerging to challenge the BRIC countries' dominance of the offshoring market.

While India was the "undisputed leader," followed by China and other BRIC countries Russia and Brazil, research firm Gartner's list this year of the top 30 offshoring destinations showed Mexico, Poland, and Vietnam pushing their way up to take them on.

Ian Marriott, research vice president at Gartner, said these countries would be seeking to take advantage of the credit crisis to capitalize on organizations' drive to save costs.

The four countries that dropped out from last year's Top 30 were Northern … Read more