rimm Archive

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Google Purchase of Motorola Mobility Shakes Up Media and Technology Sectors

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By Relmor Demitrius -

Google Purchase of Motorola Mobility

Google Purchase of

Google Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOG) announced yesterday it offered Motorola Mobility Holdings (NYSE:MMI) 12.5 billion dollars in a buyout offer.  This is good for $40 a share and the offer was accepted by the board.  It was a 60% premium over the current trading price.  The Android Platform appears to have solid footing even more so now.  What does this mean for the cell phone space?  Does this move have media and other technological competitive implications?  Where does this lead us in 2 years?  5 years?  Will Sirius XM Radio (NASDAQ:SIRI) be affected by this in any way?  What about Research In Motion (NASDAQ:RIMM) and HTC?  Should Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) worry?  Is this a showdown between Google and Apple?  Who wins?

Join KOAT Blog Talk Radio, tonight at 9 PM Eastern Time as we attempt to answer these and other questions in the media and technology spaces.  Callers welcome for questions or comments as the investor community works together to answer these questions and more.   Here is the link for tonight’s show.

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/kingofalltrades.

Callers welcome any time at : (323) 784-9623 – Come Join Us

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The Future Of Digital Music Pt. 2

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By: Gino Lattarulo

Caveman_300Referring to Part 1 of ” The Future Of Digital Music”

So Who , or what, is going to win the digital music wars?  Will digital downloads from the likes of Apple iTunes (NASDAQ:AAPL) still be around in 10 years or will everything be self contained in a “Cloud” structure.

Lets look at the pros and cons of each and then I’ll give my .01 cent opinion.

Digital downloads: Let’s face it, MP3.com changed the world.  As soon as music files became coded for quick transfer over the Internet, the whole place exploded.  The need for tangible CD’s quickly diminished and was replaced by digital players.  The sound files have an infinite shelf life, limited only by the condition of the actual player itself.  The consumer can purchase an entire album of songs for a lower price ( including artwork ) without ever having to leave their home.  Not only that, but the likes of pioneering file sharing sites like Napster provided the masses with as much free music as they could consume.  It was, and still is, a time of mass confusion and evolving.

Cloud Formats: Online radio has evolved into personal web libraries.  Sites like Grooveshark and even Youtube (NASDAQ:GOOG) allow you to pull up any song in the world and create unlimited playlists for your own custom library of virtually any song in existence.  We can’t really lump Pandora or Slacker into the cloud category because they are exclusive to radio style streaming, meaning that the user has no control over what plays other than the music genre.

So what does all of this mean for the direction of your music?  Personally I think the future lies almost entirely in the clouds.  So to speak.  It will take some time to realistically widen the scope of the Internet to allow for such an increase in web streaming.  The obstacle here is still buffering and streaming coverage for mobile users, but as more and more mobile devices and hotspots (like your car) become tethered to the internet we will see the direction shift.  Devices like Apple’s Sky Dock, which has an FM modulator and boost antennae built in, is made for Sirius / XM (NASDAQ: SIRI) and enables the user to stream their iPhone.  Although this device is seemingly proprietary, it gives us a glimpse of the what will happen in the coming years with Cloud streaming.

The main trade off with the Cloud structure versus actual downloads is sound quality.  Online streaming is pretty much maxed out at 192 kbps while digital downloads can be had at CD quality bit rates.  On the other hand, in the Clouds you have any song you want at your finger tips without having to pay for it and you can store the songs in an online virtual library.  The next ten years will definitely be very interesting.  When I was a kid ( I mean younger) I always wondered what would replace the CD.  I only wish I could see the evolution of music 100 years from now.

Of course,  If there is actually anything left after the governments of the world get done burning everything to the ground, we’ll be back to playing tiger skin bongos and bone flutes for entertainment anyway.

Peace.

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TheStreet.com Once Again Defames Sirius XM Radio At Critical Time

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obama-wall-street-reform

I was unpleasantly surprised over the weekend to see that once again Yahoo (NASDAQ:YHOO), which claims to be a credible and relevant news and search engine, appears to be complicit in the bidding of one of the most vile financial companies (in my humble opinion) known to investors.  I am talking about Jim Cramer’s own “Thestreet.com.”  As we have seen over the course of this past year, any time specific companies gain headwind, in this case Sirius XM Radio, old or simply negative press items conveniently get recirculated from the same conspicuous sources.  This categorically fits what former hedge fund manager Jim Cramer himself has called “fomenting” to elicit a specific market response.

Any way you look at it, it is unethical to release old or tailored news at critical points in a company’s history to affect a specific stock reaction.  Those who have followed Sirius XM Radio recognize this technique all too well.  When the source of these “bash” articles are timed closely with specific events to damage a company, and that same source has historic ties with the hedge funds that benefit from a downturn in the company’s stock (while your average retail investor will watch his investment suffer), experienced investors will tell you there is no coincidence.

Recent news about TSCM suggests that not only are they a shady source of news with no credibility, but perhaps also involved in manipulative practices with certain stocks on the markets.  There are also strong questions about their accounting methods.  Certainly they are the kings of  negativity as far as Sirius XM Radio (NASDAQ:SIRI) shareholders are concerned, continually hammering the company at every turn.  Their video from early last week somehow was picked up again by Yahoo only yesterday in time for a nice Sunday bashfest.  We wouldn’t want investors who were busy during the week to have to search for negativity, would we?  Once again, Yahoo, without validating their news content, makes certain that it is sitting in plain sight on their financial Sirius XM Radio page with a nice link.

The story doesn’t end with Sirius XM Radio, however, not by a long shot. The Street was also named by Overstock.com (NASDAQ: OSTK) CEO Dr. Patrick Byrne several years ago as a practicing manipulator of equities, and Jim Cramer was outed in many ways by the Overstock CEO’s fight against Wall Street manipulation. In fact, an entire website,  Deepcapture.com (http://www.deepcapture.com/), sprung from that investigative masterpiece of reporting and I applaud Judd Bagley and others who really dug deep. Reading at that site is like reading a who’s who of miscreants on Wall Street.

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HP Dives Further Into The Future

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By: Gino Lattarulo

It’s dubbed the “Super Watch”, and Hewlett Packard (NYSE: HPQ) has just been commissioned by the military to manufacture a flexible display arm device that will potentially take the place of mobile tablet PCs and smart phones.  Think of a device the size of your blackberry or iPhone  that has the flexibility to be shaped for wear around your wrist or on your jacket sleeve.  It will have a 4 to 5 inch transflective (it doesn’t require a back light) screen hp-flexible-plastic-tft-displaysthat can be viewed outdoors and will be able to monitor troop movements, satellite images and maps, and personal/troop health information.  It will also perform stealth ops like the ability to see around corners via sensors as well as the capability to visually penetrate through fog and smoke.  Yeah I know, it sounds neat but so what, right?  Actually it could be a very big deal if you think of the possibilities from a general consumer perspective.

Unlike a cell phone or a laptop/tablet, which can be (and are) easily dropped, broken, or lost, the Super Watch would be a fixture on your arm and possess the same abilities and applications as a Blackberry or iPhone, such as web access and GPS.  The really interesting part here is that because you actually wear it on your body there could be the availability to perform additional functions like monitoring vital signs for diabetics or people with heart problems.  It could act as an emergency alert, serve as a lo jack for parents to keep track of their children, remind you to take your medicine, etc. After all, there are already medical specific devices that do this so why not incorporate as much as possible.  You betcha. 

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Sirius Chart Banging Its Head On The $1.00 Mark (NASDAQ:SIRI)

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By: Gino Lattarulo -

In a previous article I gave the opinion that Sirius XM Satellite Radio (NASDAQ:SIRI) was not too far from consistently remaining above the $ 1.00 mark.  I still believe this for a number of reasons: