Around the web
27 Sep 201326 Sep 201325 Sep 201324 Sep 201323 Sep 2013
There is no simple answer, but fortunately, figuring out what's best for you isn't too hard.
Forbes
If Miliband wants to beat the Big Six and deliver energy price freeze promise, he must fix his party's broken policies first.
The Guardian
A new Greenpeace report says that by 2050 green energy could account for 70% of the electricity generation for the 10 countries comprising the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
UPI
According to reports UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) has a research team that has put tons of effort and focus behind this type of technology.
Android Community
Apple may still have big plans to disrupt the traditional TV business, but the tech giant has been leaning more on the friend side of the friend-foe line when it comes to pay television.
Variety
Synaptics first to achieve Microsoft Precision Touchpad certification for Windows 8.1 (September 17)
Synaptics has announced that its TouchPad solution is the first to be certified under the Precision Touchpad (PTP) program for Windows 8.1-based PCs and notebooks.
Company release
Wind power is no longer an insignificant energy source in the United States. Turbines across the country provided 4 percent of the nation's electricity last year - enough to power half of Mexico.
Washington Post
German Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems, Soitec, CEA-Leti and the Helmholtz Center Berlin announced the development of 44.7 percent efficiency solar cell.
Fox Business
Apple is leveraging the Bluetooth LE technology that it has been building into every iPhone since the iPhone 4S to enable automatic setup of an Apple TV 3G.
TechCrunch
Do a growing number of "cord-cutters" and "cord-nevers" mean the TV business is about to be battered like other traditional industries? Media investor Terry Kawaja doesn't think so. Here's why.
GigaOM
The customizable smartwatch spreads its reach as it becomes available on the mobile carrier's Web site and in select retail stores.
CNET
STMicroelectronics and Movea have announced their agreement to integrate Movea's SmartMotion technology into the STM32F401 microcontroller operating as a low-power sensor-hub controller.
Company release
Samsung Display and LG Display have let the lawsuits fly in a patent battle over LCD- and OLED-related technology, but today that is apparently all over.
engadget
SolarCity (SCTY), an IPO back in December 2012, has pioneered the US solar installation marketplace. But with competition rising and the company still working toward profitability, it's been looking for new ways to boost its customer count.
Investor's Business Daily
Despite having one of the hottest summers on record and taking nuclear power stations offline, Japan has had no power rationing or blackouts this year. How did they do it? They cut back.
CNN
Netflix has stated that the company's goal is to stream content in the 4K format by 2014 or so.
DSLreports
The Securities and Exchange Commission has charged a former Qualcomm executive and his financial adviser with insider trading, alleging he used a secret offshore brokerage account to make trades based on inside information about the chipmaker.
Marketwatch.com (Dow Jones)
First Wind Holdings agreed to sell 333 megawatts of capacity from two Maine projects to Massachusetts utilities.
Bloomberg
A solar-energy group is offering a plan to resolve a trade dispute between the US and China, saying import duties currently in place are crippling the industry in both nations.
Bloomberg
Chinese Internet TV company BesTV New Media said it will set up a joint venture with global software giant Microsoft to develop "family games and related services" with a total investment of up to $237 million.
The Wall Street Journal
Apple sold nine million of its latest iPhones in their first three days, but assessing the popularity of the less-expensive iPhone 5C model was difficult.
The Wall Street Journal
Apple has sold nine million of its new iPhone models in three days.
BBC News
The BlackBerry melodrama may finally be coming to a close. Just days after announcing apocalyptic cuts in its workforce, the company revealed that its largest stakeholder, Fairfax Financial Holdings, has offered to buy the company out for US$4.7 billion, or US$9 a share.
Business Week
New York Post
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