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| Latest Microsoft News |
Microsoft lets Zune music subscribers keep tunes
Microsoft Corp. is giving an early holiday gift to people who pay for all-you-can-listen access to the Zune digital music store: 10 songs to keep each month, included in the $14.99 monthly subscription fee.
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Microsoft to let Zune owners keep 10 tracks a month
Microsoft, seeking to boost the popularity of its Zune music player, announced a new subscription offer on Thursday that will allow users to keep 10 tracks a month permanently.
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Microsoft says looking at raising debt
Microsoft Corp on Thursday filed plans with securities regulators to tap the debt markets, raising money to pay for working capital, share buybacks, or other types of general corporate expenses.
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Microsoft: Not all information can be free
In a speech in London, Microsoft's top intellectual property strategy counsel argues for the need of a model in which content creators are better compensated.
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Microsoft May Sell Debt in First-Ever Bond Offering (Update3)
Nov. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Microsoft Corp. , the world’s largest software maker, may sell bonds for the first time, seeking to use its pristine credit rating to extract funds from a market roiled by default concerns.
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Microsoft Lowers Zune Prices, Tweaks Zune Pass
Microsoft cuts the price of its Zune media player and tweaks the Zune Pass model so that users can now own some songs permanently.
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Its Official: Yahoo Search Exec Suchter to Microsoft
Yesterday, BoomTown reported, based on sources, that Yahoo search exec Sean Suchter was headed to Microsoft. Now it's official. Here's a Microsoft statement on the hiring of Suchter , an important tech leader at Yahoo , from Satya Nadella, SVP for Search, Portal and Advertising: "We are very pleased to confirm that Sean Suchter ...
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Microsoft changes direction, will offer free security software
Microsoft is changing its tune on computer security, two years after its much-heralded foray into the security space turned out to be less than spectacular. Instead of charging customers $50 per year for its Windows Live OneCare subscription security service, Microsoft says that beginning June 30 it will instead offer free software code-named "Morro," designed to seek and destroy viruses, ...
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