
Amazon-Zappos Deal Official, Conficker Virus Turns One

Highlights from this morning's other big tech headlines....
- Engaged in heated online price wars with Best Buy and Walmart, Amazon significantly bolstered its arsenal today with the official purchase of online retailer Zappos. Zappos, which was ranked by Forbes as one of the '100 Best Companies to Work For' in 2009, will continue to operate independently, from its own Las Vegas headquarters. [From: Business Wire]
- This month marks the first anniversary of the arrival of the Conficker virus. Although the rampant media discussion has abated and the creators still remain hidden, the virus continues to spread and now affects over 7 million computers. [From: Network World]
- To promote green transportation and healthy living, France installed a cheap bike rental program using over 20,000 $3,000 bicycles. Predictably, 80-percent of those bikes are now missing or damaged. Hippy towns in the United States have been experimenting with free bike-sharing programs for decades, but they actually use recovered, unclaimed, and donated bikes. Duh. [From: The New York Times]
- The iPhone continues to climb the smartphone charts as it now claims a 30-percent market share, just 10 percentage points shy of its primary competitor, the BlackBerry. The trend is prompting some market analysts to predict that Apple will soon be the most popular smartphone purveyor, but the DROID and its highly desirable features might have something to say about that. [From: The New York Times]
- Nokia is eliminating its N-Gage video game service next September, but already-purchased titles will continue to work. Instead, it will focus on Ovi, its version of Apple's App Store, as well as the development of other devices like netbooks. [From: The Wall Street Journal]
- It seems that everyone has been creating some form of e-reader recently, but many consumers may already have one and not realize it. New data indicates that more people are now downloading books for their iPhones than they are games. Maybe this is why Apple has been so slow to release its own rumored Tablet. [From: Gigaom]
- The British Crown Court sentenced 22-year-old Phillipa Curtis to 21 months in a high security prison on a "death by dangerous driving charge," because she'd caused a fatal accident by texting while driving. Time for the United States to adopt a similar stance. [From: The New York Times]



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