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Microsoft launches 'Cortana' smartphone assistant
by Staff Writers
San Francisco (AFP) April 03, 2014


US news industry sees big revenue loss: study
Washington (AFP) April 03, 2014 - US news media revenues have tumbled by roughly a third since 2006 amid a shift to digital media, researchers said Thursday.

The Pew Research Center estimated annual revenues supporting print, broadcast and online journalism have slipped to between $63 billion and $65 billion, based on 2012-2013 data.

That compared with $94 billion to $95 billion in 2006, the Pew researchers said.

The analysis gleaned from Pew's annual survey of the news media underscored the massive changes in the industry.

The data showed "advertising dollars declining and audience payments, in the form of subscriptions, for example, comprising a bigger share," said research associate Jesse Holcomb.

Between 2006 and 2012, about 17,000 full-time newspaper newsroom jobs were lost, based on figures from the American Society of News Editors.

The industry has had to become less reliant on advertising as those revenues decline.

"In 2006, print and digital advertising accounted for fully 82 percent of all known revenue tied to professional newsgathering," Holcomb said.

"Today, advertising still accounts for a majority of news revenue, but amounts to 69 percent of the revenue pie, more than half of which comes from the newspaper industry whose ad revenue declined 55 percent from 2006 to 2012."

Holcomb said newspaper circulation revenue showed an uptick in 2012 of around five percent after five years of decline, in part due to "paywalls" or digital subscriptions.

Some news organizations are using new models for revenue, getting funding from foundation grants, events and digital marketing services, as well as direct investments from venture capital.

"Few industry analysts expect the advertising revenue that's been lost in recent years to come flooding back to news organizations," Holcomb said.

"While audience revenue is becoming more critical to the business, it cannot fully compensate for the loss of ad dollars.

"That is why most conversations about news sustainability come back to 'all of the above' -- cultivating a variety of revenue streams, including non-traditional ones, and experimenting with new ways of paying for journalism."

Microsoft on Wednesday took on Apple's Siri and Google Now with a smartphone personal assistant dubbed "Cortana."

Windows Phone vice president Joe Belfiore introduced Cortana onstage at the technology titan's annual developers conference.

"Cortana is the first truly personal digital assistant who learns about me, and the things that matter to me most, and knows about the whole Internet," Belfiore said in a presentation.

Cortana responds to conversationally spoken requests or commands, using insights gleaned from calendars, contact lists, online searches and other smartphone sources to respond in a manner akin to a real-life aide, Belfiore said.

Cortana's voice and character is based on a popular artificial intelligence character in Microsoft's blockbuster Xbox console video game "Halo."

It comes as a long-awaited counter to the Siri virtual assistant on Apple mobile devices and Google Now capabilities in Android tablets and smartphones.

Cortana will be in a test, or beta, mode when it becomes available in a Windows Phone 8.1 software update, which is to begin rolling out in the United States in coming months.

The new version of Windows Phone 8.1 should be available on new phones beginning in late April or early May, according to Belfiore.

Microsoft met with real-life personal assistants while designing Cortana, which is powered behind the scene by search engine Bing, he said.

As do Siri and Google Now, Cortana can remind users of flights, appointments, birthdays, routes, or other information for managing lives.

"Imagine a real personal assistant, and the kinds of things you might ask to be organized," Belfiore said while extolling Cortana's capabilities.

After being tested in the US, Cortana will expand to Britain and China, and then other countries.

In a sign that Microsoft gave Cortana a playful side, Belfiore asked the virtual assistant to reveal the storyline of the next "Halo" game only to be told "I'm quite certain you don't have the proper security clearance for that information."

- Wooing the app makers -

Insights into updates of Windows software for mobile devices and traditional computers came as Microsoft wooed developers of the fun, hip, or functional applications that strongly influence decisions about what gadgets to buy.

Microsoft is also keen to entice business and consumers to remain faithful to its computer operating system -- the software platform on which the Redmond, Washington-based company's fortune was built -- as it phases out support for its much-loved but aging version Windows XP.

"We have a billion-plus PCs (personal computers) that will all be upgrading," freshly-minted Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella told the gathering of developers.

"That is a significant opportunity for any application that targets Windows."

Nadella told the gathering of developers that Microsoft is "innovating in every dimension" to gain momentum in lifestyles increasingly revolving around mobile devices and services offered by computers in the Internet "cloud."

Software improvements were aimed at business, where Microsoft products remain strong, as well as at the booming tablet and smartphone markets.

Microsoft also used the stage to announced that Nokia will release a set of low-priced Windows-powered Lumia smartphones, starting in developing markets in Asia and India next month before gradually working its way to the United States in July.

The move takes aim at markets being overlooked and underserved, and breaks from trying to slug it out with Apple iPhones and Android-powered Samsung handsets in countries where buyers are more interested in high-end or medium-tier devices, according to Gartner principal research analyst Tuong Huy Nguyen.

"They really needed to move the price point of Windows devices down market, and this seems to be a step in that direction," Nguyen said.

"The US is essentially a two-horse market with Apple and Samsung; they have tried to push in with previous Lumia devices but it is hard."

Microsoft last year announced a $7.2 billion deal to buy Nokia's phone business and a patent portfolio.

Former Nokia chief Stephen Elop, now a vice president at Microsoft's devices division, said there was just "a short time to go" before the acquisition is completed.

Elop unveiled three new Windows-powered Lumia models during the opening of the gathering of application developers.

"In building an ecosystem, the appliction challenge is arguably our biggest challenge," Elop said at a Nokia press event late Wednesday. "That is the thing we really need to focus on."

gc/mdl

MICROSOFT

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