Monday 3 November 2014

Amazon says it faces unique risks in India

 
  
 
 
 
 

Amazon feels India’s laws and regulations are a risk for the company. 

 Amazon says it faces unique risks in India 
 

For a long time, Nokia made smartphones that ruled the world. The Symbian smartphone platform became synonymous with Nokia and even as recently as 2010, Symbian devices formed close to 50% of the total global smartphone market. 

 Nokia's 5 most iconic phones ever 
 

With over a tenth of the users from the country, India is one of the biggest markets for WhatsApp, business head Neeraj Arora said. 

 WhatsApp's India user base crosses 70 million 
 

Built by Motorola, the Nexus 6 smartphone was announced by Google last month. 

 Google Nexus 6 listed on Flipkart 
 

To consolidate its product engineering team at its headquarters in Sunnyvale, Yahoo started to layoff about 300 employees in India last month. 

 How tech startups are wooing laid-off Yahoo staff 
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For a long time, Nokia made smartphones that ruled the world. The Symbian smartphone platform became synonymous with Nokia and even as recently as 2010, Symbian devices formed close to 50% of the total global smartphone market. Between 2002 and 2010,...

 Nokia's 5 most iconic phones ever 
 
 

Pakistan-based hackers hacked two Gujarat government websites and three other websites, wrote derogatory remarks about PM Narendra Modi on their home pages. 

 Pakistani hackers deface two Gujarat government websites 
 

Flipkart has rejigged its top management, handing over more responsibility to Mukesh Bansal, the founder of fashion portal Myntra. 

 Myntra founder Mukesh Bansal gets more responsibilities in Flipkart rejig 
 

The alliance will work together to accelerate building Indic language content for users in the country. 

 Google inks alliance to promote Indian languages on web 
 

According to Apple’s senior vice president of Retail and Online Stores, Angela Ahrendts, the smartwatch will not hit the stores before next spring. 

 Apple Watch launch delayed 
 

Keeping employees from leaving is regarded as being integral to the company's plans to improve its performance, which is seen lagging behind the industry average. 

 Infosys: Attrition likely to come down by next year 
 

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