Microsoft shifts WebTV oversight to Redmond

Published: 2 March 2001 y., Friday
"MSN will assume responsibility for the WebTV Internet-on-TV service and will become the Internet service for WebTV's products," a Microsoft representative told CNET News.com on Thursday. The move is not expected to produce any changes for subscribers to the television-based Internet service, the representative said. The company is not planning any job cuts as part of the move. The Mountain View, Calif.-based unit that manages the WebTV service will report to MSN General Manager Mark Looi in Redmond, Wash., according to an internal memo. News of the changes at WebTV was reported earlier by the site Net4tv Voice, which tracks the interactive TV market and first published details of the Microsoft memo. Besides the WebTV service, Microsoft also is using WebTV's technology in its soon-to-debut UltimateTV service. That offering combines interactive television, a digital video recorder, satellite TV and Internet access. Microsoft said that the group that develops the WebTV units will continue to be a part of the Microsoft TV operation, while UltimateTV will remain in Mountain View, headed by Leak. Microsoft acquired interactive TV pioneer WebTV in April 1997 for $425 million. Although WebTV continued to grow after the acquisition, the number of subscribers eventually hit a plateau at about 1 million.
Šaltinis: CNET News.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

ZyXEL teams with France Telecom

ZyXEL's Award-Winning Prestige 100IH Allows French more »

Clinton administration releases crypto export rules

The Clinton administration released long-awaited export rules ondata-scrambling technology, quickly winning support from software industry groups that had criticized earlier proposals. more »

Making East Meet West

Internet Company Brings American Products to Japan more »

Welsh IT firm wins internet awards

The firm_s product has implications for jobs in Wales. more »

Phone carriers get call surges, not Y2K glitches

AT&T processed 1.5 million calls in the first five minutes of 2000 on the East Coast in a traffic surge experienced by most of the major telephone carriers. more »

Meeting the 2000 technology challenge

U.S. "pleasantly surprised" by Y2K bug_s scarcity. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Clinton Seeks More Spending for Computer Security

President Clinton proposed boosting government spending on computer security by some $280 million as part of a long-term plan to guard against threats ranging from hackers to terrorists. more »

Finland: Where the Wireless Are

While the world waits for wireless applications, the Finns are rolling them out to the home market. more »

Macworld hardware report

The serious and the wacky. more »