Word: warners
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...Bryan Warner, a 20-year-old history major, will attend a preliminary hearing tomorrow morning where a judge will decide whether there is enough evidence to detain him before trial...
...games; a classified-advertising site; a project to scan every book ever published and make the texts searchable; a free desktop package loaded with software; free instant messaging and online voice communication; a $1 billion investment in America Online. (AOL, like this magazine, is owned by Time Warner.) In the past year or so, Google Inc. has doubled in size to about 6,000 employees to handle all the new work. Even the bullish Rashtchy acknowledges that "Google is a black box for most people...
...European élite about how they might respond to the new world. There was more, of course - at Davos, there always is. Those wanting a sneak preview of a possible 2006 match-up in the U.S. presidential race could catch both Senator John McCain and former Virginia Governor Mark Warner. Those anxious to understand modern design could chat to Rem Koolhaas, while opera buffs sought out Peter Sellars. You have to pick and choose in Davos, to decide what it is that you take away from the long journey up the mountain. For me, the key message was that things...
...secret that every network is exploring ways to deliver content via other platforms, be it the Internet, cell phones or iPods (this week Survivor producer and reality TV impresario Mark Burnett announced he's working on an Internet project with Yahoo! and AOL, a division of Time Warner, the parent of TIME). But NBC is hoping that ?StarTomorrow? can marry the best of the old and new mediums, giving younger audiences the kind of interactive online experience they like with the already popular music competition format. Viewers will be able to go to NBC.com and watch ?StarTomorrow...
...presumably can pay for his own investment advice. There?s been disclosures of $2,000 gift cards for directors and one sweetheart deal where a company spent millions leasing aircraft from its CEO?s privately owned firm. And as part of his effort to shake up management at Time Warner (parent company of Time.com), investor Carl Icahn has been railing of late against what he calls excessive perks at the media giant, most notably the five corporate planes used by top executives for both business and personal travel. A Time Warner spokesman notes that after the expected sale...