Microsoft Corp has agreed to acquire Danger, a Silicon Valley company that makes the software for the Sidekick and other mobile devices, for an undisclosed amount. Danger has worked away for ten years ...
Microsoft may do the unthinkable with Danger, the mobile software and services developer it purchased last year: Go open source. Bloggers are abuzz about the possibility since one claims he received a ...
Microsoft says the outage was caused by a server failure within its Danger subsidiary, which runs the Sidekick service. According to Channelweb.com's source, the Sidekick servers crashed during a ...
In its clearest sign yet that it is serious about the consumer cell phone market, Microsoft says it is buying the maker of the T-Mobile Sidekick. During her years at CNET News, Ina Fried changed beats ...
What use is a Sidekick without the services? Last night, the Danger servers closed down for good, meaning no more push email, AIM or apps. If you’ve bought T-Mobile’s Sidekick 4G though, don’t worry, ...
“Red skies in morning; Sailors take warning.” Maybe that old seafaring wisdom should include users of the Microsoft-owned Danger Sidekick. In something akin to an “all is lost” warning, Redmond has ...
Continuing its push into the mobile consumer market, Microsoft Corp. said it plans to acquire Danger Inc., the developer of software and services that run Sidekick. Danger’s operating system and ...
Danger Inc., creator of the ever-so-trendy Sidekick, may be seeking a new partner-in-crime in the coming year. Danger initially dumped the hardware manufacturing of the Sidekick series over to Sharp ...