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Monday, June 13, 2016

Here's Why Microsoft Will Buy LinkedIn for $26.2 Billion

Microsoft has been on the acquisition track for nearly as long as it's existed. There are so many deals that few get major notice. And yet, some of the do, like when Microsoft bought Yammerand then Skype. Now the company has decided to buy business social network LinkedIn for $26.2 billion in a cash deal, or $196 a share, a roughly 50 percent premium over Friday's closing price. The deal was concluded over the weekend and only reported now.
Not that the reason for the acquisition is the massive wealth that LinkedIn generates. The company has grown well enough, from 2012 revenue of $972.3 million to last year's $3 billion. That's still a drop in the bucket compared to Microsoft's 2015 $93.6 billion in revenue. And it's not that the body of intellectual property that LinkedIn demonstrates seems that stunning. LinkedIn currently has 205 patents and another 117 currently public patent applications. Microsoft's take of patents is currently 32,409, with 32,301 applications in process.
Microsoft won't even absorb LinkedIn. Instead, the social network will "retain its distinct brand, culture and independence," according to a joint statement. Jeff Weiner will remain LinkedIn's CEO and report to Microsoft's chief executive, Satya Nadella.
What LinkedIn has that Microsoft wants is connections -- business connections. And that's critical to the latter's strategy. Microsoft understands that computing and relationships to the business users that are its mainstay have changed. More people have moved to mobile, an area where the Redmond-based giant has struggled. Computing has shifted to the cloud, and while Microsoft is a significant player in that arena, it's a far cry from the influence it wielded when companies all had their own servers, whether directly own and run or contracted out to a service provider.
As the statement noted, LinkedIn has 433 million members across 200 countries and territories and 105 million monthly average users. Sixty percent of its traffic comes from mobile, with 7 million active job listings. Two-thirds of its revenue comes from recruiting tools.
Not only does LinkedIn extend Microsoft's quest to connect business users -- Skype and Yammer both previous examples of the same interest -- but there's an amazing amount of data. Microsoft will be able to see what people are doing in business, who's hiring, what the requirements are for various positions, and the like. To put it differently, this is a way to make the plans and expectations of companies all over the world transparent to a business that wants to sell them the technology they need.
Plus, Microsoft has software for contact management, customer relationship management, prospecting, and other activities that would dovetail neatly into LinkedIn. The social connections become a natural reason for people to take a look at what Microsoft offers.

Here's Why Microsoft Will Buy LinkedIn for $26.2 Billion

Microsoft has been on the acquisition track for nearly as long as it's existed. There are so many deals that few get major notice. And yet, some of the do, like when Microsoft bought Yammerand then Skype. Now the company has decided to buy business social network LinkedIn for $26.2 billion in a cash deal, or $196 a share, a roughly 50 percent premium over Friday's closing price. The deal was concluded over the weekend and only reported now.
Not that the reason for the acquisition is the massive wealth that LinkedIn generates. The company has grown well enough, from 2012 revenue of $972.3 million to last year's $3 billion. That's still a drop in the bucket compared to Microsoft's 2015 $93.6 billion in revenue. And it's not that the body of intellectual property that LinkedIn demonstrates seems that stunning. LinkedIn currently has 205 patents and another 117 currently public patent applications. Microsoft's take of patents is currently 32,409, with 32,301 applications in process.
Microsoft won't even absorb LinkedIn. Instead, the social network will "retain its distinct brand, culture and independence," according to a joint statement. Jeff Weiner will remain LinkedIn's CEO and report to Microsoft's chief executive, Satya Nadella.
What LinkedIn has that Microsoft wants is connections -- business connections. And that's critical to the latter's strategy. Microsoft understands that computing and relationships to the business users that are its mainstay have changed. More people have moved to mobile, an area where the Redmond-based giant has struggled. Computing has shifted to the cloud, and while Microsoft is a significant player in that arena, it's a far cry from the influence it wielded when companies all had their own servers, whether directly own and run or contracted out to a service provider.
As the statement noted, LinkedIn has 433 million members across 200 countries and territories and 105 million monthly average users. Sixty percent of its traffic comes from mobile, with 7 million active job listings. Two-thirds of its revenue comes from recruiting tools.
Not only does LinkedIn extend Microsoft's quest to connect business users -- Skype and Yammer both previous examples of the same interest -- but there's an amazing amount of data. Microsoft will be able to see what people are doing in business, who's hiring, what the requirements are for various positions, and the like. To put it differently, this is a way to make the plans and expectations of companies all over the world transparent to a business that wants to sell them the technology they need.
Plus, Microsoft has software for contact management, customer relationship management, prospecting, and other activities that would dovetail neatly into LinkedIn. The social connections become a natural reason for people to take a look at what Microsoft offers.

Orlando shooting: The deadly legacy of the AR-15 rifle

A look at the AR-15 rifle used in three recent mass shootings, including the Orlando massacre which killed 50.


Car bomb rocks eastern Turkey

A car bomb has wounded nine people in the eastern Turkish province of Tunceli, according to the security services.

The explosion on Monday happened in Ovacik district near a housing block for civil servants working at a local courthouse.

Turkey has been frequently targeted over the past year by fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group and Kurdish separatists.


Euro 2016: Northern Ireland fan dies after fall in Nice

A Northern Ireland fan has died in Nice, French police have confirmed.
It is believed Darren Rodgers, who was 25 and from Ballymena, was on his own and fell about eight metres from a promenade onto a rocky beach.
Supt Nigel Goddard, who is leading the PSNI team in France, said he was told it was an accident and not in any way disorder related.
Northern Ireland played Poland in the city on Sunday night in their first match of Euro 2016.
The accident happened in the early hours of Monday.
"I was informed this morning by my French counterparts of this tragic news," Supt Goddard said.
"The processes are that the Foreign and Commonwealth Office will make contact with this man's family.
"I believe it was an accident."

'Tremendously sad news'

Northern Ireland First Minister Arlene Foster attended Sunday's game.
"The whole atmosphere was one of great excitement, great joy, all the Northern Ireland fans and Polish fans were having a tremendous experience, a tremendous time together," she said.
"So it is tremendously sad news to hear this morning that a young fan has lost his life. I do, of course, want to express my deepest sympathy to the family back home in Northern Ireland 

"It is news that will come to them as a terrible shock. A young man going out there to have the trip of a lifetime and to be told that this has happened, it just is really shocking."
Patrick Nelson, the chief executive, of the IFA said: "On behalf of the board, management, players and staff of the Irish Football Association, I would like to express my deep sadness at the tragic death of a Northern Ireland supporter in Nice in the early hours of this morning. 
"The thoughts of everyone at the association are with his family and friends at this time."

Qatar 'Rape Victim' Convicted Of Adultery


A 22-year-old Dutch tourist, who claimed she had been raped while on holiday in Qatar, has been convicted of adultery.
The woman, who was not present for Monday's hearing in a Doha court, was handed a one-year suspended sentence and also fined 3,000 Qatari riyals (£564).
Her lawyer, Brian Lokollo, said she was on holiday with a friend and went out for drinks at a hotel bar in the Qatari capital.
Mr Lokollo said she believes someone "messed with her drink" and her memory became hazy.
He said she later awoke alone in an apartment she had never been in before and found her clothes had been torn.
It is then that she "realised to her great horror, that she had been raped".
Dutch media quoted him as saying: "She was arrested in March on suspicion of adultery, which means having sex outside marriage."
The woman maintained she was not guilty of the accusation made against her.
The male defendant, also not in court, was sentenced to receive 100 lashes for adultery and 40 lashes for consuming alcohol.
He insisted their night together had been consensual and that the woman had even asked for money.
A Dutch Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said the woman was released by Qatari officials after the hearing.

Tony Award Winners Honour Orlando Victims

The hip-hop musical Hamilton unsurprisingly dominated this year's Tony Awards where host James Corden paid tribute to the victims of the mass shooting in Florida.
The critically-acclaimed Broadway production, which tells the story of Alexander Hamilton, one of America's founding fathers, won 11 awards including best musical after receiving a record 16 nominations.
Briton Cynthia Erivo won best performance by a lead actress in a musical for her role as Celie Harris in The Color Purple.
Fighting back tears on stage, she said: "I promised myself I wouldn't cry because my make-up artist would be really mad at me.
"Thank you American Theatre Wing for making a London girl very, very happy."
The awards were dedicated to the victims of the massacre at a gay nightclub in Orlando which left at least 50 people dead and another 53 in hospital.
Actor Daveed Diggs poses with his award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Musical for "Hamilton"
Corden opened the show with a message which said: "Our hearts go out to all of those affected by this atrocity.
"All we can say is you're not on your own right now. Your tragedy is our tragedy.
"Hate will never win. Together we have to make sure of that. Tonight's show stands as a symbol and a celebration of that principle."
The attack prompted the cast of Hamilton to drop their Revolutionary War muskets for their performance at the awards, a spokesman for the musical said.
Speaking before the ceremony in New York, Lin-Manuel Miranda, the star and creator of Hamilton, said the shooting was "heavy in my heart and heavy in my mind".
Veteran American actor Frank Langella, who won best performance by a lead actor in a play for his role in The Father, urged Orlando to be "strong" in the wake of the atrocity.
"When something bad happens we have three choices," he said. "We let it define us, we let it destroy us, or we let it strengthen us.
"Today in Orlando we had a hideous dose of reality.
"I urge you Orlando to be strong because I'm standing in a room full of the most generous human beings on earth and we will be with you every step of the way."
Jessica Lange won the award for best performance by a lead actress in a play for her role as morphine-addicted Mary Tyrone in Long Day's Journey Into Night.
"This is a dream come true," she said. "It fills me with such happiness even on such a sad day as this."
Hamilton, which is expected to open at London's Victoria Palace Theatre in October 2017, has achieved rave reviews and sell-out performances since making its debut in February last year.
However, it failed to beat the record 12 awards won by The Producers in 2001.
Corden, who won a 2012 Tony Award for his performance in One Man, Two Guvnors, hosted the 70th Tony Awards following his successful stint as the presenter of The Late, Late Show in America.
The ceremony also featured Barbra Streisand, who took to the Tony Awards stage for the first time in 46 years to hand out the best musical award.