Word: cashes
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...exist in something close to its current form after its 10-year charter expires at the end of 2016. For almost two decades, the BBC had expanded its operations rapidly as it tried to keep abreast of convulsive changes in technology and viewing habits. It funded these adventures with cash from license payers. It was already beginning to slim down again when, in 2006, the government agreed to a lower-than-inflation increase to the cost of the license fee over the next six years, leaving the broadcaster with a $4 billion shortfall. Cutting jobs and selling property will keep...
With $23 billion in cash reserves, the Redmond, Wash.-based software giant can afford to part with a little cash - even if it never earns a penny of it back. And Facebook could use the money - to hire more employees and build out the site, whose traffic is currently growing at over 100% per year, according to comScore Media Metrix, which tracks internet-user demographics. But what Microsoft chief Steve Ballmer and company desperately need these days is cachet in the burgeoning internet economy. And that is exactly what their investment just bought them...
...will now sell the banner ads appearing on Facebook outside of the United States and will share the revenue generated by that advertising. Last year, Microsoft contracted an agreement to run banner ads on Facebook in the United States through 2011. “Microsoft has a lot of cash. Facebook has enormous growth prospects. It’s a smart investment deal from both sides,” said John G. Palfrey Jr. ’94, the executive director of Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society. “Microsoft has been much...
...will now sell the banner ads appearing on Facebook outside of the United States and will share the revenue generated by that advertising. Last year, Microsoft contracted an agreement to run banner ads on Facebook in the United States through 2011. “Microsoft has a lot of cash. Facebook has enormous growth prospects. It’s a smart investment deal from both sides,” said John G. Palfrey Jr. ’94, the executive director of Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society. “Microsoft has been much...
...usually gets eight or nine $50,000 checks a year from the administration, paid for by the optional $75 Undergraduate Council fee on student termbills. That cash stopped flowing when the UC refused to comply with an administration request that it end its program funding dorm room parties...