Google announced via their investor relations page that the company has agreed to terms with Motorola for a $12.5 billion dollar acquisition at 60% premium. The boards of directors of both companies unanimously approved the transaction.
The deal puts Google head-to-toe with Apple, who has been a full-fledged smartphone manufacturer since they launched iPhone and iPhone OS in 2007. The acquisition of a handset maker is not an automatic win for Google, as they closed down their Nexus One store due to sub-par sales. A Motorola deal will put more of Google’s phones on shelves, but it also puts the search-engine company in competition with HTC and Samsung. 
“Motorola Mobility’s total commitment to Android has created a natural fit for our two companies. Together, we will create amazing user experiences that supercharge the entire Android ecosystem for the benefit of consumers, partners and developers,” Google’s Co-founder and CEO, Larry Page, said in a press release.
Google will benefit greatly from Motorola’s 17,000 patents on phone technology, as Google recently lost in a consortium against Microsoft, Apple and RIM for thousands of patents from Novell and Nortel Networks, a Canadian computer-networking company and a telecom manufacturer.
Googles stock (GOOG) closed down 1.82% at $553.50. You can view a video of CNBC analysts discussing the deal here.
Nintendo’s investors are urging the company to bring its iconic game characters, like Mario, Luigi, Zelda, and Donkey Kong, to Apple’s iPhone and iPad. The call to make games for Apple’s hit mobile devices, which have fueled success for companies like PopCap and Rovio, comes after lackluster sales of Nintendo’s latest 3DS handheld have driven prices of the company’s stock to a 6-year low.
But despite the allure of selling millions of copies of a touchscreen-enabled Super Mario title to some 200 million iOS users, who on average play 14.7 hours of games per month, Nintendo president Satoru Iwata will have none of it.
Apple has been releasing more information to developers about iCloud, it’s upcoming service that will store email, calendars, documents, and media in Apple’s cloud and sync it across users’ Apple devices. The Cupertino-based computing company plans to open iCloud to the public in the Fall. 
Developers have exclusively learned through their paid accounts that Apple will be providing former subscribers of MobileMe, Apple’s older and current version of iCloud, an extra 20GB of free space in their cloud. The free space will last until June 30, 2012 unless iCloud users choose to subscribe to the service and pay for the additional storage.
The news comes as a friendly gesture from Apple, whose stock fell more than 20 points Monday morning amid the S&P downgrading crisis. Analysts have suggested buying AAPL, along with other technology stocks, as recent economic activity does not reflect the performance of the technology sector. “Apple could buy Bank of America,” CNBC reporters said.
iCloud is currently in beta and only available to registered developers of Apple’s program. However, Apple has announced the service will launch in the Fall along with iOS 5, Apple’s new operating system for iPhones and iPads. News outlets are also reporting an iPhone 5 release during the same time period, suggesting that Apple wants to get the three products out in time for the holiday season.
My friend Josh Helfferich made an interesting prediction about this year’s WWDC in San Francisco.
Helfferich doesn’t see iCloud as an extension or rebranding of MobileMe. Instead, Josh Helfferich beleives that iCloud will be all about app syncing - something Mac and iOS users have been asking for from third party developers for years.
Another friend of Josh and I, Andrew Harwood, asked what app syncing really is. My understanding of app syncing is the transfer of data between platforms. For example, users of Culture Code’s popular task management application, Things, have been begging for the addition of cloud sync of their to-dos for a little over a year.
If Helfferich is right and Apple implements this proposed iCloud in the way we’d imagine - through APIs available to developers - it would be one of Apple’s greatest moves yet.
What has been holding back iOS is that it is so close to being a desktop platform, but it’s not. In this case, the run blocker, if you will, is apps on different platforms. There hasn’t been an easy way for users to transfer data from their computer to their mobile devices, except by plugging it in.
If iCloud brings APIs that wirelessly allow users to store app data in the cloud, owners of iDevices will be able to work and manage their data much easier and more fluently than ever before.
For example, let’s say I’m working on a Keynote presentation for a meeting I have later this afternoon. I have overslept and have managed to only finish half of the presentation on my iMac since I have to catch the train downtown to the office. I shut down my computer, grab my bag, and depart for the train. Once on the train, I pull out my iPad 2, open Keynote, and the unfinished presentation, just as I had left it on my iMac, is right there. I’m able to finish the presentation, lock my iPad, open my office MacBook Pro, open Keynote, and begin my presentation in front of my peers.
Brilliant, right?
Here’s another example. Developers have been asking for a version of Xcode for iOS since the iPad came out. Say Apple does release Xcode for iOS and builds Helfferich’s rendition of iCloud into it. Steve Streza, another friend and well known iOS and Mac developer, is working on a break through Twitter client game for iOS. Steve is working at ngmoco:)’s offices into the late afternoon. The guys in the office decide to go out an celebrate after their newest game which broke 1,000,000 copies sold. Steve Streza passes out at Smuggler’s Cove and his friends take him back to his place and leave him on the couch. He wakes up in the morning and realizes he was supposed to finish a portion of the game he was working on that night. No worries though, all Steve has to do is fire up his home Mac, open Xcode, and continue coding until he’s finished.
What’s interesting about this example is that Xcode has obviously not been developed for iOS, but if iCloud was to turn out the way Josh Helfferich predicts it will, many desktops apps like Xcode could come to iOS. I could easily see the rest of iLife suite and even some desktop games on iOS.
Let’s hope Josh Helfferich is right.
Watch it while you can. Awesome multitasking UI in the second video.
Killian Bell:
Although this isn’t going to deter jailbreaking one slight little bit, it’s still rather funny.
I don’t think TechCrunch has every been right when they’ve cited one of their “sources”, but it’s not a bad bet. People have been speculating on when Apple would be releasing some kind of cloud services, like cloud iTunes, since the huge data center in North Carolina was bought.
MG Siegler:
Here’s what we’re hearing right now:
- iOS 5 will launch in the fall and will be a major revamp of the OS.
- It could well be previewed at WWDC, it just won’t be released then.
- The iOS 5 launch is also likely to coincide with the release of a new type of iPad, which we previously reported on.
- The new iOS will be heavily built around the cloud, and we could see several new services launch from Apple that take advantage of this.
- Yes, one of those is very likely a “music locker” service. There is also a fall launch aim for this, during Apple’s annual music-themed event.
- But much of the cloud stuff will first be talked about at WWDC, Apple’s developer event which will take place in June.
- One of the new cloud service elements is likely a location service that focuses on finding friends and family members.
- As we said yesterday, OS X Lion is still on pace for a summer release — some of the new cloud components are likely to be baked into it as well.
David Kravets:
Respected for his iPhone hacks and now the PlayStation 3 jailbreak, the 21-year-old New Jersey man is accused of breaching the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and other laws after his website published an encryption key and software tools that allow PlayStation owners to gain complete control of their consoles from the firmware on up. Hotz has complied with a court order and removed the hack.
I hope Apple doesn’t do the same thing. George isn’t doing much wrong and Sony is just making an example of him.
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