Nov 4th, 2009 - Engadget
Be still, our beating hearts! HTC has just pressed the "Go" button for European and Asian shipping of its latest object of desire, and it's served notice to American phone lovers that the HD2 is coming to them soon as well. Slated for a "major US carrier" some time "early 2010," it'll land squarely in the same time bracket as the XPERIA X10, which should lead to some really quite interesting decisions to be made, presumably by March 2010. The WinMo 6.5 device might be shipping now, but you'll have to wait at least until the 9th of November before you can spill your Euros for it, and we expect to see a flurry of pricing and contract information filling that short waiting time. Full PR after the break.
Related stories:
Tory indecision and division over Europe
Nov 5th, 2009 - guardian.co.uk
It is perhaps both alarming and predictable that it has taken the intervention of France's Europe minister to bring the Conservative party's position on Europe to the fore (France: 'autistic Tories castrated UK', 5 November)...David Cameron's Europe plan is doomed - EU ministers
Nov 5th, 2009 - guardian.co.uk
David Cameron is heading for a confrontation with Europe after some of Britain's closest EU allies today rejected out of hand key demands outlined by the Conservative leader this week.
Three more countries today dismissed the Tories' new approach...Fall of the Berlin Wall: A Victory for Europe
Nov 5th, 2009 - BusinessWeek
On Nov. 9, 2009, Germany will celebrate the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. The event epitomized the collapse of the Iron Curtain and provided the final impulse for the end of communist rule by the Soviet Union...
Deutsche Telekom Profit Rises; Confirms 2009 Targets
Nov 5th, 2009 - Bloomberg
Nov. 5 (Bloomberg) -- Deutsche Telekom AG, Europe’s biggesttelephone company, posted a better-than-expected 7.2 percentincrease in third-quarter profit, aided by cost cuts...
Dollar Mixed as Sober Global Assessment Returns
Oct 30th, 2009 - Wall Street Journal
LONDON -- The post-U.S. GDP rally in risk appetite is fading in Europe Friday, leaving the dollar mixed in quiet trading. By 1020 GMT, the euro had slipped back from a high of $1.4862 to trade at $1.4849 from $1.4835 late in New York Thursday...

