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Vincent Padois, head tutor at the Pierre and Marie Curie University who teaches robotics and is babysitting the Paris ICub, makes a demonstration with ICub robot, a ?hybrid embodied cognitive system for a humanoid robot" about 1 metre (3.2 feet) high, at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris September 4, 2009. Six versions of ICub exist in laboratories across Europe, where scientists are painstakingly tweaking its electronic brain to make it capable of learning, just like a human child and hoping it will learn how to adapt its behaviour to changing circumstances, offering new insights into the development of human consciousness.   REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer

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    Adobe merges business units serving PCs, mobile

    SAN FRANCISCO
    Mon Apr 7, 2008 6:14pm EDT
    The box cover for Adobe Systems Incorporated's Acrobat Connect Professional is shown in this undated handout file photo. REUTERS/Adobe Systems Incorporated

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    SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Adobe Systems Inc (ADBE.O) said on Monday it was putting under one roof businesses selling software for computers, phones and consumer electronics to make them run on a single technology platform.

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    The announcement is part of a series of management restructuring moves Adobe is making following the planned retirement of two long-time executives, effective May 1. A spokeswoman said no employee job losses would result.

    The move represents the further consolidation of its 2005 Macromedia acquisition with the broader Adobe organization while also recognizing the growing convergence of once-distinct software and the need for it to run across a range of devices.

    The merging of the different business units may appear on its face to be simply an organizational restructuring, where the Mobile and Devices Business Unit will be folded under Adobe's Experience and Technology group.

    But the changes also are part of Adobe's effort to create a unified technical underpinning for software that serves everyone from Japanese phone users to YouTube watchers.

    Adobe said its mobile and devices business unit is joining the experience and technology group led by Adobe Chief Technology Officer Kevin Lynch, a former Macromedia executive.

    Gary Kovacs, vice president of product management and marketing for the mobile and devices unit, has been promoted to vice president and general manager of the business unit and will report to Lynch from May 1.

    Kovacs takes over for Senior Vice President Al Ramadan, who is leaving Adobe effective April 30, after nearly 10 years with Adobe and, before that, Macromedia. Kovacs was previously vice president of product marketing at Macromedia.

    Separately, the company said 16-year Adobe and Macromedia veteran David Mendels, senior vice president of its Business Productivity Business Unit, would leave at the month's end. The division is best known for its Adobe Acrobat document management software.

    Mendels will be replaced May 1 by Rob Tarkoff, senior vice president of corporate development, who joined the company last year from EMC Corp (EMC.N) and, before that, Documentum.

    Paul Weiskopf, Adobe's vice president of strategy, mergers and acquisitions and investments, will succeed Tarkoff.

    Weiskopf joined Adobe in 2005, where he worked with senior management on long-term investment strategies and played a key role in the acquisitions of Macromedia, Scene 7 and Virtual Ubiquity. Previously he was a corporate strategist at Hewlett-Packard Co (HPQ.N).

    Shares of Adobe closed 5 cents lower at $36.92 in regular session trading on Nasdaq ahead of the news. Following the announcement, the shares traded up 21 cents at $37.14.

    (Editing by Braden Reddall)



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