Enterprise Software
- Commerce chief defends economy
- Briefly: Sun shuffles sales execs
- Microsoft delays Virtual PC for Macs (News in brief)
- Red Hat adopts Novell e-mail software
- Earnings alert: Microsoft mixed bag
- Microsoft earnings paint mixed picture
- Quiet no more (Newsmaker)
- Manugistics replaces CEO
- Free OpenOffice support on tap (News in brief)
- Groove to make connection with Casahl (News in brief)
- CSC bags $600 million deal
- Novell snaps up British Salmon (News in brief)
- SAP on target with quarterly earnings
- Deal boosts Liberty Alliance
- Enterprise architects clean house
- Sun shuffles sales execs (News in brief)
- Sun to announce four-Opteron server on Monday
- Sony wins case against seller of mod chips
- Sprint touts off-Net networks
- All eyes on virus protection at Athens Olympics
- Nokia releases 'bluesnarfing' fix
- Novell, Oracle move ahead with Liberty
- The weakest security link? It's you
- AT&T drops hunt for residential customers
- Verizon's Net phone service takes wing
- Strike costs hit SBC earnings (News in brief)
- Gateway widens its loss
- LCD maker stumbles in stock market debut
- Sony puts 7.2 megapixels in consumer camera (News in brief)
- Study: Game industry sales slip
- Report: Plasma TV, notebook prices drop
- For doctored photos, a new digital truth serum
- Toshiba races to release multimedia laptop
- The keyboards of tomorrow? (Perspective)
- Senate panel embraces state VoIP taxes
- Senator wants to ban P2P networks
- Silicon Valley votes with its wallet
- Hotmail slip improves members' memory
- Report on Sept. 11 finds home on Net
- Sign-ups propel EarthLink to profit (News in brief)
- Orbitz cuts outlook due to software glitches
- Hail to the 'coder in chief' (Newsmaker)
Wednesday, July 21, 2004
Enterprise Software
- Documentum adds storage tools
- SCO flops in DaimlerChrysler Unix lawsuit
- Asian Linux gaining momentum
- Never mind the cash--how's Microsoft's business?
- Hyperion income rises by more than half
- U.S. aims to digitize health records
- Maxtor drives in reverse
- Intel's top lawyer to retire (News in brief)
- Seagate lands customer for tiny drives (News in brief)
- Texas Instruments profit surges (News in brief)
- Infineon sets aside cash to cover potential penalties
- Start-ups search for hard-drive replacements
- Bulk mailer faces criminal charges
- Antiphishing group gets help from Microsoft
- Feeling secure? Not John Thompson (Newsmaker)
- Fighting back against online crime
- British cybercops nab alleged blackmailers
- 3G, the term, makes a comeback
- Atheros reaches into electronics devices (News in brief)
- Mobiles move on up in Europe
- Cell phone glitch throws off GPS
- Lucent stays the course
- AT&T Wireless sees smaller profit
- Wireless sales strengthen Sprint earnings
- For some beta testers, it's about buzz, not bugs
- Yahoo attracted by depth of camera phone field
- Federal court broadens DMCA safe harbors
- Antipiracy bill gains new ally
- eBay profit rises, but shares fall
- DreamWorks to spin off 'Shrek' studio
- Apple signs big U.K. indies for iTunes
- Comcast tunes into Disney for broadband
- Blogging: A world stuck on itself (Perspective)
Tuesday, July 20, 2004
Enterprise Software
- Sun ponders Solaris for Power, Itanium
- Gates to donate $3 billion windfall
- Oracle backs Asian Linux project (News in brief)
- Judge grills Oracle, DOJ at trial's close
- Oracle v. DOJ: Attorneys grilled in closing
- Microsoft to share its wealth with investors
- House says no to expensing options
- UK firm files patent suit against Apple, Microsoft
- Study calls for middle solution to offshoring
- Oracle puts weight behind Asian Linux
- HP memo: Microsoft planned open-source patent fight
- IBM to bring 'Atlantic' to open-source shore (News in brief)
- CA joins the Liberty Alliance (News in brief)
- IBM tries to hook computer science students
- Study: Outsourcing megadeals on the rise
- EMC skirts software slowdown (News in brief)
- Promoting the promise of Longhorn (Newsmaker)
- Sun lifted by revenue growth, Microsoft settlement
- Seagate reports loss (News in brief)
- Intel debuts low-power Pentium Ms
- IBM to shepherd British ministry
- CipherTrust adds policy compliance to e-mail (News in brief)
- Dell wants to teach Web surfers a security lesson
- The new face of cybercrime (Perspective)
- Judge: Feds, not states, should govern VoIP
- AT&T Wireless launches high-speed service
- Nortel sues bandwidth exchange site
- HP DVD writers aim to play nice
- Overhauled Dell adapters ship again
- Will consumers tune in to portable video?
- Schwab replaces CEO with founder
- Record labels settle with Israeli P2P company
- Group calls for copy protection Rosetta stone
- Google on the move
- Google tool plucks from rivals
- Spam sender settles N.Y. case
- Net agency heralds Web-addressing advance
- Google to post quarterly results
Monday, July 19, 2004
Enterprise Software
- Microsoft lets more MVPs into Windows (News in brief)
- RightNow sets IPO price (News in brief)
- Military contractor drafts WebMethods for RFID
- IBM to bring Eclipse tools to desktop applications
- Macromedia hones Web publishing tools
- Zend sets up shop in U.S. (News in brief)
- Microsoft pays to end Lindows suits
- Oblix overhauls management software (News in brief)
- IBM leaps into product content management
- BEA muscles into process automation
- Microsoft hits play on entertainment group
- House to vote on stock options bill (News in brief)
- Sun to build servers on Rock in 2008
- Matsushita selects Rambus for TV memory (News in brief)
- Start-up puts broadband plans into orbit
- Verizon's fiber race is on
- Smaller firms pour money into wireless
- The price of VoIP's thriftiness
- Sailing the seas of MP3s
- Lexmark's profits rise, but firm lowers forecast
- Sony lowers price of Memory Sticks (News in brief)
- Virgin music device gets 'round
- Verizon makes Treo 600 available (News in brief)
- Apple hatches newest iPod
- Companies toy with portable media players
- Storytellers of '90s innovation plan comebacks
- University fires back at Microsoft in browser battle
- E-ballot software wins vote of confidence
- Study: Fantasy sports sites addictive (News in brief)
- Supply shortage could drive up cost of clicks
- EU approves Sony-Bertelsmann music tie-up
- DivX video jogs forward (News in brief)
- Napster makes gains in colleges
- Brazil Internet craze angers English speakers
- Deconstructing the spyware face-off (Perspective)
- Exposing click fraud
Sunday, July 18, 2004
Enterprise Software
- Liberty Alliance signs up Oracle, Intel (News in brief)
- Opsware hopes to play well with others
- Oracle counts on success in China
Saturday, July 17, 2004
Enterprise Hardware
Friday, July 16, 2004
Enterprise Software
- Microsoft: Sun deal unsigned; feds look at Longhorn
- IBM expands job description for Linux exec (News in brief)
- Microsoft awarded $4 million in spam suit
- Sun desktop software exec moving to Linux specialist
- JBoss airs expansion plans
- Oracle to boost research spending in China
- SCO seeks to buttress case against Big Blue
- Was it worth the effort? (Perspective)
- Banking law mints tech windfall
- Alviso advisory: Intel delays new notebook chip
- Gateway returns to PC roots
- With Rollins at helm, Dell eyes ambitious course
- Samsung profit almost triples
- Motorola spinoff plan faces tough climate
- Dell increases second-quarter forecast
- First virus for Windows CE surfaces
- Network General back in business
- 'Atak' worm variant linked to al-Qaida sympathizer
- Chocks away for in-flight cell phone test
- Start-up Flarion ropes in big telecom players
- City-owned network moves forward
- Web reacts to Martha Stewart sentencing
- Microsoft tools drive online music offerings
- Call him Sir Tim Berners-Lee
Thursday, July 15, 2004
Enterprise Software
- IBM leads push to smooth software installation
- Red Hat restatement triggers legal attacks
- Moody's slashes EDS debt to junk (News in brief)
- Report: Offshoring only one drain on tech jobs
- Sun mulls an open-source Java server
- More than an open-source curiosity (Newsmaker)
- Veritas acquires utility computing firm
- Hooray! It's tax day, TSMC says (News in brief)
- Sun Microsystems faces minitender offer
- IBM profits beat the Street
- Europe propels PC shipments
- Rollins to take up the reins at Dell
- Fluid lenses, video messaging get research grants (News in brief)
- Nanosys prices IPO, looks ahead
- AT&T; Wireless to launch 3G service next week
- Nokia suffers Asian flu in America
- Sony Ericsson profits in second quarter
- Sony Ericsson picks up new phones
- Europe mulls spectrum trading
- Sprint's big VoIP plans for small business
- Nokia shares plunge on dismal outlook
- Sony, Samsung complete LCD plant
- Xbox Live roster hits 1 million (News in brief)
- Microsoft, Fiat team on car technology
- PC sales surge in Europe, Mideast, Africa
- Microsoft buys Lookout to boost search
- Season over for 'phishing'?
- eBay plugs into digital-music market
- Stamps.com, eBay settle dispute (News in brief)
- IM giants drop some barriers to peace