|
 |
Saturday, February 28, 2004 |
testing home page
11:46:35 AM
|
|
Testing to home page
11:45:07 AM
|
|
 |
Thursday, August 07, 2003 |
Soeur Thing. River Front Times Aug 7 2003 0:12AM ET
8:52:00 AM
|
|
 |
Wednesday, August 06, 2003 |
IBM: Linux legal troubles will fade. SCO's challenge to Linux eventually will become a forgotten chapter in the operating system's history, an IBM executive tells attendees of a Linux trade show Wednesday.
5:35:16 PM
|
|
Microsoft testers get an eyeful. In a brief security lapse, early testers of Microsoft software had access to discussions on all of the company's products, rather than just the programs they were trying out.
5:35:16 PM
|
|
Fewer alliances a red flag for Siebel?. The one-time software star sees its coterie of partners shrink to nearly half its former size. And at the same time, the company has been making cuts to its alliance-management staff.
5:35:16 PM
|
|
Lindows chief hears Net phones calling. Having done battle with the record industry and launched into a set-to with Microsoft, Michael Robertson now is taking on the phone companies.
5:35:16 PM
|
|
Study: Cell phone use to double. Though worldwide subscriptions to cell phone service will rise to 2 billion in the next few years, that twofold increase marks a slowdown in growth, according to a new study.
5:35:16 PM
|
|
 |
Thursday, July 17, 2003 |
Eye on the UK. Recent technology news and commentary from silicon.com and ZDNet UK, sister sites of CNET News.com.
5:52:12 PM
|
|
EDS boosts its hosting service. Electronic Data Systems expands a partnership with Maxamine to help customers assess the makeup of their Web sites as well as analyze traffic.
5:52:12 PM
|
|
Can you decipher kitty chat?. A new gadget from Japanese toy maker Takara--home of the woof-to-word device Bowlingual--reportedly promises to translate your cat's meows into human speech.
5:52:12 PM
|
|
Hitman 2 GC. TotalGames.net Jul 17 2003 5:47PM ET
5:51:46 PM
|
|
Bill aims to curb Net censorship. Would-be Internet censors in China and Myanmar could have a tougher time limiting the free flow of information, according to a measure approved by the House of Representatives.
8:51:20 AM
|
|
Earnings alert: SAP, Nokia show weakness. The software maker posts earnings above forecast, despite depressed sales...The handset maker warns that a soft dollar will whack sales and profits...AMD remains in the red.
8:51:20 AM
|
|
Why Oracle-PeopleSoft is a lose-lose. He saved Oracle in the early 1990s, and now Larry Ellison's former No. 2, Ray Lane, tells CNET News.com why his old boss would be best served by rethinking his acquisition strategy.
8:51:20 AM
|
|
 |
Wednesday, July 16, 2003 |
Microsoft loses key patent ruling. A federal judge issues a critical ruling supporting a patent lawsuit against the software giant brought by InterTrust, a digital rights management company.
8:51:19 PM
|
|
Dell finds Axim glitch. The PC maker says it has identified a software glitch inside its Axim handheld and will not ship new units until it corrects the problem.
8:51:19 PM
|
|
IBM sees earnings momentum. Big Blue reports higher second-quarter profit than a year ago, meeting Wall Street targets, but says it's still too early to predict an upturn in the tech market.
8:51:19 PM
|
|
PC sales surge in second quarter. Despite the SARS epidemic, the war in Iraq and economic uncertainty, the personal computer market grew faster than expected last quarter.
8:51:18 PM
|
|
Broad patents on streaming media upheld. A California court finds that a little-known company may have a legitimate stake in just about every kind of streaming media, from Internet multimedia to in-demand cable.
2:52:54 PM
|
|
AMD trims its losses a bit. Advanced Micro Devices sees revenue pick up slightly in the second quarter to $645 million, but the chipmaker is still in the red.
2:52:54 PM
|
|
Apple beats expectations on lower profit. Buoyed by a rise in sales, Apple Computer on Wednesday reported third-quarter results that exceeded expectations, although its profit was down from a year ago.
2:52:54 PM
|
|
Orbitz hit by site outage. Orbitz is hit by a site outage, making the popular travel site unavailable to visitors at the height of the busy summer travel season.
2:52:53 PM
|
|
Microsoft's dog food dietitian. Rick Devenuti,Microsoft's chief information officer, explains to CNET News.com why his department has become a live testing ground for all the company's beta products.
2:52:53 PM
|
|
Wrong turn in the Net's future. U.C. Berkeley professor Yale Braunsteinsays the future growth of broadband in the United States is being put at peril by an FCC determined to hand over control of the Internet market to the Baby Bells.
7:44:31 AM
|
|
Hot spots elude RIAA dragnet. The anonymity provided by wireless broadband access points is hindering the record industry's fight to stop people from trading songs and movies online.
7:44:31 AM
|
|
Study: Corporate P2P use is common. Peer-to-peer software such as Kazaa and Morpheus are deeply entrenched inside corporate networks, according to a new survey of computer systems.
7:44:30 AM
|
|
Macromedia updates light-duty Web tool. The software maker adds antipiracy product activation and Mac OS X support to Contribute, its Web publishing tool aimed at ordinary office workers.
7:44:30 AM
|
|
Euro speaker. Westmidlands.com Jul 15 2003 1:24PM ET
7:43:05 AM
|
|
 |
Monday, July 14, 2003 |
Yahoo to buy Overture for $1.63 billion. The Web portal says that it plans to buy search company Overture Services, a move that's squarely aimed at taking on Google, Microsoft and other search engine competitors.
12:51:39 PM
|
|
Wi-Fi pushes beyond the laptop. Cisco Systems' Linksys division is set to start selling a device that uses Wi-Fi to connect computers to stereos and televisions.
12:51:39 PM
|
|
Earnings alert: Yahoo meets expectations. The Web portal meets the Street's mark though analysts are not yet cheering...Corel post loss, cuts jobs...3Com says a joint venture in China will launch later than expected.
9:51:11 AM
|
|
The politics of open-source software. CNET News.com's Declan McCullagh discusses why the Initiative for Software Choice is lobbying hard to make sure government agencies here and abroad don't unduly favor open source.
8:51:47 AM
|
|
A fair share. Stock options have long promised riches to legions of workers, but many have been left with worthless options--a bitter and demoralizing reminder of unrealized dreams.
8:51:47 AM
|
|
SGI uses ATI for graphics behemoths. Silicon Graphics on Monday is expected to release a new high-end visualization machine that marks a major change for the company: reliance on mainstream video technology from ATI.
8:51:47 AM
|
|
Good reaches out to more devices. Good Technology releases new messaging software and adds partners as it looks to attract more enterprise customers by broadening the device and network compatibility of its software.
8:51:47 AM
|
|
 |
Sunday, July 13, 2003 |
|