- Porn Panel: Nix 'Mouse-Trapping'
- Cisco
Wires The Home
- The "R" Technology
Revolution: Relationship, Research Revenue
- Privacy
Council Will Offer Lexis-Nexis Content
- Lawyers:
Helping Us, Hurting Us
- AOL Said Not
Living Up to Promises
- Everybody Go
Surfing
- IDC Sees an Interactive TV
Revolution
- Cross-Examination Sinks
E-Mail Add-On
- Expanded Web Domains
Could Include .Kids, .Pro, Or .xxx
- Barnes
and Noble Leads Bricks - and Mortars Pack
- Global
Bandwidth: Feast or Famine?
- E-tailers
Must Master China's Diversity
- Network
Appliance to push content delivery network
- Austin
Suffers Growing Pains
- Network Appliance
Unveils Content Delivery Products
- Does
someone in Alabama have my CD?
- Microsoft
.Net in the works for Linux?
- Older
IT Pros Need Not Apply
- The Pitch
: Alternative Medicine
- Site Places
Bounty On Patents
- The Net Gets Wet
- On Creating Digital Dividends
- Web
Users Intend To Vote ... In Force
Porn Panel: Nix 'Mouse-Trapping' The Commission on Child Online Protection
wants the government to come down hard on sex site practices such as 'mouse-trapping'
-- when multiple windows open and it takes forever to close them all. Cisco Wires The Home
Even if you're not James Bond, Cisco Systems can help you live like him
The "R" Technology Revolution:
Relationship, Research Revenue Single letters are the marketer's touchstones.
We have the ubiquitous - e- used in company names, e-commerce (B2C and B2B varieties),
and, as one pundit exclaimed, E-nough. We want to focus on R-relationship technologies
gathering research to produce revenue Privacy Council Will
Offer Lexis-Nexis Content The Privacy Council announced this week that
it has formed an alliance with Lexis-Nexis to provide privacy content through
the latter company's real-time news service, Veracity. Lawyers: Helping Us,
Hurting Us Journalists and lawyers. Siblings under the skin. A symbiosis
that's often uneasy but essential to a free press AOL Said Not Living Up
to Promises Rivals continue to maintain that America Online is not allowing
other services to communicate with its popular instant messaging service Everybody Go Surfing
Need to get out more but can't bear to leave your computer screen? Jack
Schofield explains how to socialise in cyberspace IDC Sees an Interactive
TV Revolution Massive improvements to the infrastructure for TV-centric
information appliances over the past few years and lower costs per home for interactive
service deployment will foster an interactive TV revolution. Cross-Examination Sinks
E-Mail Add-On Jude asks the right questions and uncovers security flaws
that give a vendor a failing grade Expanded Web Domains
Could Include .Kids, .Pro, Or .xxx As the Internet evolves and grows,
browsers seeking family-friendly sites might soon be able to type .kids instead
of .com. Less kid-friendly sites might be found using the suffix .sex or .xxx.
Barnes and Noble Leads
Bricks - and Mortars Pack Book seller boasts a unique audience of 3.5
million, by far the leader among bricks-and-mortar shopping sites Global Bandwidth: Feast
or Famine? How much bandwidth is really out there, how much do you need,
and how much should you expect to pay for it? E-tailers Must Master
China's Diversity e-tailers will need to understand regional differences
among the Chinese population in order to gain a foothold in the world's most populous
country. Network Appliance to
push content delivery network Network Appliance is looking to capitalize
on its cache expertise to get a head start in the content delivery network market.
Austin Suffers Growing
Pains San Francisco gets all the ink on how dot-coms are influencing
the landscape. But Texas' famous university town is changing, too, and some say
not for the better. Network Appliance Unveils
Content Delivery Products CA-based Network Appliance introduced a host
of new products that it hopes will come closer to fulfilling the promise of rich
content delivery. Does someone in Alabama
have my CD? Double-check your checkout at e-commerce sites, says Jim
Rapoza, for the holidays are near. Microsoft .Net in the
works for Linux? According to an SEC filing, Corel could port .Net to
Linux. And -- surprise, surprise -- Microsoft was threatening to sue Corel, not
vice versa. Older IT Pros Need Not
Apply If filling IT positions is such a big problem for companies, then
why do skilled, experienced workers struggle to find full-time employment? The Pitch : Alternative
Medicine Awash in struggling startups and unfulfilled promises, online
health care is one sector most entrepreneurs won't go near. Three new companies
are taking a swing anyway -- and promising results and profits now, not later.
Site Places Bounty On
Patents BountyQuest.com aims to enlist public to help companies track
down patent-related information The Net Gets Wet
The Navy announces it has finally conquered one of the toughest Internet frontiers:
the ocean. On Creating Digital Dividends
Hundreds of world leaders and Internet bigwigs converge this week to
discuss the worldwide gap between those with access to digital technologies and
those without. Web Users Intend To Vote
... In Force Online users are a politically involved group, with a respectable
55.7% reporting that they voted in the non-Presidential election year 1999
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