- The Unlikely Revolutionary
- EMI's
Song to Remain the Same
- Internet
Proposals Given To Congress
- April's
Internet Stock-Shock Fallout Continues
- Web
Has Little Impact For Most Olympics Fans
- Wal-Mart
No Web Mart
- Quake rattles Japanese
telcos, chip makers
- Informax takes
its bioinformatics software to the enterprise
- California
Cities Turning Away Dot-Coms
- IBM
to build $2.5B chip plant in New York
- Cracked!
'World's toughest' code broken
- Microsoft's
Window Into Linux
- Star Wars
- Key
E-Business Legal Battles Looming
- Ranking
the Best Venture Capitalists
- Lucent's
management change should have come sooner
- BT
Claims Talks With AT&T Continue, Despite Reports
- NBCi
President Quits
- UPS moving to install
wireless LANs at all delivery hubs
- Prohibition
Online ?
- Microsoft Urging Users To
Patch 'Serious' IIS Security Hole
- Transmeta
Debuts Crusoe Processor
The
Unlikely Revolutionary Dave Sorensen is shaking things up at General
Mills, leading the maker of Cheerios and Betty Crocker cake mixes onto the Internet.
EMI's Song to Remain
the Same The Warner Music-EMI deal is on hold for now, which means execs
at EMI get to keep doing things their way for a while... If you think Web radio
is an alternative to traditional radio, think again.... Internet Proposals Given
To Congress Congress should consider a voucher program to help needy
families get connected to the Internet, a scientific advisory panel April's Internet Stock-Shock
Fallout Continues The sudden drop in the Internet stocks market last
April continues to reverberate through the online financial markets, according
to a study released today by Jupiter Web Has Little Impact
For Most Olympics Fans Although operators of the official Web site of
the Sidney Olympics and the Web home of the games' US broadcaster each boasted
of traffic reaching a half-million visitors a day, a study released today says
the Web wasn't a big part of most Americans' Olympic experience Wal-Mart No Web Mart
Sudden site closure magnifies online superiority of retail rivals Quake rattles Japanese
telcos, chip makers 7.3-magnitude quake sends some workers home, reduces
telco capacity. Informax takes its bioinformatics
software to the enterprise Pharmaceutical research is changing in ways
likely to make a few software companies very rich. California Cities Turning
Away Dot-Coms Cities in the land of high-tech milk and honey are doing
the unthinkable: turning away Internet companies that are the cutting edge of
Silicon Valley's software economy... IBM to build $2.5B chip
plant in New York IBM said it plans to build a $2.5 billion chip plant
in East Fishkill, N.Y. The plant is part of its $5 billion capital-investment
plan to support its semiconductor business. Cracked! 'World's toughest'
code broken Swedes use 70 years of computer time to decipher 10 increasingly
difficult codes set by author Simon Singh.
Microsoft's Window Into Linux Corel got a cool $135 million from their
former adversary in exchange for a promise to promote MS' new '.NET' platform.
But SEC documents reveal Microsoft can also have Corel develop Linux apps for
the platform Star Wars The
legal battle between DirecTV and its scrappy challenger over shelf space in the
nation's largest consumer electronics stores is slated for trial in December.
Key E-Business Legal
Battles Looming The use and abuse of spam and the fight over domain names
are the subject of two lawsuits gathering steam in the courts that could affect
online business conduct in the future, Ranking the Best Venture
Capitalists The best venture capitalists are the ones who do well by
their companies, not just themselves. An exclusive survey ranks today's top Internet
VCs by this new measure -- and turns up a few surprises. Lucent's management change
should have come sooner Several analysts who follow the networking business
said today's ousting of Richard McGinn as chairman and CEO of struggling Lucent
Technologies was long overdue. BT Claims Talks With
AT&T Continue, Despite Reports Beleaguered British Telecom [NYSE:BT],
having seen its share price plunge from 15 to around six pounds ($22.50 to $9)
over the last year, was fighting a rear guard action after a report in Wall Street
journal NBCi President Quits
Edmond Sanctis exits after NBC network's online unit was streamlined
UPS moving to install
wireless LANs at all delivery hubs United Parcel Service of America plans
by mid-2002 to install advanced wireless LANs and next-generation scanners at
all 2,000 of its package-delivery hubs and sorting facilities. Prohibition Online ?
Clinton is set to sign into law Sen. Orrin Hatch's bill against the online
sale of alcoholic beverages via the internet. This tells the net community that
the idea that the internet's inception would promote "friction-free capitalism"
was convoluted, at best. Microsoft Urging Users
To Patch 'Serious' IIS Security Hole Microsoft Corp. is scrambling to
alert users of its Internet Information Server (IIS) software to a serious security
flaw that has been discussed online by potential attackers for at least a week
Transmeta Debuts Crusoe
Processor Laptop computers are continuing to become more powerful machines.
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