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The Motley Fool July 26, 2005 Stephen D. Simpson |
Taiwan Semiconductor Rounds the Turn Business appears to be picking up for this semiconductor manufacturer, but is there still value in the stock?  |
InternetNews July 25, 2005 Clint Boulton |
HP Pitches Low Cost, High Capacity Drives How do you keep costs down without sacrificing storage capacity? HP says Fibre Attached Technology Adapted (FATA) is the way to go.  |
InternetNews July 25, 2005 Clint Boulton |
EMC Makes Massive Array Official The new DMX-3 swallows unprecedented amounts of storage to help corporations tackle the growing data glut head-on.  |
InternetNews July 25, 2005 David Needle |
Intel's Arizona Plans Are FABulous Intel is sinking $3 billion into a new chip manufacturing plant, focused on the company's most cutting edge 45 nanometer process technology for future computing platforms. The new technology lowers the cost of chip production.  |
InternetNews July 25, 2005 David Needle |
More Dual Core News Expected From Intel The chip giant has several announcements planned over the next ten days, including processor news, a manufacturing update and a plan for emerging markets.  |
The Motley Fool July 25, 2005 Tom Taulli |
SanDisk's Flashy Quarter Higher-tech cell phones and gadgets mean bigger memory sales. Management indicated that investors should expect "significant returns" for 2006.  |
BusinessWeek August 1, 2005 |
Samsung's Goal: Be Like BMW Samsung is out to build a brand that people know instantly and desire.  |
BusinessWeek August 1, 2005 |
How Philips Found New Spark Royal Philips Electronics CEO Gerard Kleisterlee tells how an emphasis on smart design pushes innovation, makes happy customers, and boosts the bottom line.  |
BusinessWeek August 1, 2005 Steve Hamm |
Two Pillars Of IBM's Growth Look Shaky A better second quarter for IBM hides challenges in mainframes and services.  |
Entrepreneur August 2005 Amanda C. Kooser |
Today's Specialist Microsoft aims to serve up support for small businesses with a new training program, utilizing partners who have completed training and passed a proficiency test. The company expects to have 20,000 certified specialists within 18 months of the program's July launch.  |
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