| Old Articles: <Older 2901-2910 Newer> |
 |
InternetNews September 20, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Oracle, HP Get Agile Oracle and HP are unveiling a joint initiative to help enterprises improve IT service levels and lower IT costs. They will ensure Oracle's software runs on HP's servers. Oracle also announced a new lifetime support policy.  |
InternetNews September 20, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Sun Flares with New UltraSparc The UltraSparc IV+ runs circles around its predecessor as Sun looks to boost its standings in the Unix market, which have been slipping slightly recently.  |
The Motley Fool September 20, 2005 Jim Gillies |
The David and Goliath of GPS Is bigger always better, or do the best investments come in small packages? GPS device firm Lowrance Electronics falls short of industry behemoth Garmin by almost every metric, but you have to pay up for the big gun. Is it worth it?  |
InternetNews September 19, 2005 David Needle |
Intel, Oracle Power Electric Sports Car The first all-electric sports car uses Intel chips, WiMax and Oracle database software to communicate.  |
The Motley Fool September 19, 2005 Nathan Parmelee |
Not Quite a Bargain A high-quality tech stock hits the low list. Headsets are a fairly profitable business, and there is plenty of room for innovation there, not to mention branching into related products like headphones. Put Plantronics on your stock watch list.  |
The Motley Fool September 19, 2005 Nathan Alderman |
Nintendo's Revolutionary Controller The video game innovator wows fans and critics with an oddball input device.  |
Entrepreneur October 2005 Heather Clancy |
Home Smart Home Smart Systems Technologies wants to make your new home the ultimate gadget.  |
InternetNews September 16, 2005 Jim Wagner |
Dell Puts Mandriva on Latitude for Students Dell is offering its low-cost Latitude 110L notebook pre-loaded with the Mandriva's Linux operating system.  |
National Defense October 2005 Grace Jean |
Harvesting Solar Energy From Nano-Thin Films Researchers at the U.S. Army Soldier Systems Center in Natick, Mass., are developing prototypes of battery chargers and shelters that would harness solar energy through nanocomposite thin-film photovoltaics.  |
National Defense October 2005 Grace Jean |
Moving Nanotechnology Research Into Market Remains a Challenge U.S. investments in nanotechnology have escalated into the billions of dollars in recent years. Yet moving the resulting discoveries and materials into the market remains one of the industry's toughest challenges.  |
| <Older 2901-2910 Newer> Return to current articles. |