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Fast Company January 2004 Chuck Salter |
A Conference Call Worth 1,000 Words Staring down his critics, Kodak CEO Daniel A. Carp unveils a bold rescue plan to remake his troubled $12.8 billion company.  |
Fast Company January 2004 Nate Nickerson |
Intel's Portfolio Is Way Down. And That's Okay. Since the collapse of the initial-public-offering market in 2000, the venture capital business has been positively toxic. So who would keep making deals in such an environment? Well, the biggest name in venture capital these days isn't a traditional VC firm at all. It's Intel.  |
InternetNews January 2, 2004 Michael Singer |
DOJ May Settle with Memory Chip Maker Micron Technologies' possible amnesty deal with the Department of Justice is a boon to rival Rambus.  |
InternetNews January 2, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
IBM On-Demand Hits Target A big customer win for Big Blue's on-demand computing initiative.  |
BusinessWeek January 12, 2004 |
Craig Barrett Barrett's push to build highly efficient factories means that Intel can churn out chips at costs way below those of competitors.  |
BusinessWeek January 12, 2004 |
Yun Jong Yong Yun has made Samsung one of the world's fastest-growing brands, selling feature-packed digital gadgets and state-of-the-art chips.  |
BusinessWeek January 12, 2004 |
Nobuyuki Idei There are reasons to doubt the leadership ability of Sony CEO Nobuyuki Idei.  |
InternetNews December 31, 2003 Michael Singer |
Mini iPod On Apple's Plate All eyes will be on CEO Steve Jobs next week, when the Macintosh master is expected to pull an entry-level music player out of his hat.  |
InternetNews December 30, 2003 Erin Joyce |
It's Still a PC-Driven Home Network New survey from The NPD Group finds that PC makers are the go-to guys for consumers' increasing interest in home networking.  |
InternetNews December 30, 2003 Michael Singer |
China Driving Chip Growth in 2004 IDC analysts predict double-digit sales of semiconductors next year, thanks in part to high consumer demand for mobile phones and PCs.  |
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