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InternetNews January 7, 2004 Clint Boulton |
VERITAS to Acquire Application Virtualization Firm The storage firm will pay $59M for Ejasent, bolstering its utility computing portfolio to compete with IBM, HP and EMC.  |
InternetNews January 7, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
Intel Puts Its Money on the Connected Home The chip-making giant will invest $200 million to get more of its chips into the digital home.  |
InternetNews January 7, 2004 Michael Singer |
Infineon Joins Flash Memory Melee The German chipmaker jumps into a profitable but potentially volatile market that is teeming with competitors.  |
InternetNews January 7, 2004 Michael Singer |
AMD Shipping 64-Bit Athlon for Notebooks With the help of Microsoft, the No. 2 chip company hopes to prompt a whole new buying cycle of Athlons for mainstream notebook computers.  |
InternetNews January 7, 2004 Clint Boulton |
Big Blue's Blades Go Four-way IBM looks to pack extra punch in its super thin four-way blade centers, which they claim are more dense and powerful than comparable HP offerings.  |
BusinessWeek January 12, 2004 |
Hardware: Computers Get Their Groove Back Big companies are spending again, eager to update antiquated systems. PCs and peripherals are heating up -- but server profits will be squeezed  |
BusinessWeek January 12, 2004 |
Chips: This Boom Is Just Powering Up Economic recovery will further boost demand-and prices-across the industry. New chips from Intel and AMD are set to fire up Wi-Fi and computing.  |
BusinessWeek January 12, 2004 |
Consumer Electronics: Free-Falling Prices And Rocketing Sales Multipurpose DVD devices and MP3 players are poised for banner years. The entry of Dell, HP, and Gateway will intensify the competition.  |
InternetNews January 6, 2004 Michael Singer |
Dial 'M' For Celeron Intel tweaks its low-cost, entry-level processor to handle Centrino instructions for thin and light laptops and other applications.  |
InternetNews January 6, 2004 Michael Singer |
Transmeta Shrinks Crusoe Chip The low-power chipmaker looks forward to x86-based smaller form factors, what it calls Ultra Personal Computers.  |
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