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JavaWorld January 2001 Tom Sullivan |
Sun outlines J2EE strategy Sun Microsystems today outlined its J2EE strategy for the coming year, gave a glimpse of its Web services strategy, and detailed a new release of the J2EE platform...  |
T.H.E. Journal January 2001 |
E-Learning Center Includes Integrated Support Sun Microsystems has signed an agreement with VIP Tone to deliver, install and support a school bundle with pre-loaded and pre-configured Sun Ray appliances and an integrated, customized Sun server...  |
PC World February 2001 Jon L. Jacobi |
Honey, I Shrunk the Bits! Removable Storage Gets (Really) Small Media storage devices slim down but too many standards threaten confusion...  |
PC World January 2, 2001 Tom Mainelli |
Intel Gets Funky With Introduction of MP3 Player Chip giant ready to release Concert Audio Player, releasing more consumer products soon...  |
Bank Technology News January 2001 David Gosnell |
Diebold Makes Peace With Advocates For Blind Committing to make all of its ATMs voice operated, Diebold is the first manufacturer to accommodate the demands of a stubbornly determined lobby for the disabled...  |
Salon.com December 19, 2000 Chris Scott |
Blind arrogance Apple repeatedly insults its own consumers, so why should we care if the company lives or dies?  |
Salon.com December 19, 2000 Wes Simonds |
How Apple can be fixed It's time to join the PC world and make the Mac the universe's most compatible computer...  |
Wired January 2001 |
Flash Forward: Polaroid's Five-Year Plan Polaroid needs a new future desperately: Its stock price is in the teens. And then there's the challenge that Polaroid, like every traditional camera company, faces in the all-powerful pixel...  |
Fast Company January 2001 Charles Fishman |
Face-Time: Donna Dubinsky Donna Dubinsky is half of the duo that turned the PalmPilot into the fastest-selling consumer product in history. So what's her killer app?  |
Fast Company January 2001 Amy Wilson Sheldon |
No Business Like Show Business Fifteen months ago, when Kim LeMasters, 51, left Hollywood for Silicon Valley, he didn't abandon the entertainment industry. He's now CEO and chairman of ReplayTV, a company that makes next-generation television products...  |
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