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CIO May 15, 2004 John Edwards |
The Inevitability of Blade - Essential Technology Blade servers helped the Mars rover land safely while saving NASA money. That combination of high power and low cost is driving blade technology mainstream.  |
InternetNews May 14, 2004 Michael Singer |
Intergraph, Gateway Settle 'Clipper' Spat Gateway will pay a total of $10 million for use of Intergraph's technology leaving only HP to litigate or license in the so-called 'OEM case.'  |
InternetNews May 14, 2004 Clint Boulton |
IBM: ILM Par for the On-Demand Course IBM didn't come to the information lifecycle management table overnight, but now it's touting the capability as part of its on-demand infrastructure.  |
InternetNews May 14, 2004 Michael Singer |
Intel's Menu Chocked with Dual-Core, Mobile Chips Company execs point to a refocus on 64-bit systems, Itanium and Pentium M in the short-term.  |
InternetNews May 14, 2004 Michael Singer |
Apple Searches for a Few Good Clusters The Macintosh maker holds a contest to supply five scientific research projects with its bioinformatics hardware and software.  |
The Motley Fool May 14, 2004 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Highway to Dell Dell delivers, like it does every three months.  |
PC World June 2004 Tom Mainelli |
Processors: Intel Plays Name Game CPU names to change as clock speeds lose their relevance.  |
BusinessWeek May 24, 2004 Gene G. Marcial |
Sun's Eclipse Can't Last Forever Sun Microsystems has been an investment disaster for five years, with the stock way down. Most analysts are still quite negative on it.  |
InternetNews May 13, 2004 |
Intel Exec Named Cadence CEO Former Itanium and Xeon czar Mike Fister replaces Ray Bingham at the San Jose, Calif.-based electronic design firm.  |
InternetNews May 13, 2004 Clint Boulton |
IBM Launches Supercomputing Center Big Blue opens a European counterpart to its U.S. Deep Computing On Demand center in hopes of expanding business.  |
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