| Old Articles: <Older 1111-1120 Newer> |
 |
BusinessWeek May 31, 2004 Jay Greene |
Teaching Microsoft To Make Nice? Microsoft's general counsel is settling suits and turning enemies into partners.  |
BusinessWeek May 31, 2004 |
A Mellower Microsoft in Court? New Microsoft General Counsel Bradford L. Smith says it's seeking settlements as partnerships play a bigger role now for the giant.  |
InternetNews May 21, 2004 Michael Singer |
A New Era Of SOA: Sun and Microsoft Publicly, the two sides are quiet, but backroom planning on service oriented architectures is fueling their 10-year interoperability roadmap.  |
InternetNews May 21, 2004 Clint Boulton |
Microsoft Indigo Architect John Shewchuk One of the builders behind the Indigo messaging platform talks up how it works and how it fits into the OS puzzle.  |
InternetNews May 21, 2004 Ryan Naraine |
Sneak Peek Into Microsoft Research At the WWW Conference in New York, Microsoft Research head Rick Rashid offers a glimpse of some of the software giant's more exciting projects.  |
InternetNews May 21, 2004 Clint Boulton |
Web Services Strategy Shift For Infravio The software maker offers a central repository for reusable assets as the market for Web services and SOA management heats up.  |
InternetNews May 21, 2004 Erin Joyce |
2004: The Year Open Source Changed Everything Just like in 1981, IBM is at another crossroads in the evolution of computing systems.  |
InternetNews May 21, 2004 Michael Singer |
Oracle, PeopleSoft CEOs File Depositions Ellison and Conway answer their subpoenas, as lawyers for third-party rivals haggle over releasing sensitive corporate documents.  |
The Motley Fool May 21, 2004 Phil Wohl |
Microsoft Puts on a Happy Face By partnering with former bitter rivals, like Oracle, Microsoft is taking the steam out of the monopoly theories and positioning itself quite well to be a prominent tech stock for years to come.  |
InternetNews May 20, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
Oracle Joins Microsoft's Visual Studio The database software maker offers an olive branch to its rival to help its customers dovetail Oracle's products with Visual Studio .NET 2003.  |
| <Older 1111-1120 Newer> Return to current articles. |