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BusinessWeek November 24, 2010 Ira Boudway |
A Website for the World's Materialists New York startup Thingd aims to compile an online catalog "of everything in the world" and plans to make money off affiliate fees and transactions of secondhand goods.  |
BusinessWeek November 24, 2010 Douglas MacMillan |
Innovator: Ex-MySpace Exec Amit Kapur The former MySpace executive wants to build personalization software to help news sites and entertainment companies make better recommendations.  |
The Motley Fool November 24, 2010 Andrew Bond |
This Under-the-Radar Stock Gives Credence to the Tech Rally Tech Data's quarterly results and guidance look good for the technology sector.  |
The Motley Fool November 24, 2010 Anders Bylund |
That's a Big One, Oracle As legal battles go, this one should be pretty short. SAP has been ordered to pay up $1.3 billion to Oracle.  |
InternetNews November 24, 2010 |
ViVu to Bring Videoconferencing to Lync Startup specializing in high-definition video conferencing service for Skype says it is nearing release of a similar service for Microsoft's Lync unified communications offering.  |
The Motley Fool November 24, 2010 Jeff Hwang |
One of the Most Intriguing Products From the Las Vegas G2E IGT delivers a real hold'em poker experience, but don't expect it to challenge the video poker floors any time soon.  |
The Motley Fool November 24, 2010 John Reeves |
Gold or Apple? What about both? One prominent investor is bullish.  |
The Motley Fool November 24, 2010 Seth Jayson |
Why the Street Should Love Adobe's Earnings With 12.1% of operating cash flow coming from questionable sources, Adobe Systems investors should take a closer look at the underlying numbers.  |
The Motley Fool November 23, 2010 Anders Bylund |
Nuance Plus Apple Equals Bupkus Looking at the overnight stock chart for Nuance Communications, you'd be well within your rights to question Mr. Market's sanity.  |
InternetNews November 23, 2010 |
Windows at 25: What Brings the Next Generation? A quarter century after its launch, Microsoft's Windows remains the dominant computing platform, but the next couple decades promise radical change.  |
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