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InternetNews March 1, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
A New Cattle-Driver for Longhorn Michael Sievert, a former AT&T Wireless executive, was named Microsoft's corporate vice president for Windows product management on Tuesday. Job no. 1: Longhorn.  |
CRM March 1, 2005 Jason Compton |
Oracle's Oyster The PeopleSoft acquisition alters the software giant's competitive landscape.  |
CRM March 1, 2005 Colin Beasty |
The End of Independence? Best-of-breed applications are feeling more pressure from full-suite solutions.  |
InternetNews March 1, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Intel, VMware Sign Virtualization Pact VMware's virtualization software will help Intel customers consolidate resources by running multiple instances of an operating system or application on one physical machine.  |
InternetNews March 1, 2005 Michael Singer |
IBM Restocks Eclipse Project The company centers on tools and plug-ins that link its programs to Web services, Java, WSDL and the Eclipse Modeling Framework.  |
The Motley Fool March 1, 2005 Jeff Hwang |
Midway's Narrow Scope Scores Midway Games caps off a year of progress with its first quarterly profit in five years.  |
The Motley Fool March 1, 2005 Tom Taulli |
SAP Revs on the M&A Autobahn Europe's largest software company proves it can do deals, too announcing its purchase of Retek. On the news, Retek's stock surged 40%. This transaction is likely to not be the last M&A deal for the German giant.  |
InternetNews February 28, 2005 Michael Singer |
PeopleSoft Users on the Fence: Report PeopleSoft customers jumping ship, climbing aboard Oracle's.  |
InternetNews February 28, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
Windows Media Player Name Game Microsoft comes up with eight names for the version of Windows that doesn't come with Windows Media Player installed - a demand by the EU.  |
BusinessWeek March 7, 2005 Robert Barker |
Why These Times Are Not So Taxing For Intuit Taxpayers who come to TurboTax via Free File are decidedly younger than average, and Intuit aims to convert them to fully paying software users as they age into more complicated tax situations. Worried investors should relax.  |
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