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InternetNews May 13, 2005 Tim Gray |
U.S., China Clash Again Over Tech Washington claims Beijing's government software procurement rules are stacked against American companies.  |
The Motley Fool May 13, 2005 Tim Beyers |
Firefox's New Beau IBM embraces the upstart open-source browser. Maybe you should consider investing in open source, too.  |
The Motley Fool May 13, 2005 Tom Taulli |
Blackboard's Textbook Quarter The educational software solutions provider reports strong growth and upped its guidance for the year to earnings of $22 million to $23 million, which translates into $0.78 to $0.81 per share.  |
InternetNews May 12, 2005 Michael Singer |
Ballmer: Innovation Requires Bold Bets Microsoft's CEO looks to grow the company by pushing hard on search, collaboration and productivity software.  |
InternetNews May 12, 2005 Tim Gray |
MSN Snaps up MessageCasts For Alert Services MessageCast's alerts are now under Microsoft's roof, providing updates in every channel you can think of.  |
InternetNews May 12, 2005 Jim Wagner |
Interwoven in Microsoft's Gold Circle Interwoven signs up to Microsoft's top partnership level and the benefits it brings.  |
InternetNews May 12, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Helping Uncle Sam Rate Its SOA BEA Systems targets government agencies with a service-oriented architecture assessment test.  |
InternetNews May 12, 2005 Michael Singer |
Oracle Fulfills PeopleSoft Support Promise The release of Enterprise Performance Management 8.9 is the first step in Oracle's plan to finish PeopleSoft projects.  |
The Motley Fool May 12, 2005 Tom Taulli |
ScanSoft's Nuanced Deal Wall Street doesn't like ScanSoft's merger with Nuance. But private equity firm Warburg Pincus does.  |
PC Magazine May 4, 2005 John R. Quain |
Thinking Machines, Take Two Palm cofounder Jeff Hawkins has started a company, Numenta, to create computers that can think like humans and to inspire new work on computer intelligence.  |
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