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PC World November 1, 2002 |
Proposed Antitrust Deal Accepted Judge orders more flexible bundling, greater choices in settlement agreed to by Microsoft.  |
Information Today November 2002 Marydee Ojala |
Forrester Research Hosts Portals Summit This 1-day event in Salt Lake City addressed the current enterprise portal landscape.  |
Information Today November 2002 Gail Dykstra |
The Truth About Digital Rights Management This Software and Information Industry Association panel discussion looked at DRM's role in the content market  |
Salon.com October 31, 2002 Andrew Leonard |
Flag of inconvenience Fearing the Taiwanese flag would irk China, Red Hat yanked it from its version of Linux -- and started an international geek uproar.  |
Salon.com October 30, 2002 Farhad Manjoo |
Goliath crushes David Even as it was fighting its antitrust battle with the feds, Microsoft was already on to Round 2: Winning the streaming-media wars. Second of two parts.  |
Salon.com October 29, 2002 Farhad Manjoo |
Microsoft's media monopoly Bill Gates wants to control the delivery of digital entertainment into your home. And according to a lawsuit brought by a pioneering software company, he's prepared to crush anything that gets in his way. First of two parts.  |
New Architect November 2002 Thomas Claburn |
Catching Mono Miguel de Icaza is the CTO and cofounder of Ximian, a leading open source software and service provider. He's given Linux a leg up onto the desktop. Now, with Mono, he's shepherding the open source flock into Microsoft's .Net. An interview with de Icaza on making a cross-platform .Net.  |
Salon.com October 15, 2002 Farhad Manjoo |
Saving AOL The online giant's woes are legion. Will new software and a bet on broadband come to the rescue?  |
Linux Journal November 1, 2002 Lawrence Rosen |
Why We Still Oppose UCITA The author believes that it will be important to start afresh with UCITA and consider the new environment in which open-source software competes against proprietary, closed software marketed by wealthy companies.  |
PC World October 4, 2002 Paul Roberts |
Is Microsoft Serious About Security? Software giant says offering secure products is its top priority, but new vulnerabilities continue to appear.  |
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