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Information Today April 21, 2003 Paula J. Hane |
SurfWax Aims to Surf into the Enterprise Market SurfWax, a small California-based company that has provided Web-based research solutions for individuals, schools, and law firms, announced the release of SurfWax Enterprise. The launch of the new meta-search product marks the company's move into the corporate and enterprise market.  |
Wired May 2003 David Kushner |
Prepare to Meet Thy Doom John Carmack's game engines set the standard for PC graphics - and legions of gamers and the industry love him for it. Now he's brought the world to the brink of Doom III.  |
CIO April 15, 2003 |
The Earliest Adopter Microsoft's IT boss is the first to install, the first to deploy and the first to judge. Consequently, he's learned a little bit about rollouts.  |
CRM April 1, 2003 Martin Schneider |
Vertical Focus: Healthcare Changes in the way healthcare providers and pharmaceutical companies go to market have opened the door for CRM projects, vendors and analysts say.  |
CRM April 1, 2003 |
Hot Seat: Julie Choi Avoiding the crush of Microsoft CRM  |
CRM April 2003 Martin Schneider |
Prove It Gone are the days when CRM vendors could pitch features and functionality, close the deal, hit the trail, and never look back. Today's CRM buyers demand proof during the presale that the CRM technology they are considering will deliver the promised results.  |
CRM April 2003 Eric Krell |
CRM by Any Other Name Although the financial services industry remains in the throes of a perfect storm of economic, financial performance, and regulatory pressures, spending on CRM remains a priority. Just don't call it CRM.  |
Wired April 2003 Josh McHugh |
Wrist-Top Revolution How fashion watchmaker Fossil teamed up with Microsoft and Palm to change the face of wearable computing.  |
CIO March 15, 2003 Christopher Koch |
Showdown at the 6.0 Corral In a 2001 CIO survey, 85 percent of the respondents said they weren't going to sign up for Microsoft's new subscription plan. Our latest survey shows that more than half have stuck to their guns. That's because a new factor has entered the equation: choice. Now CIOs have it.  |
CIO March 15, 2003 Christopher Koch |
Making Open Source Pay -- A Developer's Dilemma Even the companies that have managed to successfully sell themselves as service and support providers for open source have struggled to find a winning business model.  |
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