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BusinessWeek July 14, 2003 |
Protecting Content, Pleasing Consumers Richard Parsons, Bill Gates, Mel Karmazin, and Brian Roberts talk about digital technology's twin aims -- and challenges  |
BusinessWeek July 14, 2003 Himelstein & Kerstetter |
Tech M&A: The Long, Cold Winter May Be Over Oracle's move for PeopleSoft was just the beginning. Investment bankers say their phones have been ringing off the hook and their workloads have shot up in the last month. Calendars are packed with brainstorming sessions. Merger discussions that were lukewarm at best are heating up.  |
HBS Working Knowledge July 7, 2003 Mallory Stark |
The Organizational Model for Open Source A surprising entity has emerged to protect the interests of open source software developers: the non-profit foundation. Harvard professor Siobhan O'Mahony discusses this emerging organizational model.  |
CRM July 1, 2003 Martin Schneider |
Vertical Focus: Financial Services The good news for CRM vendors is that the financial services industry has consistently been investing heavily in CRM initiatives. The bad news is, the return on investment has not been stellar.  |
CIO July 1, 2003 John Parkinson |
The End of Idealism The grassroots development model has matured, but open source may now be facing its worst growing pains.  |
Linux Journal June 19, 2003 Ian Taylor |
My Visit to SCO The full story of what one person who signed SCO's NDA encountered on his visit to the software maker to discuss SCO's claim that Linux infringes on its intellectual property rights.  |
Wired July 2003 David Diamond |
The Peacemaker How Linus Torvalds, the man behind Linux, keeps the revolution from becoming a jihad.  |
CFO June 16, 2003 John Verity |
Down but Not Out There may be a second act for ASPs, who say they've figured out how to make software services work.  |
Wired July 2003 Jeffrey M. O'Brien |
Bill Gates, Entertainment God Microsoft has two visions for the future of digital media: unlimited choice for consumers, and unlimited control for producers. One thing's for sure, it's unlimited opportunity for Redmond.  |
JavaWorld June 11, 2003 Robert McMillan |
JavaOne: Java to ship on Dell, HP PCs Dell and HP put Java back on the desktop  |
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