| Old Articles: <Older 5061-5070 Newer> |
 |
InternetNews August 10, 2006 Andy Patrizio |
To Patch Or Not To Patch? Microsoft issues a fix to a severe hole. The government insists we use it, but is there a risk?  |
InternetNews August 10, 2006 Boulton & Hickins |
IBM $1.6B Buy Shrinks ECM Battlefield IBM today agreed to purchase rival FileNet for $1.6 billion in cash, a deal that will further shrink the number of players in the enterprise content management space.  |
InternetNews August 10, 2006 Sean Michael Kerner |
Intel Opens Up Video Drivers Intel developer Keith Packard announced the immediate availability of open source software drivers for the Intel 965 Express Chipset graphics controller.  |
InternetNews August 10, 2006 Sean Michael Kerner |
Healthcare, Meet Open Source IBM this week said it is open sourcing technology to the Eclipse Foundation's Open Healthcare Framework project in an effort to bridge the information silos.  |
InternetNews August 10, 2006 Andy Patrizio |
Borland Relaunches Turbo Compilers Borland is re-launching Turbo Delphi for Win32 and for .Net, Turbo C++ and Turbo C#.  |
InternetNews August 9, 2006 Sean Michael Kerner |
A Coverity Eye on Firefox Code Mozilla will announce that it is using Coverity's source code analysis software, which extends beyond the confines of Coverity's Department of Homeland Security grant to improve open source software code quality.  |
InternetNews August 9, 2006 Ed Sutherland |
Bugs in Your BlackBerry Software could be first exploit tailored to the BlackBerry e-mail device.  |
InternetNews August 9, 2006 Michael Hickins |
Novell's Sentinel Watches Over Your Network Novell incorporates the Sentinel security perks from its e-Security purchase.  |
InternetNews August 9, 2006 Andy Patrizio |
Microsoft Technology Makes Photos Feel 3D Microsoft's Photosynth can transform a group of photos online to create a 3D space on the Web for users to "fly" through via mouse.  |
InternetNews August 8, 2006 David Needle |
IBM Promos SAP on the Mainframe IBM said it plans to spend money over the next five years to test, enable and support SAP applications on IBM's System z mainframe series.  |
| <Older 5061-5070 Newer> Return to current articles. |