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InternetNews February 19, 2009 David Needle |
Rocky Times Ahead for Silicon Valley Don't bet on green tech to lead a turnaround, experts warn. Instead, count on "creative destruction" and "Moore's Second Law."  |
InternetNews February 19, 2009 Paul Shread |
HP, Dell Lead Tech Stocks Lower There was little for investors to smile about on Thursday.  |
InternetNews February 19, 2009 Andy Patrizio |
Windows 7 on Mobile Phones? Don't Bet on It. Rumormongers see Microsoft dropping hints on porting Windows 7 to smartphones. But it's a bad idea at best, analysts say.  |
InternetNews February 19, 2009 Stuart J. Johnston |
Judge Decertifies Class in 'Vista Capable' Suit Instead of millions of plaintiffs, Microsoft only has to fight six, but it's not out of the woods just yet.  |
The Motley Fool February 19, 2009 Anders Bylund |
Tech Layoffs Will Bear Fruit Opportunistic investors and entrepreneurs can benefit from the recent round of technology company layoffs, even if the companies don't.  |
InternetNews February 18, 2009 Stuart J. Johnston |
Microsoft Won't Stop in 'Albany' After April Microsoft kills off its subscription Office and OneCare service and gives users two and a half months before Office subscriptions self-destruct.  |
InternetNews February 17, 2009 Andy Patrizio |
Intel Sees Itself Between the Clouds Intel will play no favorites while the many players jockey for position in the emerging cloud computing market.  |
InternetNews February 17, 2009 Stuart J. Johnston |
Windows Mobile 6.5 Debuts But Is It Too Late? Microsoft puts on a good face at the world's largest wireless conference but not everyone believes Microsoft's efforts will succeed.  |
InternetNews February 17, 2009 Paul Shread |
Sun's Encryption Keys Going Open Source Just days after seven IT vendors proposed an encryption key management standard, Sun is open sourcing its own key management technology.  |
InternetNews February 17, 2009 Sean Michael Kerner |
Red Hat, Microsoft in New Interoperability Pact Red Hat and Microsoft, the erstwhile operating system rivals, are teaming up on a virtualization interoperability deal between Microsoft's Windows Server and Red Hat's Enterprise Linux.  |
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