| Old Articles: <Older 2191-2200 Newer> |
 |
InternetNews October 25, 2004 Colin C. Haley |
Avaya Intros IP Telephony On Demand Taking a page from IBM's and HP's on-demand model, Avaya announced a new offering today to help service providers sell IP telephony and contact center applications to businesses for a monthly, usage-based fee.  |
InternetNews October 22, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
RFID Worries: ROI, Reliability A new survey of RFID technology vendors and end users finds uncertainties over the technology's ROI, tag availability and performance are the issues of greatest concern.  |
Entrepreneur November 2004 Liane Cassavoy |
Point of Sale Big-name software companies are now targeting small businesses to prove their products fit an entrepreneur's budget.  |
Entrepreneur November 2004 Mike Hogan |
Broadband Wagon Greater broadband connectivity is coming to a neighborhood near you. What will it mean for businesses?  |
Entrepreneur November 2004 Amanda C. Kooser |
The I's Have It A more secure wireless standard is on its way and major manufacturers are expected to implement the new standard with a focus on business hardware first.  |
Entrepreneur November 2004 Melissa Campanelli |
In Search Of . . . Can you afford to add advanced search tools to your web site? Perhaps the real question is, Can you afford not to?  |
InternetNews October 22, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
IE Fights Back, Sort Of Amid the buzz surrounding alternative browsers, one security researcher claims Microsoft's is more stable.  |
InternetNews October 22, 2004 Sean Michael Kerner |
Apache Refreshes Web Server Line The Apache Software Foundation targets update at fixing critical Web server vulnerability with Apache 1.3.32.  |
InternetNews October 22, 2004 Chris Nerney |
Outsourcing Takes a Back Seat Outsourcing has not been the first topic in presidential campaign stump speeches, but it still weighs heavy on the minds of IT workers.  |
InternetNews October 21, 2004 Clint Boulton |
OASIS Groups to Tackle Utility Computing Standards body OASIS has made good on its plans to develop the Data Center Markup Language, setting up four technical committees to foster utility computing standards.  |
| <Older 2191-2200 Newer> Return to current articles. |