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Entrepreneur January 2004 Liane Cassavoy |
Hot Disks The next best thing to Outlook... CRM gets bigger and better... etc.  |
Entrepreneur January 2004 Amanda C. Kooser |
Tech Buzz Versatile mice for your employees... the next generation of portable display devices... etc.  |
PC World January 2004 |
News In Brief Sony's tiny, 5-megapixel Cyber-shot... DoubleSight's double 15-inch LCDs... Google's Deskbar... etc.  |
PC World January 2004 |
Letters Cross-platform CPU tests... wireless interference at sea... an overlooked time-saver... and the scoop on graphics boards.  |
PC World January 2004 Steve Fox |
Plugged In: Hollywood Locks Down Digital Video Plus: Rising LCD costs, PCs with flair, and Net phones that work.  |
Adventure Dec 2003/Jan 2004 |
The Leading Edge: The Best of Adventure 2004 Equipment Goes Lighter... Technology Links You up... What's Next: Follow the Leaders...  |
PC Magazine December 30, 2003 John C. Dvorak |
The Beginning of the End Dept. Apparently, Microsoft is dumping Intel and switching processors in the next-generation Xbox -- and going with an IBM design... Evidently when Microsoft sees anyone else beginning to make some money, it has to rush into the same business... etc.  |
PC Magazine December 4, 2003 |
Bits & Bytes (v22n23) Israeli startup Lenslet is demonstrating an optical processor called EnLight, which the company claims can perform a supercomputer-level 8 trillion operations per second... Xerox's PARC has developed a plastic semiconductor transistor array made entirely using jet printing  |
Wired December 2003 |
Wired Tools 2K3 Tech gear is fun again -- whether you're into 3-D computer screens, smartphones, theater-quality home audio, or DNA kits for kids. Our crack squad of geeks has rounded up 77 innovative playthings that'll keep you entertained till next holiday season.  |
PC Magazine December 9, 2003 |
Bits & Bytes Futurist Ray Kurzweil predicts we will have reading machines within a few years that are not just sitting on a desk, but are tiny devices you put in your pocket, enabling blind people to read anywhere... Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer has announced a string of new security initiatives... etc.  |
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