Old Articles: <Older 241-250 Newer> |
|
PC Magazine May 12, 2004 John C. Dvorak |
A Phone as Your Next Computer? Never. The next time someone brags about digital phone technology being so great, flick the person on the nose as hard as you can. Seriously. |
PC World June 2004 Tom Mainelli |
Processors: Intel Plays Name Game CPU names to change as clock speeds lose their relevance. |
InternetNews May 13, 2004 Michael Singer |
IT Heavies Push DDR2 With DDR2's debut close at hand, Intel, IBM and Samsung put their money on the faster memory standard and predict a near complete market transformation by next summer. |
InternetNews May 7, 2004 Michael Singer |
Intel Changes Course on Desktop, Server Chips Production on key Pentium lines will end as chipmaker shifts to dual core processors. |
Technology Research News May 5, 2004 |
Upbeat Computers Boost Users Researchers have showed that when computers equipped with speech synthesizers gave users spoken positive reinforcement during software delays, users smiled more and performed better at subsequent problem-solving exercises. |
CIO May 1, 2004 Martyn Williams |
PCs Are a Terrible Thing to Waste - I.T. Recycling With falling prices, relplacing a PC is more attractive than upgrading. However, there are environmental implications in doing so. |
PC Magazine May 4, 2004 Bill Howard |
The Bang-for-the-Buck Axiom Your wallet does best when you identify the highest-performance components, then back off one or two levels. |
Entrepreneur May 2004 Mike Hogan |
The Fast Lane Greater speed and better performance, but who in your company really needs the new Pentium 4 PC? |
The Motley Fool April 12, 2004 Lita Epstein |
Intel Trade Wars Turn Japanese Some Intel company offices near Tokyo were raided last week by Japan's fair trade watchdog amid charges of antitrust violations. |
PC World May 2004 Desmond & Leonhard |
PC Problems? Fix 'Em Yourself Taming tech glitches is easy--once you know what to do. Our troubleshooting guide shows how to solve them like a pro. |
<Older 241-250 Newer> Return to current articles. |