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InternetNews September 6, 2005 Roy Mark |
Kazaa to Continue Court Fight Down Under The peer to peer file-swapping service Kazaa loses a major round in legality of business model in Australia. |
Bank Systems & Technology August 30, 2005 Phil Britt |
Powering Up the Grid To provide accurate and timely regulatory capital and risk information to internal and external sources, Wachovia instituted semi-annual upgrades of GridServer Virtual Enterprise Edition from DataSynapse. |
InternetNews August 24, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Grid Passes Real-World Test Software maker CDO2 claims the Sun Microsystems grid computing utility cut transaction times from days to minutes. |
PC Magazine August 17, 2005 John R. Quain |
Pay to Peer: A New Spin on Music Sharing Wurld Media's Peer Impact sells music online through a P2P system and pays users for referrals. |
InternetNews August 15, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
Imeem Launches P2P Social Network Imeem aims to stand out with privacy features, a strong open source foundation, integrated IM, blogging, file- and photo-sharing features. |
InternetNews August 8, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
IBM Grows The Grid The company's Grid and Grow is intended to help enterprises get going on distributed computing at an entry-level price. |
PC Magazine August 3, 2005 Sebastian Rupley |
P2P Shifts Following the Supreme Court's landmark ruling in MGM v. Grokster, there are already rumblings about shifts in the business models that P2P services like Grokster, Kazaa, and Morpheus use. |
InternetNews August 2, 2005 Paul Shread |
Grid Meets P2P A Grid Forum paper looks at ways to make grid computing and peer-to-peer applications work together. |
Bio-IT World July 2005 Chris Dagdigian |
Adventures in XML Transformation The combination of XPATH and XSLT revived the Grid Engine monitoring project and enabled it to make significant progress in a few short weeks of nights-and-weekends hacking. |
InternetNews July 19, 2005 Roy Mark |
Hollywood, Tech Still Sparring Over Grokster Almost a month after the Supreme Court ruled that peer-to-peer developers are liable for copyright violations if they actively induce piracy with their technology, Hollywood and the Silicon Valley continue to snipe over the meaning of the decision. |
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