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BusinessWeek November 29, 2004 Gene G. Marcial |
Why A Suitor May Click On TheStreet.com Internet financial service provider TheStreet.com has perked up, with stocks rising. Now there is takeover talk.  |
IndustryWeek December 1, 2004 Jill Jusko |
Technologies Of The Year -- SeeChain Consignment Inventory SeeCommerce Inc.'s Web-based offering helps manufacturers keep their off-site inventory under control.  |
Search Engine Watch November 17, 2004 Chris Sherman |
Managing the Firehose of Real-Time Information RSS feeds, search alerts and other information monitoring technologies are great, but often end up providing too much of a good thing. PubSub is a 'matching engine' that offers a promising new way to keep up to date while alleviating information overload.  |
The Motley Fool November 17, 2004 Alyce Lomax |
Yahoo! Courts Singles Is Yahoo! Personals all dressed up with no place to go?  |
Information Today November 15, 2004 Barbara Quint |
OCLC and Yahoo! Offer Joint Toolbar The co-branded toolbar serves as a vehicle for delivering Open WorldCat content and empowers users with the ability to seamlessly search for information that is available in offline databases.  |
InternetNews November 15, 2004 Jim Wagner |
Yahoo for DomainKeys One of the Web's largest e-mail providers is looking to make its service safer with the adoption of DomainKeys, a cryptographic-based e-mail authentication technology.  |
InternetNews November 15, 2004 Clint Boulton |
Grand Central: Integration is a Service Grand Central Communications has finished the latest version of its Business Services Network, a system that shuttles business integration services over the Web to help clients manage and bundle applications.  |
The Motley Fool November 15, 2004 Alyce Lomax |
Yahoo! Doesn't Get It You can get more storage capacity now with Yahoo! Mail, but not the gig Google offers. This could end up being too little, too late for some users.  |
The Motley Fool November 15, 2004 Seth Jayson |
Half a Billion for a Freebie Wall Street Journal publisher Dow Jones pays more than $500 million for Web-based MarketWatch.  |
The Motley Fool November 12, 2004 Tom Taulli |
Concur Wants to Track Your Travel Most companies need to keep tabs on travel & entertainment expenses. Concur thinks it has a better way.  |
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