News (55)

  • New focus, new fears aid Iridium relaunch

    The once-bankrupt Iridium Satellite is rising from the ashes, benefiting from the sudden interest in satellite phones after the telecommunications breakdown during the September 11 terrorist attacks.

  • Study: Microsoft magnified flaw's risks

    A recently revealed security flaw in Microsoft's Internet Information Server may have been overhyped, according to testing figures from a UK-based Internet research firm. The survey also showed big Web hosting companies are losing out to smaller rivals.

  • Write code? You might go to jail

    Two well-known computer security experts pulled down their works from the Internet this week for fear of being prosecuted under 1998's Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

  • Net music's Groundhog Day

    Big record labels and other music powerhouses are finally beginning to thaw to new kinds of Internet music services, but those emerging so far may be a big disappointment -- to both consumers and the companies offering them.

  • The Internet preps for a medical miracle

    Internet-savvy consumers, hungry for health information, may spark a revolution in personalised medicine that experts say will send shock waves through insurers, employers, doctors, pharmaceutical companies and the Internet itself.

Features and Case Studies (5)

  • Seagate: Take your recession and stuff it

    Investors may be panicking, but Seagate CEO Bill Watkins says business and tech trends paint a different picture than the one on CNBC.

  • Optical networking: The next generation

    Forget Internet2. The National LambdaRail is the most ambitious network research project going. But can it save the optical networking industry?

  • Establishing a server triage policy

    When a crisis or full-fledged disaster happens, every department will argue that it needs to be brought back online first. How do you choose? Here are some guidelines for helping you make the best decision.

  • Microsoft's balancing act

    Buffeted by criticism of the way it handles privacy and security matters, Microsoft is trying to batten down the hatches on both fronts in simultaneous efforts.

  • Could Sun hold a key to SCO's future?

    As SCO forges ahead with a take no prisoners approach, its most fervent opponents are salivating at the prospect that a sealed 1992 settlement between the University of California, Berkeley, and Novell could disprove SCO claims to the Unix code. Imagine if Sun were holding a similar document in its files?

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