News (24)

  • Will 'Ginger' snap?

    Everyone wants to know what it is, but the wonder invention might be crushed under the weight of its own hype.

  • US patent reform has ICT industry approval

    The high-tech industry has given the thumbs up to sweeping changes to the US patent system approved by the Senate and House committees last week.

  • Is Linux outgrowing its roots?

    Has the penguin gotten too cosy with the establishment for its own good? Or is it simply learning to live in a world in which revenue and customer lists are critical factors for success?

  • The pragmatic radical

    Q&A Michael Dell, the chairman and CEO of namesake computer maker Dell, certainly knows how to fit his image to his company.

  • Pioneers reminisce on 20 years of the PC

    What made the IBM PC a truly revolutionary device when it debuted in 1981? The technical reference manual that came with it, for one thing.

Features and Case Studies (8)

  • SCO and Linux: The legal rights and wrongs

    Q&A An intellectual-property lawyer gives advice to technology customers concerned by SCO's Linux action

  • Blade servers: the fine print matters

    Blade server innovation can be hard to find, until you look into the small print to see who is doing what.

  • Reinventing Sun Microsystems

    Over a long and distinguished career, Andy Bechtolsheim has earned a reputation as a top-notch engineer. Now that reputation will be put to the test. The task: Invent Sun Microsystems' next "hot box".

  • It's time to put ethics into IT

    A report published this week finds sweatshop working conditions at the contractors who make the components for Dell, HP, IBM and other brand manufacturers. It should be taken as a wake-up call for the industry.

  • Sun poised to take open-source Solaris step

    Sun Microsystems is about to take the next step in its plan to refurbish the reputation of its Solaris operating system in the eyes of a small but crucial group: programmers.

Reviews (3)

  • The real truth about Centrino

    A casual observer might have gotten the impression from last week's colossal Centrino launch--which the company declared was its biggest product introduction since Pentium--that Intel had just invented 802.11 networking and wireless hot spots.

  • Intel gets inside life sciences

    Intel says its processors are behind efforts to find new breakthroughs in life sciences research and healthcare in a number of countries.

  • Tualatin: roam if you want to

    When Intel released the Pentium III Tualatin, PC manufacturers applauded its power saving achievements and joined the chip manufacturer in promising bright new era in mobile computing. However, as the release of the first generation of notebooks built around the new chipset starts to gain momentum, it is not clear how notebook manufacturers will deliver its advances to the market.

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