News from the blogosphere today has indicated that Google is preparing to launch one of its first offline-ready Web applications in the form of Google Docs as part of Google Gears.
Google has joined the Open Invention Network (OIN) which will see it agree to cross-license open- source-related patents to other members free of charge.
As part of its overall services push, Microsoft has been quietly trying to figure out just what it can offer up to large corporations.
IBM and Google are teaming up to bring mini applications called gadgets from the consumer Web to corporate networks.
Cisco Systems late last week in the US said it would bolster its unified communications and collaboration portfolio through purchasing instant messaging company Jabber.
IBM and Google on Monday released details of their academic cluster computing initiative that will provide datacentres for remote computer programming.
Firm quietly working on data storage software designed to help companies find business documents scattered across their networks.
To move ahead, big software companies are reaching back to a familiar strategy: offering customers a soup-to-nuts "stack" of software products.
Search giant's expanding roster of Windows-free Web services may be a factor in the shuffle. Software on demand is an issue too.
IBM's Grady Booch says developers can no longer just dash off code without thinking about the larger implications.
While the interface of IBM's free office suite is sexy, its hunger for system resources and lack of features mean that OpenOffice.org 3 is still the best free office suite. Also, watch out for Symphony's lack of OOXML support.
All Lenovo computers worldwide will soon come bundled with Microsoft's Windows Live software, the companies announced Wednesday.
Big Blue plans to boost artificial intelligence by unifying the different schools of thought.
To encourage the broadest possible support for its forthcoming "Storage Tank" technology, IBM will release an open-source version of the software needed to let servers tap into the next-generation storage system.
IBM's iSeries will never be IBM's most exciting range of servers, but it is destined for great things, according to one of its architects.
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