News (17)

  • First tests: Mobile P4 fails to impress

    Intel's mobile Pentium 4 processor has little to offer users of mainstream applications, according to first tests conducted by ZDNet UK.

  • Intel wants super 3G in every PC

    Chip giant Intel has signed a deal with the GSM Association to help hardware makers include mobile SIM card readers and 3G connectivity in new PCs.

  • Michael Moore attacks e-voting

    Controversial US documentary maker and author Michael Moore has lambasted electronic voting machines being used in some US states, claiming the technology is inherently open to misuse.

  • Carly Fiorina on globalisation

    ITU 2003: Hewlett-Packard's chief executive - who has been shoulder-tapped by the new California governor-elect - spoke in favour of globalisation.

  • Dell execs defend PC-centric world view

    Dismissing critics who say Dell is too heavily dependent on PC sales, executives with the computer maker reaffirmed their commitment to personal computers.

  • Up-and-coming Australian tech companies

    Looking for the next overnight success? We profile five upstart Australian tech companies. (OK, one of them is from New Zealand).

  • AMD's Sanders: A call to arms!

    In Hannover, Germany on Monday, AMD's chairman and CEO, Jerry Sanders, discussed his company's future processor strategy, its continuing battles with Intel and his dream of seeing his processors in the corporate environment. ZDNet UK's editor, Richard Barry, was there.

  • Joining the virtual workforce

    Teleworking, services automation, business process computerisation and workforce virtualisation promise to radically change the way we work. ZDNet Australia finds out how you might be affected by the proliferation of workplace technologies..

  • Europe: PC sales see slight growth

    Long considered a laggard in PC sales, Europe is emerging as one of the bright spots, if for no other reason than that US performance is so bad.

  • Profiting from disaster

    Can disaster recovery be anything more than an insurance policy?

  • US MARKET CLOSE: Dow, Nasdaq make decent gains

    Technology stocks made strong gains Thursday, pushing the Nasdaq composite up 98 points to 4,267.57. The Dow Jones industrial average closed up 80 points to 11,114.27.

  • The Year 2000 in review

    The new millennium was the year Microsoft was ordered to bifurcate, dot-coms tanked on Wall Street, WorldCom's Bernie Ebbers saw his merger mania capped and Napster scared the recording industry nearly to death. 2000 was a cascading waterfall of events that ended any doubts about the Net's ability to change the way we think, learn, play and do business.

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