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Gateway Shuts All Stores, Cuts 2,500 Jobs

Gateway has said it will close all of its remaining retail stores, putting some 2,500 people out of work and driving the final nail into the coffin of an ambitious but failed approach to selling computers The additional layoffs -- which amount to nearly 40 percent of Gateway's remaining workforce -- are expected to come quickly, with all stores shu...

INDUSTRY ANALYSIS

Eight IT Textbooks, 4,031 Pages, 17 Mentions of Linux

Want to know why most business analysts and venture capitalists simply don't get it with respect to Unix? Take a look at the computer books they study while working toward their MBA, financial analysis certificate or accounting designation, and you'll understand that their ignorance isn't entirely their fault Each of these professional qualificatio...

LOOKING FORWARD

Turning Nanotech into Profit

Compare the vastness of the Internet with the microminiaturized world of subatomic structures, and you will get an idea of the potential that nanotechnology holds for industrial profit. Some analysts are predicting nanotechnology will become the biggest boost to the technology industry since the World Wide Web Nanotechnology is the science of creat...

SPECIAL REPORT

VCs Warm Up to New IPO Craze

Greg Stanger knows how difficult it can be to take a company public, even in the best of times. A former Microsoft employee, Stanger became CFO of Expedia when the travel site was spun off and taken public in 1999 Stanger also knows that even with the recent run-up in technology stocks and the prospect of at least one blockbuster IPO in the near fu...

Netsky Variants Dominate Virus Payload in March

The pesky Netsky worm dogged Web computers during the month of March, accounting for 60 percent of all malicious e-mail tracked by antivirus firm Sophos Five of the top 10 viruses tracked during the month, including all of the top three, were variants of Netsky. Some 15 versions of the worm were active during the period. All told, some 18 variants ...

Forrester Study Recasts Microsoft Security

Is Linux more secure than Windows? That's the question Forrester senior analyst Laura Koetzle attempted to answer in a recent report on the subject, but her analysis may be pouring gasoline on an already flaming debate....

UPDATE: Google's Gmail Is 'For Real'

Google has confirmed to the E-Commerce Times that its newly announced Web mail service is not an April Fool's hoax, despite Thursday morning speculation "It's for real," Google spokesperson David Krane told the E-Commerce Times.

IBM Opens, Customizes Power Chips

By making final chip designs more flexible and opening its Power processor architecture to more partners and developers, IBM is pushing its microprocessor technology to the widening category of electronic devices that require chip customization Calling it an "unprecedented step," IBM outlined its plans to collaborate openly on the Power microproces...

Canada Feds Rule Song Swapping Legal

Want to download pop songs in MP3 format with impunity and without fear of prosecution? Move to Canada. The refuge for Vietnam War draft dodgers of the 1970s is now an asylum for intellectual-property pirates A federal court judge in Canada this week ruled that swapping songs on the Internet for "personal use" does not violate copyright law or infr...

Google Announces 1-Gig Web Mail Service

In what may -- or may not -- be its most ambitious foray beyond its core search business to date, Google has announced it will launch a free e-mail service called Gmail. The tone and timing of the press release, dated April 1st, led some to speculate that it could be an elaborate April Fool's Day hoax. But the release pointed to an extensive FAQ (...

Asian Governments Team on Linux Industrial Policy

Industrial policy has long been discredited as an economic strategy in the United States, but not in Asia. The government of Japan, for example, has always worked closely with companies in IT and consumer electronics to influence corporate winners and losers, but the results have been exceptionally spotty....

DOJ Bans Linux from US in Wake of iWidget Brouhaha

In a bizarre twist of fate for the burgeoning Linux community, the U.S. Department of Justice has banned Linux from the United States The DOJ ruling comes after Darl McBride, CEO of SCO Group, and Linus Torvalds, original developer of the Linux kernel, agreed to arm wrestle over the disputed code in lieu of seeking a court ruling. Overall, SCO has ...

McNealy To Bet the Company on 'Corona' CPU

The standard chip-making process, based on using lithography to etch circuits in silicon and other materials, has been in use since the mid-1970s, with change expressed mainly in increased manufacturing precision as decreases in the wavelengths used allowed the development of ever smaller components. Pundits, of course, have been predicting the en...

Memo: Bill Gates To Sabotage Linux Using "Time-Travel" Machine

In an effort to warp the space-time fabric, Microsoft chairman Bill Gates will go back in time to sabotage the Linux operating system, according to an internal memo leaked to the Internet by an unknown Microsoft insider "This is clearly a smoking gun," open-source programmer Tux Rodriguez wrote in his weblog, where he also posted the leaked memo....

Piping Hot Dogs Rises from Dot-Com Graveyard

Hot dog stand owner Jim McMahon has announced the triumphant return of his company, Piping Hot Dogs.com, from the dot-com graveyard. "We really learned our lesson, man," McMahon said in an interview Thursday. "For a while, dot-com became dot-bomb, you know? It was like a stigma. People saw the .com on my cart and walked the other way. They didn't ...

Nobel Economist Praises IT Outsourcing

A new study released this week by a Nobel Prize-winning economist dispels doubts raised by demagogic politicians on the campaign trail -- and in Congress -- about the impact of outsourcing on the U.S. economy, stating that outsourcing actually increases jobs and pay for IT workers The report was released by the Information Technology Association of...

Gates Targets 2006 for Longhorn Release

Hoping to steer its next-generation Windows operating system -- code-named Longhorn -- into the developer community, Microsoft released previews of the software toward the end of last year. The actual Longhorn operating system, the company's next-generation SQL Server known as Yukon and the company's next-generation development tools code-named Whidbey are as many as two to three years from arriving.

UPS Hires SBC for WiFi Blitz

SBC Communications, one of the telecom industry's landline leaders, announced Tuesday its plans to roll out "FreedomLink" WiFi hotspot service at UPS Store locations throughout the United States. The announcement is the latest stage in the company's overall FreedomLink strategy, which promises to bring mobile connectivity to a mass audience The mov...

PeopleSoft Sued for 'Faulty' ERP Rollout

The state of Ohio is suing software maker PeopleSoft, seeking up to US$510 million in damages and costs because of what it calls a faulty installation of the company's enterprise resource planning (ERP) applications at Cleveland State University The lawsuit charges PeopleSoft with breach of contract and negligent misrepresentation, among other coun...

TECHNOLOGY SPECIAL REPORT

Instant Messaging Opens New Security Holes

Instant messaging has become the latest employee productivity tool. A customer-service representative can use it as a quick and easy way to answer an inquiry, whereas a salesperson can inform a busy vice president about a new account. In fact, research firm Gartner estimates 70 percent of corporate employees rely on instant messaging while at work ...

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