Motorola, Symbol, others announce new technology
Motorola and three other vendors are joining forces in a $US500 million venture to develop a new company to provide scanning technology for mobile phones and other devices.
Motorola and three other vendors are joining forces in a $US500 million venture to develop a new company to provide scanning technology for mobile phones and other devices.
Pushing itself deeper into the ASP (application service provider) market, Nortel Networks this week agreed to buy privately held EPiCON for $US275 million in stock.
Sun Microsystems has introduced a new family of storage arrays designed for a broad spectrum of users.
An electronics giant and a Massachusetts company are hoping an infusion of capital and a licence agreement will bring "electronic paper" to market quicker.
Microsoft will have to wait until it files its notice of appeal in the government's antitrust case against the software maker before a federal court will consider delaying the implementation of remedies in the matter, a federal judge ruled Tuesday.
Pushing itself deeper into the ASP (application service
provider) market, Nortel Networks Corp. Wednesday agreed to buy privately held
EPiCON Inc. for US$275 million in stock.
Microsoft Corp. will have to wait until it files its notice of appeal in the government's antitrust case against the software maker before a federal court will consider delaying the implementation of remedies in the matter, a federal judge ruled Tuesday.
U.S. doctors and patients are increasingly talking with
each other by e-mail about aches, pains and various maladies, a new study
released Monday concluded.
A greater number of IBM Corp.'s servers, laptops and
desktops will now come with the Linux operating system, company officials said
Monday.
The dreaded plague of computer viruses grabbing headlines
worldwide doesn't seem likely to end anytime soon, particularly now that
security experts have identified the Timofónica virus from Spain that slipped
into mobile phones this week and flooded them with e-mail messages.
Palm Inc.'s use of handwriting software for its Palm line
of handheld computers did not infringe on a Xerox Corp. patent, a U.S. district
court judge ruled this week.