wall street journal - News, Features, and Slideshows

News

  • Apple faces tough choice on cheaper iPhone

    Renewed talk of a cheaper iPhone shuffled into view this week, with sources as varied as the spotty DigiTimes to the more mainstream Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg claiming Apple will enter the low-price fray this year.

  • Chinese hack on U.S. Chamber went undetected for 6 months

    <a href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2011/121311-cyberattacks-bloomberg-254054.html">Chinese hackers</a> lurked in the U.S. <a href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2011/120911-hbgary-anonymous-253924.html">Chamber of Commerce network</a> for six months without being detected, enjoying unrestricted access although it is unknown what information they exploited, according to a published report.

  • Trashing the boss online still a bad idea, but ...

    Three congressional aides recently lost their jobs in part because they are worthless layabouts who drink on the job, but also because they are but the latest to forget that <a href="http://www.networkworld.com/slideshows/2010/052610-twitter-quiz.html">Twitter</a> lives on the Internet and tweets - especially those badmouthing your boss -- are visible to one and all.

  • Report: Brocade puts itself up for sale

    Brocade Communications Systems Inc. has hung a "for sale" sign on its door, according to a report today in the Wall Street Journal. Brocade declined to comment on the report.

  • Wall Street Journal Releases Free iPhone App

    The Wall Street Journal has jumped on the mobile content bandwagon and released an application for the iPhone. The financial newspaper set the price point at free -- ironic, given that the Journal's online content comes at a price of US$103 per year, or $140 for the print edition.

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