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Mita to sell multifunction device
- Mita has joined the rapidly expanding multifunctional peripheral (MFP) market, competing with recent releases from Hewlett-Packard and Xerox. [News.com]
Moore says Moore's Law to hit wall
- Moore's Law is coming into direct conflict with the law of nature. So says Gordon Moore. [News.com]
More 56-kbps products on tap
- Manufacturers are pressing ahead with products based on 56-kbps technology, despite the likelihood that a preliminary 56-kbps modem standard will not emerge this month. [News.com]
More layoffs expected at Apple
- More executive departures and layoffs are expected at Apple Computer (AAPL) as interim chief executive Steve Jobs continues to shake up the computer company. [News.com]
Motorola cuts modem prices
- Motorola (MOT) is cutting prices by almost 40 percent on some 56-kbps modems in an effort to spur sales as users continue to debate whether or not they want to buy non-standard equipment, while Xircom is forging ahead with new 56-kbps modems for notebook users. [News.com]
Motorola gives up Macs
- Motorola Computer Group will cease development of its StarMax line of Macintosh-compatible computers, the company announced today, confirming a report yesterday by CNET's NEWS.COM. [News.com]
Motorola halting Mac development
- Motorola is expected to stop development of Macintosh-compatible computers, CNET's NEWS.COM has learned. [News.com]
Motorola has a copper chip too
- Motorola's Semiconductor Product Group wants the world to know it has a "copper chip" too. [News.com]
Motorola looks beyond Macs
- Motorola's (MOT) Semiconductor Products group, which is responsible for PowerPC processors, signaled it will shift its business increasingly away from computers and further toward non-PC markets. [News.com]
Motorola may shift chip strategy
- Motorola's (MOT) PowerPC processor group is expected to make an announcement Monday that could shift its business away from computers and further toward non-PC markets. [News.com]
Motorola posts $95 million charge
- Motorola (MOT) said today that it would post a special $95 million charge in the third quarter as a result of its exit from the Mac clone business and weakness in the paging market. [News.com]
Moving day nears for Gates
- Microsoft (MSFT) chairman Bill Gates and his family are finally moving into their $60 million lakefront mansion, which was under construction for seven years. [News.com]
NCD announces new NCs
- Network Computing Devices announced new versions of its network computers even while the market for terminal replacements awaits the official imprimatur of Microsoft. [News.com]
NEC Japan quits closed design
- Pressed by an eroding lead in Japan's personal computer market, NEC Computer (NIPNY) said on Wednesday that next month it would begin selling PCs based on a global standard promoted by Microsoft and Intel. [News.com]
NEC announces Pentium II server
- NEC Computer (NIPNY) today announced a new Pentium II server intended for the lower end of the market, as previously reported by CNET's NEWS.COM. [News.com]
NEC to release larger Pentium II servers
- NEC Computer will unveil a new Pentium II server on Monday that's targeted at the more price-sensitive segment of the server computer market. [News.com]
NEC to revamp PC models
- NEC Computer today said it plans to start selling a new personal computer based on the formats set by Microsoft software and Intel microprocessors by the end of this year. [News.com]
NT could gain at corporations
- Sequent Computer Systems (SQNT) and Dell (DELL) showed off technology that allows multiple Windows NT servers to be strung together for improved performance and reliability, boosting the prospects for Microsoft's software in high-end corporate computing where Unix has traditionally been strong. [News.com]
Nasdaq targets British investors
- LONDON-The Nasdaq stock market announced plans Wednesday for a $10.5 million advertising drive aimed at attracting British retail investors who can buy stocks via the Internet. [News.com]
Nasdaq to monitor stock chat sites
- The Nasdaq will keep an eye on free-flying sensitive financial data online in an effort to curb the spread of erroneous information, which can affect stock prices. [News.com]
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