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Pandesic e-business system debuts - Pandesic, the joint e-commerce venture of Intel (INTC) and SAP will roll out its first e-business system by month's end, the company said today at the Internet Commerce Expo in Los Angeles. [News.com]
 
Patent may let Lycos license spiders - Lycos (LCOS) owns spiders. [News.com]
 
Paul Allen eyes Metricom shares - Metricom (MCOM) today said Paul Allen plans to up his stake in the wireless data communications company with the purchase of an additional 2.58 million shares of its stock. [News.com]
 
Pentium II ads cost Intel $100 million - Intel (INTC) will spend more than $100 million this autumn, the most it has ever spent for a fall campaign, to promote its new Pentium II microprocessors on television, in print and on radio. [News.com]
 
Philips markets new DVD player - Philips Electronics announced a new version of its DVD video player. [News.com]
 
Philips to offer PC-TV - Philips Electronics, one of the world's largest consumer electronics companies, is setting its sights on the U.S. market with a PC-TV convergence product that can serve as the centerpiece of a home entertainment network. The device is expected to compete with offerings from Gateway 2000 and Compaq. [News.com]
 
Photo finish for Sony alliance - Sony and PictureVision, a Herndon, Virginia-based maker of photo development software, are teaming up to sell turnkey digital photo finishing systems for camera shops and other photo developing outlets, which should ease the transition from print film to digital photography. [News.com]
 
Pinnacle Micro plans workforce cuts - Pinnacle Micro (PNCL), an optical storage technology company, said today it plans "significant" workforce reductions in its Irvine, California and Colorado Springs, Colorado operations and expects its third-quarter revenues to be significantly below second-quarter revenues. [News.com]
 
Pittman: Cyberspace is splitting - The cyberspace market may be splitting into those users who want more sophisticated computer services and those who want things kept nice and simple, AOL Networks (AOL) chief executive Robert Pittman said. [News.com]
 
PointCast to push new networks - PointCast announced it is rolling out ten new networks for ten key industries, such as telecommunications, legal, and real estate, the latest attempt to help users sort through the plethora of information on the Net. [News.com]
 
Politics, courts stall encryption - The past two weeks have brought key cases on encryption as well as policy debates about its regulation to the fore. In the courts are two professors who are testing their legal rights to use and teach cryptography. On Capitol Hill are the politicians, law enforcement officials, bureaucrats, companies, and advocates advancing and opposing export restrictions and mandatory key recovery. Here's a look at the most recent stories. [News.com]
 
Power announces deep price cuts - Power Computing announced immediate price cuts and memory upgrades for midrange and high-end desktops. [News.com]
 
Power called more harm than good - Apple Computer detailed its reasoning behind the purchase of Power Computing at a press conference today, saying in essence that it bought the company because Power didn't expand the market for the Mac OS. [News.com]
 
Power cutting Mac prices - Now that it's getting out of the Macintosh business and jumping into the Intel-compatible PC market, Power Computing has cut prices on its main Macintosh computer lines. [News.com]
 
Power jumps right in - Less than ten days after agreeing to surrender its license to produce Macintosh clone PCs, Power Computing marked its transition to the Intel-based market by formally announcing a notebook line that features the brand-new Tillamook chip. [News.com]
 
Power out to prove new strategy - Power Computing, virtually forced into selling its Macintosh direct sales business to Apple (AAPL) and left to refocus its business on the highly competitive PC arena, has a short timeline to prove its new business model before its money runs out, analysts say. [News.com]
 
Power turns attention to Intel - Intel is in and Apple is out. [News.com]
 
PowerAgent shuts doors - Internet marketing and advertising start-up PowerAgent has shut down just weeks shy of launching its flagship service, said its chief executive. [News.com]
 
Prodigy ad gets in users' faces - Prodigy Internet thinks it has found the perfect online ad, but some of its subscribers think otherwise. [News.com]
 
Prodigy adds Solutions division - Prodigy said today it is restructuring the company into three divisions and announced that chief executive Paul DeLacey is stepping down to serve as strategic adviser to the chairman. [News.com]
 
 

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