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J.D. Edwards adds FormScape - J.D. Edwards' OneWorld enterprise resource planning software system will soon allow users to generate and print electronic forms. [News.com]
 
J.D. Edwards outshines competition - SAP may own the high-end enterprise resource planning market. But J.D. Edwards owns the middle market. [News.com]
 
JDA Software adds e-commerce - JDA Software is energizing its business with a new e-commerce division. [News.com]
 
JDA, Baan form joint venture - And then there was Baan. [News.com]
 
Jamaica to miss Y2K deadline - Jamaica will not overcome its Year 2000 computer problems until 2004, with the private sector hardest hit by the delay in swatting the millennium bug, a government minister said yesterday. [News.com]
 
Japan PC prices head to $1,000 - Japanese consumers are following their American counterparts in opting for low-cost PCs, according to newly released market research. [News.com]
 
Japan's Windows 98 sales surge - More than 500,000 copies of Microsoft's Windows 98 operating system (OS) have been sold in Japan in the month since the Japanese-language version made its debut, according to the Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Japan's largest business daily. [News.com]
 
Japanese war criminals testify - Four members of the "Chu-Kin-Ren," a group of Japanese war criminals, used the Internet on Sunday to broadcast their solemn, and often times emotional, testimonies about their roles in some of the most gruesome events in human history. [News.com]
 
Judge says Microsoft must comply - A United States judge today ordered Microsoft to make available its chairman, Bill Gates, and 16 other top officials for deposition by government lawyers who are bringing an antitrust suit against the software giant. [News.com]
 
Judge to rule on deposition access - A federal judge said he would rule later today on whether depositions to be taken in preparation for the Microsoft antitrust case are to be open to the public. [News.com]
 
Kent warns of slimmer margins - Kent Electronics said today that it expects lower sales and orders from its contract manufacturing business to hurt gross margins in that segment, and said September shipments will determine whether the company reports a profit or loss for the second quarter of its fiscal year. [News.com]
 
Key Net security hitch resolved - Mathematicians at IBM and a Swiss university say they have developed a new system of securing information against the most aggressive type of attack by computer hackers--a step seen as resolving concerns about privacy and the integrity of electronic transactions on the Internet. [News.com]
 
Key e-rate executive resigns - The embattled e-rate initiative to wire the nation's public schools suffered another blow today as a key executive announced that he will be stepping down later this month. [News.com]
 
LSI plunges on warning - Shares of LSI Logic fell more than 13 percent today after the company warned that it expects its third-quarter earnings to miss Wall Street's already lowered expectations. [News.com]
 
Landmark copyright law - In a move that may have broad industry impact in the digital age, the House approves a landmark bill already passed by the Senate to safeguard copyrights for music, software, and written works on the Internet. In addition, an amendment to the legislation will affect the way Webcasters do business. [News.com]
 
Language boosts Australia on Net - English language use has given Australia a lead over its Asia-Pacific rivals in utilizing the Internet, a senior IBM executive said today. [News.com]
 
Lawson's single focus pays off - Lawson Software's strategy of hitting middle market companies in specific industries is paying off. [News.com]
 
Learning Company stands by deal - The Learning Company said it remains committed to its previously announced $420 million deal to buy Broderbund Software. [News.com]
 
Lessig: Who will shape Net rules? - The policy debate over online regulation is no longer about whether certain rules and values will govern the Internet, according to Larry Lessig. The real question is who will set the tone for that governance--the online community, technology makers, or the government. [News.com]
 
Logility suffers in crowded market - [News.com]
 
 

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