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Netscape shifts sales strategy
- Netscape Communications (NSCP) has reorganized its sales force to put more responsibility on the shoulders of third-party partners and keep only the richest customers for itself. [News.com]
Netscape signing up distributors
- Netscape Communications (NSCP) will announce tomorrow that it is making inroads in the great software distribution battle--with a little help from the Justice Department. [News.com]
Netscape site revenue down
- When Netscape Communications (NSCP) decided last month to offer its browsers for free, the company was left with two revenue engines: its Web site and server software. [News.com]
Netscape to put code on new site
- Netscape Communications (NSCP) announced today it is launching a special team and companion Web site to be the resource center for those seeking information about its free browser source code. [News.com]
Netscape up on buyout rumors
- Netscape Communications' (NSCP) stock jumped by as much as 13.4 percent in today's trading, as rumors circulated of a buyout by Sun Microsystems (SUNW). [News.com]
Netscape upgrades suite
- Netscape Communications (NSCP) is releasing Monday an upgrade of its flagship server software. [News.com]
Netscape: Stop and buy the roses
- Netscape Communications continues to expand its online offerings, this time with a cobranded site with the FTD florist network. [News.com]
Network Associates buys TIS
- Hoping to build its share of the security software market, Network Associates (NETA) said today that it will acquire Trusted Information Systems (TISX), which makes firewall and other security software, in a stock-swap deal worth roughly $300 million. [News.com]
Network Associates climbs to top
- With today's acquisition of firewall vendor Trusted Information Systems (TISX), Network Associates (NETA) claims it's the leading security software provider. [News.com]
New 3D graphics for the Mac
- Graphics hardware manufacturer IXMicro has rolled out a new line of 3D graphics boards for Apple Macintosh computers. [News.com]
New Cisco gear shoots high
- Cisco Systems (CSCO) has shipped its latest play for carrier dollars, offering a high-end device that could apply pressure to competitors like Northern Telecom and Ascend Communications. [News.com]
New Office comes in pieces
- Looking to give IT managers more control over which applications get deployed to users, Microsoft (MSFT) is developing a more flexible version of its Office desktop application suite. [News.com]
New Pentium II workstations for HP
- Hewlett-Packard released five new Kayak workstations based around Intel's fastest Pentium II microprocessor, currently the company's top-of-the-line chip. [News.com]
New Toshiba, Sony notebooks small but fast
- Sony and Toshiba are using Intel's fastest Pentium processors in new ultra-portable models. [News.com]
New domain bypasses red tape
- Tonga's done it. Niue's done it. And now, Turkmenistan is getting into the act. [News.com]
New hole in Web security reported
- Many of the Internet's most popular Web sites are vulnerable to new security threats, according to a report released today. [News.com]
New policy may cut investor suits
- Software companies may see a temporary dip in earnings reports, but fewer shareholder lawsuits, under new accounting regulations that go into effect this year. [News.com]
New search engine goes commercial
- Idealab, entrepreneur Bill Gross's well-known incubator for Internet start-ups, on Saturday is expected to jump into the search-engine business with Goto.com, which will take on the likes of Yahoo and Excite with a decidedly commercial approach. [News.com]
New source for browsers
- Netscape Communications (NSCP) isn't the only organization making its browser code free, as a Web-based project called Mnemonic has just released the first tangible results of a lightweight browser that can be downloaded and modified by anyone. [News.com]
New supercomputer initiative
- Four leading computer companies have signed on to the U.S. government's effort to develop the world's fastest supercomputer by 2004, an initiative intended to simulate testing of the country's nuclear stockpile while also transferring leading-edge technology into the marketplace. [News.com]
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