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Fastest AMD chip in notebook
- Next month, Micro Express will introduce a new notebook featuring an AMD K6-2 processor and a large display for under $2,300. [News.com]
Fastest PowerPC chip debuts
- Motorola introduced the industry's fastest PowerPC microprocessors, "G3" chips that run at 366 MHz while using less power than competing processors from Intel. [News.com]
Fighting for security
- International debates over online privacy protection and how to handle the export of strong encryption have dragged on with little obvious progress. Experts say the only solution is swift, sweeping action--though few will be entirely satisfied with the outcome. [News.com]
Fighting hackers with freeware
- Been hacked? Only the Shadow may know for sure. [News.com]
Fill it up with R/3
- SAP is teaching its R/3 software new tricks. [News.com]
Fingerprint ID system in Japan
- The Japanese unit of Compaq Computer said it began accepting orders in Japan today for a fingerprint identification system designed mainly for corporate users. [News.com]
Firm aims to fix broken links
- For all the innovations in Net technology over the past few years, there are still few things more aggravating than broken hyperlinks. [News.com]
Firm tests antispam software
- In the cat-and-mouse fight of spammers vs. antispammers, one company is launching what it hopes will become a major weapon against bulk email. [News.com]
Firms bring ATMs home
- Out of cash? The ATM is no longer only down the block, around the corner, or across the mall. [News.com]
Firms profiting via portals
- Amid the high-profile battle among portal sites such as Yahoo and Lycos, a growing number of Web companies are basing their businesses on the back of this sizzling market. [News.com]
Firms propose new crypto plan
- Leading technology firms have proposed a new data encryption plan meant to ease U.S. government fears that exporting strong encryption will compromise national security. [News.com]
Flash memory capacity increased
- Japanese electronics maker Fujitsu announced that it has developed a 64-megabit flash memory chip in cooperation with Advanced Micro Devices. [News.com]
Flat panel display dips below $900
- CTX International reduced the price of a 14-inch LCD display to $899, making the City of Industry, California, operation one of the first flat-panel manufacturers to break the $900 price barrier. [News.com]
Fujitsu bundles Netscape browser
- Netscape Communications said today that Fujitsu will include Netscape's Communicator Internet browser software on all four series of its latest LifeBook notebooks. [News.com]
Fujitsu offers cashless ATM
- Fujitsu said today that it had introduced a cashless automatic teller machine (ATM) and an electronic wallet. [News.com]
GOP awaits Y2K encore
- Republicans who had earlier criticized the White House for not taking the Year 2000 technology bug seriously are optimistic about yesterday's speech by the president on the issue, but caution that it's only a first step. [News.com]
GTE to pursue MCI-WorldCom suit
- While expressing pleasure that MCI Communications is required to divest its Internet assets before merging with WorldCom, GTE said it will pursue its lawsuit against the merger until all of its concerns are met. [News.com]
GTE, Bell Atlantic in merger talks
- Bell Atlantic and GTE are in merger talks to create a U.S. telecommunications powerhouse with revenues of $53 billion, second only to those of AT&T, according to published reports. [News.com]
GTE, Bell Atlantic shake on it
- Bell Atlantic and GTE announced today that they have agreed to a merger that would create a company capable of providing a wide range of services, including long distance, local and wireless services, as well as Internet access. [News.com]
Gates gives $7 million to libraries
- While politicians squabble over the particulars of a federal program to hook schools and libraries up to the Net, Microsoft's Bill Gates and others are sidestepping bureaucrats and cutting fat checks to support public online access. [News.com]
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