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Gateway cuts notebooks again
- Gateway cut prices yet again on Pentium II notebooks as the company attempts to consolidate gains it has made in the notebook market. [News.com]
Geeks to play San Francisco
- This Friday, three bands of amateur musicians, who by day are computer programmers, venture capitalists, investment bankers, and other high-tech executives, will live out a fantasy playing a gig at one of the most famous venues in rock and roll history--the Fillmore. [News.com]
GeoCitizens fume over watermark
- A transparent, floating watermark that GeoCities introduced last week has caused an emotional uproar among a number of the Net community's "homesteaders." [News.com]
Germany to appeal CSI case
- German state prosecutors in the Bavarian city of Munich today took the unusual step of filing an appeal against the conviction of a former CompuServe manager in a key Internet pornography case. [News.com]
Gingrich talks crypto in Valley
- Encryption was at the top of a list of high-tech issues addressed by House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Rep. Bob Goodlatte at a roundtable discussion with a Silicon Valley consortium here today. [News.com]
Going portal
- "Portal madness" is sweeping the Internet industry, as new media, old media, entertainment, and telco companies jockey for position to become the next greatest portal brand in cyberspace. Some efforts are home grown, such as Netscape's Netcenter, while others, such as AT&T's rumored buyout overtures to AOL and its partnership with Excite, are the result of companies looking to buy what they can't create in hopes of cashing in on the latest online craze. [News.com]
Goldman Sachs to go public
- Goldman Sachs, considered by many to be the crown jewel of the investment banking community, and the last big private partnership on Wall Street, is expected to dispense with the latter distinction and become a publicly traded company, according to reports. [News.com]
Government puts patents online
- The Clinton administration soon will make available hoards of patent and trademark information free over the Internet, Commerce Department Secretary William M. Daley announced today. [News.com]
Government's Y2K progress slows
- The latest round of quarterly reports on the federal government's efforts to remedy the Year 2000 computer problems began on a sour note yesterday, as a U.S. House subcommittee released a progress report giving the government a failing grade. [News.com]
Greenspan: Let monopolies be
- Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan says U.S. regulators should leave most monopolies alone because they could not survive long in a world of rapidly advancing technology and global competition. [News.com]
Ground zero for convergence
- Ground zero in the ongoing convergence of voice and data networks will be the SuperComm '98 telecommunications trade show this week in Atlanta. [News.com]
Group to speed in-home networks
- A group of leading technology companies announced plans to develop standards to facilitate high-speed in-home networks using existing phone lines. [News.com]
Groups use Net to register voters
- Though voting online might be a long way off, use of the Net for related activities has gotten a boost with the launch of a new online voter registration program. [News.com]
HP adopts AMD chips
- Hewlett-Packard launched a line of home PCs using processors from Advanced Micro Devices, becoming the third top-tier vendor to adopt chips made by one of Intel's closest rivals. [News.com]
HP bundles services for small business
- Hewlett-Packard (HP) introduced a program for selling integrated Internet services to small businesses, the latest top-tier PC company to add service offerings to the standard hardware platform. [News.com]
HP confident of Asia recovery
- Asian markets will be "difficult" over the next several quarters, but Hewlett-Packard is confident about long-term prospects in the region. [News.com]
HP freezes work in Singapore
- Hewlett-Packard Singapore said today that it has sent 3,000 people, one-third of its local staff, on leave for five days in an effort to cut costs. [News.com]
HP opens business help center
- Hewlett-Packard launched its first enterprise computing support center in Brussels, Belgium, one of three such facilities it plans to operate worldwide, in an effort to meet one of its corporate customers' most pressing concerns while also addressing one of the computing industry's most lucrative markets. [News.com]
HP paints new PC picture
- Hewlett-Packard unveiled new Pavilion consumer PCs, its first systems to offer substantial support for the company's emerging digital imaging strategy. [News.com]
HP releases 400-MHz workstations
- Hewlett-Packard released three new Windows NT-based workstations based around 350-MHz and 400-MHz Pentium II chips in an effort to keep its line competitive, as Dell breathes down its neck. [News.com]
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