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Java notebook NC is here - Sun Microsystems (SUNW) and Japan's Toshiba revealed they will collaborate in advancing Java-based Mobile Network Computing, an announcement made on the same day as the long-awaited debut of the JavaStation network computer. [News.com]
 
Java tool browses intranets - Net start-up InterNetivity has introduced a Java data analysis tool for business users that delivers data over a corporate intranet to Web browsers. [News.com]
 
JavaSoft insists it will make money - Under pressure to show real profits, JavaSoft insists that Hewlett-Packard's (HPW) move to create its own Java Virtual Machine for embedded devices won't derail its plans to make money. [News.com]
 
JavaSoft jabs at industry titans - Executives from Sun Microsystems' (SUNW) JavaSoft division came out swinging at the JavaOne conference here today. [News.com]
 
JavaStation dream fading - Product delays, a lack of viable applications, and competition from Windows-based Terminals and low-priced PCs are seemingly sapping the lifeblood out of the potential market for JavaStations. [News.com]
 
JavaStations finally ready - After approximately a year and a half of delays, Sun Microsystems is finally going to release its JavaStation for general commercial use at the end of this month. [News.com]
 
Jobs gets options, not salary - Apple Computer's (AAPL) interim chief executive Steve Jobs and his fellow board member Larry Ellison each were granted 30,000 shares of Apple stock at an exercise price of $23 a share, the company's proxy said today. [News.com]
 
Jobs's moves looking good - Rotten no more: Apple Computer's (AAPL) aggressive efforts appear to be paying off. [News.com]
 
Jobs: Stay the course - Using familiar themes from past keynotes, Apple Computer (AAPL) interim CEO Steve Jobs outlined new software initiatives for the publishing market and new systems--including one with a 400-MHz processor--as Apple continues to demonstrate a "steady as she goes" attitude about its business plans. [News.com]
 
Juno works the phones in service - Free email provider Juno is working the phones. [News.com]
 
KPCB partners sell @Home stock - Three partners with Silicon Valley venture capital firm Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield, & Byers plan to sell 135,000 shares in @Home (ATHM), a KPCB-funded company whose stock has jumped threefold since going public eight months ago. [News.com]
 
Katmai chip to get 200-MHz bus - Although the 100-MHz system bus is yet to be released, it will likely have a short life, industry pundit Michael Slater said at Microsoft's WinHec Conference. [News.com]
 
Kodak to invest $1 billion in China - In a bid to boost slumping profits, Eastman Kodak (EK) said today that it will invest $1 billion in China--one of the biggest investments by a U.S. company in that country. [News.com]
 
LSI Logic plans chip technology - LSI Logic (LSI) plans to introduce a new chip technology that will combine all of the system functions onto one chip to create future communications, computer, and consumer products. [News.com]
 
Labels tune into Liquid Audio - More than 50 independent record labels and artists have committed to using Liquid Audio products for promotion and sales of music over the Internet, the company announced today. [News.com]
 
Learning Co. to buy Mindscape - The Learning Company (TLC) today agreed to buy Mindscape for $150 million in cash and stock, another sign of consolidation in the educational software market. [News.com]
 
Legal path unclear for Windows 98 - With the release of Windows 98 only months away, it remains to be seen if Microsoft and the Justice Department are headed for another showdown. But if the government does decide to go after the new operating system, it would appear to face daunting obstacles. [News.com]
 
Legal victory for Java - Coinciding with Sun Microsystems' JavaOne conference, a federal judge has issued a preliminary injunction ordering Microsoft to pull the Java-compatible logo from all its products. Sun is suing Microsoft over its implementation of the programming language. [News.com]
 
Lessig would have sided with DOJ - Documents made public today showed that a special adviser was leaning toward recommending a ruling against Microsoft in the government's antitrust case before he was temporarily removed from his post. [News.com]
 
Long-term upside for tech stocks - Profit warnings from leading U.S. high-technology companies have spooked stock markets around the world, but analysts said today that, although the short-term outlook may be cloudy, the long-term outlook is as inviting as ever. [News.com]
 
 

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