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Excite cofounder files to sell shares
- A senior vice president and cofounder of Excite, Joseph Kraus, may sell 52,790 common shares worth about $2.6 million, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing. [News.com]
Excite in $125 million banking deal
- Excite will announce a deal worth as much as $125 million with Bank One, the fifth-largest bank in the nation, to create an online banking center, according to a source. [News.com]
Excite in $125 million banking deal
- Excite will announce a deal worth as much as $125 million with Bank One, the fifth-largest bank in the nation, to create an online banking center, according to a source. [News.com]
Extended Systems boosts synchronization
- Extended Systems will release Enterprise Harmony '98 for Desktops, a synchronization application for Windows CE and PalmPilot users, the company said. Enterprise Harmony currently synchronizes corporate information with Windows CE devices, but the newest version, expected by the end of the year, will be expanded to also work with Palm Computing's PalmPilot devices. [News.com]
FCC delays ISP regulation ruling
- The Federal Communications Commission will put off for at least another week a controversial decision over how local calls to Internet service providers should be regulated, officials said today. [News.com]
FCC questions telco megamergers
- The Federal Communication Commission's Gloria Tristani says she has strong reservations about several telephone company megamergers now up for FCC approval. [News.com]
FCC strikes at Sprint, Telmex venture
- The U.S. Federal Communications Commission today dealt a sharp blow to a joint venture between Sprint and Telefonos de Mexico, after competitors complained the companies were not abiding by conditions set by the FCC in August. [News.com]
FCC to delay Net call fee ruling
- The Federal Communications Commission will delay until this week a knotty decision to phase out a regulatory loophole that allows local phone carriers to collect hundreds of millions of dollars by serving Internet service providers, people familiar with the plan said. [News.com]
FCC to review wireless spectrum caps
- The Federal Communications Commission has voted to revisit the issue of capping the amount of wireless spectrum owned by cellular telephone companies in each market. [News.com]
FCC to set fees on DTV broadcasts
- Broadcasters will find out today how big a fee the U.S. government plans to levy on companies that use new digital technology to send pay-per-view or other subscription services over the airwaves. [News.com]
FCC: Net tax an "urban myth"
- About once a year for the past three years, word has spread that the Federal Communications Commission was about to regulate or tax the Internet, triggering a deluge of protests by people all over the country. [News.com]
FTC explains high-tech agenda
- Federal Trade Commission chairman Robert Pitofsky has no illusions about what many people think of the agency's efforts to regulate the high-tech industry. [News.com]
Fast-growing firms say IT's their edge
- The fastest-growing companies in the United States attribute their competitive advantage to an edge in IT, according to a study released today. [News.com]
Fed mulls wiretap access to Net
- Federal regulators are struggling over a decision that could give the FBI and other law enforcement officials wiretap access to Internet voice calls, and possibly access even to the content of data messages such as email. [News.com]
Fed sees expanding telephone subsidies
- A federal advisory panel recommended today that the nation's Universal Service telephone subsidy program be expanded in order to protect rural and other low-income phone customers. [News.com]
Fed won't overturn state ISP rules
- Federal Communications chairman William Kennard told state utility regulators that the federal government would not overturn controversial state rules regulating calls to Internet service providers. [News.com]
Fight for supercomputer title
- Silicon Graphics and IBM are both claiming bragging rights as the world's top supercomputing company. [News.com]
Firms tout future DVD drives
- Sony, Philips, Hewlett-Packard, and others haven't yet shipped their version of re-recordable DVD drives, but that hasn't stopped them from talking about new versions that would store even more data than the non-existent drives. [News.com]
Firms tout future DVD drives
- Sony, Philips, Hewlett-Packard, and others haven't yet shipped their version of re-recordable DVD drives, but that hasn't stopped them from talking about new versions that would store even more data than the non-existent drives. [News.com]
First Indiana, EDS in check processing deal
- First Indiana's First Indiana Bank said yesterday that it signed a seven-year deal with Electronic Data Systems to process its checks. [News.com]
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