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Japan laps up ultraportables - U.S. computer makers are urgently designing lightweight notebook computers for the Japanese market, where ultraportable sales are skyrocketing. [News.com]
 
Japan weighs U.S. accounting - Japanese companies are considering U.S.-style accountability to shareholders to help jolt the Tokyo stock market out of its long-term torpor, executives and legal experts say. [News.com]
 
Japanese chipmakers cut jobs - Japanese electronics giant Hitachi has announced that it will merge two of its U.S. semiconductor units in a move that will eliminate 650 jobs, or about 4 percent, of its stateside work force. [News.com]
 
Java court session to be closed - Today's final arguments in Sun Microsystems' request for a preliminary injunction against Microsoft remain off-limits to the public, an assistant to U.S. District Judge Ronald Whyte said this morning. [News.com]
 
Java suit hearing under way - Attorneys for Sun Microsystems and Microsoft squared off in a daylong hearing regarding Sun's request that the software giant modify Java features in Windows 98. [News.com]
 
Jaz drives get cheaper - Iomega today announced a $100 price cut on its Jaz 2GB drives, the second discount for the product this summer. [News.com]
 
Jobs maps Mac's future - Addressing the Seybold publishing conference here, interim CEO Steve Jobs detailed Apple Computer's strategy for the Mac OS 8.5 and upcoming OS X operating systems. [News.com]
 
Judge delays Microsoft trial date - A federal judge today denied the vast majority of Microsoft's request to dismiss antitrust prosecutors' landmark suit against it, ruling that genuinely disputed factual issues at the heart of the case--some substantiated in previously confidential memos among Microsoft executives--can be resolved only by going to trial. [News.com]
 
Judge denies cookie file request - A federal judge has dismissed a novel case testing just how far a state's public records act extends into cyberspace, ruling that a local government's refusal to turn over its computer files does not violate a journalist's First Amendment rights. [News.com]
 
Judge puts Microsoft on ice - A federal judge today told Microsoft that once the landmark antitrust trial of the software giant begins on October 15, he will consider the company's request to limit the breadth of testimony--but not now. [News.com]
 
Judge rejects limit on domain fees - A federal judge has affirmed the legality of a tax paid previously by millions of Internet domain name registrants, clearing the way for the government to resume collecting a fee of $15 to $30 per address. [News.com]
 
Judge: Java case about contracts - The judge presiding over Sun Microsystems' request for a court order halting Microsoft from shipping a modified form of Java told the litigants the case is about contract law, not arcane software development issues. [News.com]
 
Juniper ships speedy router - Start-ups naturally have to deal with a lot of big "ifs," and Juniper Networks is no exception. [News.com]
 
Juno finds infamous spammer - It took four months and some dogged detective work, but free email and online service Juno said it has finally tracked down one of the most notorious spammers on the Net. [News.com]
 
K6-2, Windows 95 mismatch cured - A relatively obscure, but annoying, glitch has been discovered when the fastest versions of the K6-2 processor from Advanced Micro Devices is used in conjunction with Windows 95, but the company and Microsoft have taken steps to eradicate it. [News.com]
 
Kaplan launches online law school - Joining the swelling rank of educators embracing the Net, test preparation firm Kaplan will launch a law school online this fall. [News.com]
 
Keeping e-commerce current - MCI WorldCom today updated its relationship with online procurement service Commerce One, stating that MCI Systemshouse will continue to be a preferred systems integrator. [News.com]
 
Kodak, Intel team on chips, photo CDs - Later this month at an industry event, Kodak and Intel will detail a plan to offer consumers digitized photographs on CDs and elaborate on a digital camera technology based on a lower-cost design, the first fruit of their six-month-old digital imaging alliance. [News.com]
 
Kodak, Intel to unveil disc product - Kodak and Intel today announced their plans to offer consumers digitized photographs on CDs and to elaborate on a digital camera technology based on a lower-cost design, the first fruit of their six-month-old digital imaging alliance. [News.com]
 
Korean chip merger at crossroads - Hyundai Electronics Industries may have the upper hand in a battle for managerial control over a proposed merger with LG Semicon, analysts in Seoul said today. [News.com]
 
 

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