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Report questions interactive TV
- The rollout of digital television may not lead to a revolution of interactive entertainment television programming, a new study says, throwing cold water on one aspect of a highly anticipated feature of next-generation TV. [News.com]
Report slams PC reliability
- Computer vendors are not measuring up when it comes to shipping computers that work, according to a new report from Windows Magazine. [News.com]
Report warns of Valley recession
- The Asian financial crisis is already hurting California and will cause a dramatic slowdown in the state's economic growth by early next year, a new report says. [News.com]
Report, video: Dangerous surfing?
- It was a familiar scene: employees crowded around a computer monitor waiting to see President Clinton sweat. [News.com]
Retailers key to Compaq's Latin sales
- Compaq Computer sees no electronic highway around middleman retailers in Latin America, even though the Houston-based PC company increasingly relies on selling directly in the United States, a Compaq executive said today. [News.com]
Roadblocks in the fast lane
- The 56-kbps standard for modems is ratified, but problems remain. Meanwhile, Motorola sues two companies over software modems. V.90 modem standard approved But industry analysts warn that damage from the lengthy standards battle which preceded this detente may be difficult to reverse. [News.com]
Rockwell to spin off chip unit
- Rockwell International, the struggling electronics control and communications company, said it will take a charge in the fourth quarter as part of its plans to resize and spin off its semiconductor business. [News.com]
Rocky Mountain delays bid
- Rocky Mountain's bid to acquire Internet Communications for $42 million was delayed until October 2 after Rocky Mountain said it needed to complete financing before it could close the deal, the companies said. [News.com]
S&P wary of tech sector outlook
- Tech companies increasingly are facing the prospect of falling credit ratings in light of exposure to ailing Asian economies and, as a result, are finding it more difficult to raise money to do business. [News.com]
SAP aims to make it easy
- SAP wants to put the soft back in its software. [News.com]
SAP exec quits to run start-up
- SAP America chief executive Paul Wahl is resigning to lead a Silicon Valley start-up company, another example of a corporate high-technology executive becoming more of an entrepreneur. [News.com]
SAP strategy extends scope
- SAP owns the enterprise resource planning software market, but that isn't good enough. [News.com]
SAP tries to go user-friendly
- Image is everything. Obey your user. [News.com]
SAP wins $35 million deal
- Sumitomo Chemical said today that it planned to spend about $35.5 million on a corporate management software system developed by SAP of Germany. [News.com]
SBC dismayed by telecom ruling
- SBC Communications said it was disappointed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit's 2-to-1 ruling that the "special provisions" of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 are constitutional. [News.com]
SEC takes on voodoo accounting
- The Securities and Exchange Commission wants to put the kibosh on creativity--at least when it comes to the way public companies report their earnings. [News.com]
SEC to Net brokers: Shape up
- Online brokerage firms need to improve customer access through the Internet during periods of stock market turmoil, the Securities and Exchange Commission said in a review of the October 1997 stock market slump. [News.com]
SGI adds hardware guarantee
- Bolstering its Internet strategy, Silicon Graphics has added a guarantee that if its hardware doesn't do the job SGI consultants say it will, customers get more for free. [News.com]
SGI revs flat-panel technology
- Silicon Graphics today introduced a 17-inch digital display that may push futuristic flat-panel technology into the mainstream. [News.com]
SGI shakeup came at hefty price
- Though it has yet to turn around financially as a result, Silicon Graphics paid a hefty sum to replace its top management team nearly eight months ago, including a $5.3 million "golden parachute" to outgoing chief executive Ed McCracken, the company's proxy statement disclosed today. [News.com]
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