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Street gains for third day running
- Stocks saw some upside in trading today, following two straight sessions of big gains on Wall Street. [News.com]
Street rebounds on rate cut news
- U.S. stocks staged an impressive turnaround to end higher today as hopes for an interest rate cut next week by the Federal Reserve trumped market fears that earlier sent investors scurrying. [News.com]
Street up on good inflation news
- Stocks gained today as strength in technology stocks and a favorable inflation figure offset Wall Street worries that President Clinton might face impeachment. [News.com]
Strong showing for iMac in poll
- The final numbers from an iMac buyer's poll show some encouraging signs for Apple Computer's stylish new Macintosh. [News.com]
Study: Boom in computer viruses
- More companies are using antivirus software, but they're also suffering more computer viruses on their corporate networks, according to a study by private firm International Computer Security Association. [News.com]
Study: Chip revenue up in '99
- It's not over, but the so-called Asian flu may be easing, according to Dataquest in a new study that predicts the semiconductor industry will grow 11.8 percent in 1999 following a 6 percent decline in 1998. [News.com]
Study: Net brokers threaten banks
- Discount brokerages will control more than 50 percent of personal finance activity online by 2002, taking significant market share away from banks, according to a study released today. [News.com]
Study: Net use causes depression
- Spending just a few hours a week online appears to leave people feeling more socially isolated, lonely, and depressed, according to a two-year study of nearly 100 families with Internet access. [News.com]
Study: Netscape share below 50%
- Netscape Communications is rapidly losing ground to Microsoft in their battle for the Web browser market, according to a new study. [News.com]
Study: Simplify e-commerce sites
- There's no question that people are heading online with their wallets and shopping lists, but actually finding the items they are looking for is proving to be much more difficult. [News.com]
Sun exec held MS view of Java deal
- Executives from Sun Microsystems agreed with Microsoft's reading of a licensing contract at the heart of their bitter legal battle until a Sun superior told the company's employees to disregard the document, an attorney for Microsoft argued. [News.com]
Sun execs to testify in Java suit
- The bitter dispute over the Java computer language--designed to make programming easier--continues in federal court today. [News.com]
Sun plans to work with NT
- Sun Microsystems is eating crow but it could end up tasting like filet mignon. [News.com]
Sun sees boon from others' delays
- Sun Microsystems said that it sees a big opportunity from the delays by both Intel and Microsoft of their next-generation technologies. [News.com]
Sun sheds light on chip path
- Sun Microsystems said it will come out with microprocessors running at 1,500 MHz, or more than four times faster than its current microprocessors, in less than four years under an aggressive roadmap that puts the company in the race to establish the standards for the next generation of computing. [News.com]
Sun ships latest mail server
- Sun Microsystems today began shipping the latest version of its enterprise Internet mail server, showing signs that it plans to play in the big leagues in the tight enterprise groupware market despite earlier warnings by analysts about any positive outcome. [News.com]
Sun taps i-Planet for security
- Sun Microsystems will soon announce the purchase of remote access specialist i-Planet, according to sources close to the deal. [News.com]
Sun, Quark keep rivals at bay
- Publishing software provider Quark may have found itself spurned in one recent deal, but it has landed another without missing a beat. [News.com]
Sun: Give Java a chance
- Seeking converts among disaffected Windows developers, the president of Sun Microsystems' Solaris unit preached the gospel of Java and touted the opportunity to make big bucks in software for non-PC devices. [News.com]
Sun: MS aims to "hijack" Java
- The Sun Microsystems executive who runs the company's Java efforts yesterday charged that Microsoft is trying to "flood the market" with its own "divergent version of Java" in an effort to undermine the promise of letting developers create software that runs on different operating systems. [News.com]
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