With more businesses turning to instant messaging, the technology gets serious about making money.
|
If only technology's most successful private company would go public, the reasoning goes, then the industry would thrive once again. Too bad business doesn't operate on "ifs" and "onlys."
|
USA Networks eyes a handful of internet survivors.
|
Xbox cocreators reunite in a game-production company that will become the new middleman for publishers and developers.
|
We are not surprised that Sigma Networks is being liquidated.
|
As Goes the Boom, So Go Corporate VCs.
|
The optical components firm got its product to market, but VCs have refused to cough up more money to keep it afloat.
|
Online Porn Goes Mainstream.
|
After ceding the low end to TiVo and Microsoft, ReplayTV pursues a new market segment: gadget-lovers with broadband connections and money to burn.
|
There's still money to be made in the business-to-business arena for a chosen few. Who will survive the B2B shakeout? You might be surprised.
|
Tech Soundings: Increasingly, the search for hopeful leads in drug discovery involves in silico drug screening, a computer-based process popular in the 1980s.
|
Tony Perkins humbly suggests that President George W. Bush can enhance his leadership by building support for policies such as his missile defense project before he announces them.
|
In 1999, I wrote a column about the "party economy" in San Francisco -- how important the drunk-with-money launch parties were to the Internet economy, what it was like to be in the middle of it, etc. But I never ran it ...
|
Despite creditors, critics, and a civil suit filed by the state of Connecticut, Jay Walker, poster child for the Internet bubble, says he's plotting a comeback.
|
Investors learned the hard way that tech earnings couldn't grow indefinitely. But just as the boom couldn't last forever, neither will the current downturn.
|
But will it be coming to a phone near you?
|
A superstar game company makes a move to the silver screen.
|
|
|
The Kleiner Perkins partner and ardent Bush backer is named co-chairman of the president's council on science and technology. He'll be a conduit between the tech community and the White House. Red Herring is on the scene.
|
It will be a year of going back to basics, when IT managers focus on deployment of new technologies and applications that save money.
|
Page
1
of
4
|