Archive - 11 Mar 2002
IBM steals into first place in Unix market
Sun slips from top spot...
Why the easy life's over for mobile
Time to move on to pastures new...
Telecity shares soar on suitor knock-back
Investors admire its 'chastity'...
BT hyperlink row nearing a conclusion
Or is it just nearing the next level of uproar?
Ellison leaving on a jet plane
After four years of bickering he takes his rich-boy's-toy elsewhere...
UK workers can't tell work from home
Confused? You should be apparently...
Recession? What recession? Contractors' salaries jump again
Pay packets aren't shrinking...
Freeserve to sue UK government as AOL tax fight heats up
Customs and Excise accused of breaking European law...
Mugabe fired from a cannon to Hague trial
It's one way to solve the crisis in Zimbabwe... don't rule it out
Virgin porn in the palm of your hand
3G 'Triple X' fun for Virgin mobile customers...
Back-up storage makes Quantum leap
Disks are in, tape is out...
The mummy returns, thanks to SGI
Virtual reality meets Egyptology...
Chip firms ink $1.4bn deal
'Salt and vinegar with that?'
Friends reunited are getting married
'You may spurn my advances now Sheila O'Brien, but you mark my words, I'll be back for you one day.....
The incredible shrinking Cebit
There it is - behind the portakabin...
HP-Compaq still too close to call
This could actually get interesting over the next week...
Baltimore shares soar on multi-million deals
"Norway?" "Way"...
Psion revalues wireless business
£100m write-down for handheld player...
Blair set to back £2bn Galileo project
GPS alternative nears lift off...
PR disaster! Marconi faces £3m 'bill' from agency
Hill & Knowlton adds to blighted company's woes...
Worldcom eyes Energis
Suitors form an orderly queue...
NTL goes Korean as UK set-top maker loses Pace
Samsung in, Pace out...
Sun sues Microsoft for $1bn over Java
"What is at stake here is the future of an open software industry and an open internet..."
The Bloor Perspective: Novell, unions and accounting for all things
In their latest bundle of analysis, the Bloor team considers Novell's recent progression, a classic ...
