Archive - 15 Jul 2002
WorldCom fraud: did the UK government fail to act?
DTI knew of scandal years ago, says whistleblower
Top 10 email do's and don't's
Hit 'send' in haste, relent in leisure...
RedHotAnt chief sent to jail
VAT's that for dot-com crook
BBC e-learning plans 'will cost business £400m'
But Beeb claims public backing for web learning strategy
Norwegian government ditches Microsoft
Well, the Norwegians would, wouldn't they...
Interoute snaps up bones of eBone
MAN at work
Worm warning: Frethem's running free and spreading fast
Another little wriggler causes mayhem
Microsoft readies next-generation Media Player
Bill goes to Hollywood...
Gerald Ratner loses rights to his own name
Well, online anyway...
Vodafone sues Daily Telegraph for libel
Gent in a huff about opinion piece...
Trouble at the top for Deutsche Telekom chief
Go away, says government...
Hacker group debuts anonymous email
Secret squirrel...
Wireless LAN on platform 802.11b
Something to do while you wait for the train...
E-envoy bows to Welsh wave
Tidy...
SEC chief refuses to step down
Scandal or no scandal, he's stayin' put...
Marconi UK assets snapped up by 3i
Remember them?
Official: Mac users are richer and cleverer than PC users
Cogitate different...
Qwest considers restating $1bn in revenues
It's as easy as S-E-C...
IBM's Shark returns to the murky storage waters
It's a storage fin...
Former Asda chief flies in to rescue Energis
High-speed cables, aisle 14...
Vivendi to receive E2.5bn lifeline
Take this and start the garage sale...
The Bloor Perspective: EMC's declaration of independence, the insecurities of the board and diminishing mobile mania
This week Robin Bloor and his team consider just how independent EMC's new venture with Accenture is...