Archive - 30 Mar 2001
BEA left languishing after iPlanet mix up
Analyst praise for BEA and its WebLogic internet application server has failed to restore the compan...
Hackers tear apart US sites - FBI issues public warning
The credit card details of over one million web users have been stolen or compromised following a co...
Lotus delays Raven launch - again
Lotus has once again pushed back the launch of its new knowledge management suite, code-named Raven.
Philips eyes early exit from handset race
Europe's largest electronics manufacturer, Philips, may bail out of mobile handsets, according to it...
IT pros may need licences to work
IT professionals could soon find themselves unable to work unless they have the same licence that ni...
IR35: Judgement day looms
Monday is judgement day in the IR35 judicial review, and the winner in the legal tussle will be disc...
"You're not getting in - not with data like that"
Bouncers, wheel clampers and security guards have never been the most popular members of society, so...
Will the last electronics company to leave the country please turn off the power...
UK electronics manufacturers may be forced to move their operations out of the country as a result o...
Director's dinner table banter leaves BT in the soup
Philip Hampton, finance director at BT, spoke candidly about his company's struggles earlier this we...
Mitsubishi reports poor handset sales
Mitsubishi has missed its global target for mobile handset sales by nearly a third, selling a mere 1...
Portal push sees SAP snap up US partner
German software vendor SAP has bought its US partner Top Tier for $400m cash in a bid to strengthen ...
Bush appoints VC as top tech advisor
The number one technical adviser to US president George Bush set out his stall yesterday calling for...
John Lamb's Week: hackers, pensions and trouble ahead
This week the pensions industry will be keeping its fingers crossed when government-backed stakehold...
Behind the Headlines: An era of design and IT unity
The emergence of the icon-based vortal, or vertical portal, is a welcome advance in the presentation...
Vodafone deal cuts debt burden to £7bn
Vodafone has completed its long-drawn out deal to dispose of Italian telco Infostrada and in doing s...
HP screens give users shocks and screams
HP has admitted that shipments of faulty monitors may give users electric shocks.
'Human' computer to stamp out fraud
The UK government is trying to stamp out web fraud by funding the development of a computer program ...
IBM escapes Holocaust lawsuit over legal technicality
Lawyers of Holocaust victims who claimed IBM executives had played a part in Nazi Germany's final so...
CRM the order of the day
Dublin-based CRM provider Norkom Technologies has secured $2m in advanced orders for its new platfor...
Europe on a high, US at a long-time low
European bourses rose in early trading after a weak start. Telecom stocks were among the biggest gai...
InterX slump prompts staff shares rejig
Ailing web software company InterX has announced it is to re-evaluate its employee share option sche...
Opening the door to the internet fraudsters
Ninety-five per cent of you think you'll be the victim of internet fraud.
