Recent Articles
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Users Give XP SP2 Mixed Marks
Developers, IT department workers and early adopters have begun to report on their experiences installing Microsoft’s Windows XP Service Pack 2, and while most say they have had no serious problems installing the update, it hasn’t all been smooth sailing, either. Early experiences suggest that the security-oriented upgrade will need extensive testing before IT managers…
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IBM Readies Software for Real-Time Reports
IBM is readying a new software product, known internally as BAM (Business Activity Monitoring), for use in supply chain management, risk management and other areas where customers want to generate real-time reports from either single or multiple sources of information. Produced this summer through IBM’s Extreme Blue college internship program, BAM will be marketed to…
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A Few Bumps on the Road to Windows XP SP2
Since Microsoft Corp. began its staged rollout of Windows XP Service Pack 2 (SP2) late last week, there have been a few bumps—but, at least so far, no major potholes—on the road to deployment. Microsoft has characterized SP2 as a “critical” must-have update. The company’s overriding message is that all Windows XP users should deploy…
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Graphics Workstation Uses Nocona Chip, Nvidia Tech
Verari Systems is putting Intel’s Nocona chip and the latest graphics technology from Nvidia into a high-end workstation aimed at compute-intensive tasks. Verari Systems Inc. unveiled the two-way NemeSys X64 graphics workstation Tuesday at the Siggraph computer graphics show in Los Angeles. The new 3.6GHz Xeon chipscodenamed Nocona, with Intel Corp.’s EM64T extension technologygives the…
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IBM Not Threatened by Sun’s Novell Gambit
IBM officials scoffed at Sun Microsystems Inc.’s intimations last week that it would buy Novell Inc., calling the rhetoric nothing more than an attempt to disrupt IBM and its customers. The issue ignited when Sun President and Chief Operating Officer Jonathan Schwartz mentioned in interviews with the press, including eWEEK, that the Santa Clara, Calif.,…
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IBM Business Group Drives High Growth
IBM has combined several technology initiatives, including Linux, grid computing and virtualization, into a single high-growth business group, Strategic Growth Initiative, led by Jim Stallings, ex-general manager of Linux for the Armonk, N.Y., company. Stallings talked last month to eWEEK Senior Editor Peter Galli about SGI. What motivated the creation of Strategic Growth Initiative? We…