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CNNMoney: Epic smackdown looms in Google vs. Oracleupdated: Fri Aug 13 2010 16:14:00

Stuck between maintaining an unsettling status quo or causing a damaging but potentially lucrative ruckus, Oracle is going for the ruckus.

What to do with passwords once you create themupdated: Thu Jul 15 2010 12:50:00

Cryptography expert Bruce Schneier used to write his passwords down on a slip of paper and keep it in his wallet. Today, he uses a free Windows password-storage tool called Password Safe that he designed five years ago and released into the open-source community.

Mozilla pushes back Firefox deadlinesupdated: Tue Dec 29 2009 10:09:00

Mozilla won't make a 2009 deadline for releasing Firefox 3.6 and is giving itself more time to complete a major update, version 4.0.

After 5 years, Firefox faces new challengesupdated: Wed Nov 11 2009 15:50:00

Five years ago, Mozilla made it clear that the browser wars weren't over after all.

Fortune: Red Hat takes on the recessionupdated: Fri Aug 21 2009 05:44:00

Remember about five or six years ago when the open source software movement was going to beat the stuffing out of software giants like Microsoft, Oracle and Sun? That hasn't exactly happened.

Microsoft vs. Googleupdated: Fri Jul 10 2009 16:30:00

CNN.com's blogger bunch discuss the latest offerings from Microsoft and Google.

Odds are stacked against Chrome OS's successupdated: Fri Jul 10 2009 16:30:00

Google's netbook-friendly Chrome OS takes direct aim at Microsoft, whose eight-year-old Windows XP leads the netbook market. But the odds are stacked against Google.

CNNMoney: Get control of your employee recordsupdated: Tue Apr 21 2009 18:03:00

Question: I have a small veterinary practice with 10 employees. What is a good program to use to make a database about my employees, with photos, contact info, salaries, information on their last raise, etc.?

CNNMoney: Sun-Oracle deal isn't a big loss to IBMupdated: Mon Apr 20 2009 13:57:00

The acquisition of Sun Microsystems by International Business Machines' rival Oracle on Monday came just weeks after Sun's negotiations with IBM failed.

Commentary: Create a tech-friendly U.S. governmentupdated: Thu Jan 08 2009 13:35:00

The incoming Obama administration's plan to appoint the first national chief technology officer unequivocally emphasizes the new team's belief that technology isn't ancillary or extraneous to governance, and instead that it's an integral part of the effective running of a democratic superpower.

Time.com: Google Enters the Browser Warsupdated: Tue Sep 02 2008 23:00:00

With the unveiling of Chrome, the search behemoth begins its march toward becoming Windows -- but free

Microsoft's new browserupdated: Tue Sep 02 2008 07:51:00

Privacy is at the heart of the new Microsoft browser, but it might eat into Google's lunch. CNN's Jim Boulden reports.

Time.com: Microsoft, Novell Expand Alliance with $100M Dealupdated: Wed Aug 20 2008 17:00:00

Microsoft Corp., expanding on an alliance with Novell Inc., has agreed to buy as much as $100 million more for subscription certificates for Novell's Linux products, Novell said Wednesday

Time.com: Firefox Goes for a Recordupdated: Tue Jun 17 2008 13:10:00

It's "Download Day" for its new browser, and the Firefox folks have alerted Guinness. Here's an advance look

Fortune: Oracle and Sun - Two software paths that convergeupdated: Tue Jan 22 2008 11:02:00

Oracle and Sun both made impressive acquisitions of software companies this week. For its part, Oracle in buying BEA Systems is making the last great stand for licensed software - old school stuff customers buy and install themselves.

Fortune: Here come the hot IPOs of '08updated: Thu Jan 10 2008 12:44:00

Just because the U.S. economy might be looking at a recession, doesn't mean a few good tech IPOs can't light up the market. While no company is fully immune to economic retraction, the most promising technology companies have the advantage of a global marketplace in which to sell their wares. So if U.S. markets hit the skids, companies can always focus their efforts on Asian or European customers.

True or False: E-Wasteupdated: Mon Dec 03 2007 21:52:00

True or False: Switching from a Windows-operated computer to a Linux-operated one could slash computer-generated e-waste levels by 50%.

Why so much software?updated: Wed Oct 24 2007 10:43:00

Computer expert Ken Colburn has more on why your new computer comes with so many trial software programs installed.

CNNMoney: Red Hat profit jumps on Linux revenue riseupdated: Tue Sep 25 2007 05:15:00

Open-source software maker Red Hat Inc. said Tuesday fiscal second-quarter earnings rose sharply, driven by higher revenue from subscriptions for its Linux operating software.

CNNMoney: Microsoft fails to win global standard approvalupdated: Tue Sep 04 2007 02:33:00

Microsoft Corp. has failed in a first step to win enough support to make the data format behind its flagship Office software a global standard, the International Standards Organization said Tuesday.

Fortune: Microsoft takes on the free worldupdated: Mon May 14 2007 09:35:00

Free software is great, and corporate America loves it. It's often high-quality stuff that can be downloaded free off the Internet and then copied at will. It's versatile - it can be customized to ...

CNN Future Summit forumupdated: Thu Apr 26 2007 06:39:00

A machine for the home that can make anything, even itself sounds like the dream of a science fiction fan, but a device using open source software developed at Cornell University has been designed to do just that. Could it represent the dawn of the arts and crafts movement for the digital age or open the gateway to the destruction of intellectual property rights and copyright?

Business 2.0: Building a Wiki Worldupdated: Tue Apr 03 2007 10:00:00

Jimmy Wales may have created the world's largest encyclopedia, but he can't keep his inbox in order. In the back of a black London cab, careening from one high-powered meeting to the next, Wales si...

Business 2.0: Why It Pays to Give Away the Storeupdated: Thu Mar 15 2007 13:01:00

Once upon a time, in the bad old days of business, giving away a product without charge was unheard of. Sure, Estée Lauder gave samples to celebrities and Gillette sold its razors cheap and made mo...

Fortune: Second Life to go open sourceupdated: Sun Jan 07 2007 20:54:00

Aiming to take advantage of its already-impressive momentum, San Francisco's Linden Lab, developer of the Second Life virtual online world, will announce Monday that it is taking the first major step toward opening up its software for the contributions of any interested programmer.

Fortune: Technology and the developing worldupdated: Wed Dec 20 2006 15:40:00

When people ask me what I think is the most important trend in technology today, I always answer the same way. It's not Web 2.0, Open Source software or Google's growing power. The most important trend in technology is how it is boosting economic development around the world.

CNNMoney: Linux to work with Windowsupdated: Thu Nov 02 2006 15:04:00

Once-bitter software rivals Microsoft and Novell came together Thursday to make peace in the operating system world.

Business 2.0: To love or hate Vista?updated: Wed Nov 01 2006 19:14:00

Looking for a cheap PC this holiday season? Good luck trying to find one with anything but Microsoft's Windows on it.

The insider's guide to Web Wars 2.0updated: Tue Oct 24 2006 05:03:00

(CNN) -- Mozilla previews a new version of its Firefox Web browser today, less than a week after Microsoft unveiled the latest edition of its own Explorer. Here's all you need to know about the fiercest battle on the Web since Microsoft vanquished Netscape in the late 1990s.

Transcript: Scott McNealy, Chairman of Sun Microsystemsupdated: Fri Aug 04 2006 07:17:00

Sun Microsystems Chairman Scott McNealy sums up his leadership style by saying "sharing is a good thing." It may not be what Wall Street wants to hear but McNealy believes he can use Sun power to eliminate the global digital divide. McNealy talked to CNN's Maggie Lake about his goal of creating an open source society and educating the next generation of tech superstars. My first question, does he think the U.S. is falling behind when it comes to creating cutting edge technology?

Fortune: The soul of a new teamupdated: Thu Jun 08 2006 10:09:00

The highest and best form of efficiency is the spontaneous cooperation of a free people. -- Bernard Baruch, financier and Roosevelt advisor, 1870-1965.

Business 2.0: Novell looks to Linux for a lifelineupdated: Thu Jun 01 2006 13:53:00

SAN FRANCISCO (Business 2.0 Magazine) - It's official: All mentions of Novell must now, once again, be preceded by the adjective "beleaguered."

Fortune: MySQL: Workers in 25 countries with no HQupdated: Wed May 31 2006 12:31:00

It seemed like a typical company holiday party. The brandy and eggnog flowed freely, although it didn't seem to loosen up any of the attendees.

Reclusive Linux founder opens upupdated: Thu May 18 2006 03:19:00

Portland, Oregon is the unlikely capital of a global software revolution. The revolution is called Open Source. And its leader? Linus Torvalds, the reclusive founder of Linux.

CNNMoney: Will Oracle offer a Linux package?updated: Mon Apr 17 2006 07:20:00

Business software firm Oracle is mulling creating its own version of the Linux operating system in an effort to keep up with competitors, according to a news report published Monday.

CNNMoney: Tech: What's hot, what's notupdated: Thu Apr 13 2006 13:04:00

Tech stocks are having a cracking 2006, with the NASDAQ hitting a five-year high this month, but some sectors are primed for better growth than others.

Business 2.0: Can Linux help Oracle beat IBM?updated: Fri Apr 07 2006 17:40:00

For years, Oracle and IBM have fought over bragging rights for the $8 billion database software market - a key technological battleground upon which sales of almost all other business software depend.

Business 2.0: Will telecom go open-source?updated: Mon Mar 06 2006 07:46:00

At the San Francisco offices of Panorama Capital, two dozen engineers, venture capitalists and academics gathered around a nondescript piece of hardware they all helped build.

Business 2.0: The Black Box That Would Conquer Telecomupdated: Wed Feb 22 2006 15:45:00

At the San Francisco offices of Panorama Capital, two dozen engineers, venture capitalists, and academics gathered around a nondescript piece of hardware they all helped build. Then Allan Leinwand,...

Fortune: Is Slashdot the future of media?updated: Fri Feb 10 2006 09:56:00

If you want to see the future of media, go to Slashdot.org.

FSB: Smooth Sailingupdated: Fri Jan 20 2006 10:00:00

(FORTUNE Small Business) - John Hoss, partner and VP of Freeport Launch Service, doesn't have time to monkey with his computer system. Operating a nine-vessel fleet off the coast of Freeport, Texas...

Browser choice benefits Web usersupdated: Fri Nov 04 2005 03:55:00

When it comes to browsers, Microsoft's Internet Explorer has a stronghold on the market, but other products are starting to make inroads, giving Web users a choice about what software they use to surf the Net.

Business 2.0: Building The Next Googleupdated: Tue Nov 01 2005 00:01:00

It's a terrific time to be an entrepreneur. The availability of cheap computer hardware, free software, and high-speed Internet access has created a powerful new base from which to launch new busin...

CNNMoney: HP thinks small is beautifulupdated: Fri Sep 30 2005 14:55:00

Last week Hewlett-Packard announced that it is acquiring two small software makers, Peregrine Systems and AppIQ, to bolster its enterprise software business. These deals, the first big software moves made under new HP CEO Mark Hurd, are a good start, but they aren't nearly enough to cure the company's software woes.

Fortune: IBM Shares Its Secretsupdated: Mon Sep 05 2005 00:01:00

It's IBM's nightmare. In a conference room in Bangalore, a team of retail experts at software company Wipro are redesigning the consumer experience for a major U.S. retail chain. They're methodical...

Business 2.0: How to Ride the Fifth Waveupdated: Fri Jul 01 2005 00:01:00

Rick Rashid makes his living staring off into the distance. He's head of Microsoft Research, the software giant's R&D arm, and it's his job to peer far over the horizon to divine where technology i...

Business 2.0: David vs. The Data Goliathsupdated: Sun May 01 2005 00:01:00

Does the world need more database software? Maybe, if it's a low-cost open-source program that packs all the punch of products made by Oracle and Microsoft. That's the hope of startup EnterpriseDB,...

Money and freedom a winning formulaupdated: Wed Feb 23 2005 03:57:00

In its attempt to conquer the movie world, specialist animators Moving Picture Company (MPC) have turned to an unlikely ally in the form of open sourcing, the concept that is changing the way businesses around the globe are operating.

Fortune: SHOULD YOU JOIN THE BROWSER WARS?updated: Mon Nov 29 2004 00:01:00

"DITCH YOUR BROWSER," WRITES EDITOR-IN- chief Harry McCracken in October's PC World, a magazine widely read by techies and power users. What on earth is he talking about? Like a growing number of t...

New browser to challenge Microsoftupdated: Tue Nov 09 2004 11:40:00

Microsoft's dominance of the Web browser market faces a fresh challenge with the release of the final version of Mozilla's Firefox browser.

Business 2.0: Microsoft's Worst Nightmareupdated: Mon Nov 01 2004 00:01:00

Blake Ross is lounging at his parents' Florida Keys condo, thinking ahead to his first day back at Stanford. His goal for his sophomore year: nothing less than to "take back the Web" from Microsoft...

Fortune: REDMOND'S OPEN-DOOR POLICYupdated: Mon Oct 18 2004 00:01:00

SINCE ITS FOUNDING A GENERATION ago, Microsoft has been famous (and famously reviled) for guarding its secrets as vigilantly as the former KGB. But in a series of surprising and little-noticed move...

Fortune: WHY HACKERS ARE A GIANT THREAT TO MICROSOFT'S FUTUREupdated: Mon Oct 18 2004 00:01:00

NOBODY IN CHARGE AT MICROSOFT IS LIKELY to forget the dog days of August 2003. That month viruses and worms aimed at flaws in Windows software brought the Internet to its knees. Hard drives flooded...

Business 2.0: Open-Source Databasesupdated: Fri Oct 01 2004 00:01:00

Five years ago open-source databases such as MySQL were like sparring partners—a student might practice on them, though you'd never subject them to a pro fight. But in 2004 they showed they could c...

CNNMoney: Microsoft IS worried about Linuxupdated: Thu Sep 09 2004 13:46:00

The "risks" sections of most company SEC filings are usually pretty tedious reads, written as they are by members of the legal staff hoping to cover the company's behind should an investor lawsuit arise.

Business 2.0: Unleashing the Monster Download Using file sharing for good instead of evil, BitTorrent is helping companies save a bundle.updated: Tue Jun 01 2004 00:01:00

Blizzard Entertainment knew what it was in for when it announced in March that fans of its Warcraft computer games could download an online role-playing version for testing: 100,000 would-be orc ki...

CNNMoney: Beware the penguinsupdated: Tue May 25 2004 12:13:00

Stop me if you've heard this one before. The Linux operating system is starting to emerge as a formidable threat to Microsoft's Windows.

Fortune: Gunning for Linux The free operating system--backed by IBM, HP, and others-- is breaking Microsoft's monopoly. updated: Mon May 17 2004 00:01:00

In the ascetic waiting room of the SCO Group's Lindon, Utah, headquarters, the only reading matter is a stack of beige, telephone-book-sized binders. They are volumes I, II, III, and IV of the comp...

Business 2.0: The Perils Of Prosecuting The Penguin Lawsuits against Linux users have made SCO tons of enemies. What they haven't made SCO is updated: Sat May 01 2004 00:01:00

As a business model, it's either incredibly daring or thoroughly despicable, depending on your point of view. First, acquire rights to software you didn't write, some lines of which may or may not ...

Fortune: Have Tech's Bullies Been Tamed? Microsoft is shaking hands with Sun, paying fines, and--gasp!--ceding ground to rivals. What givupdated: Mon Apr 19 2004 00:01:00

To most people, Microsoft's image has long been blissfully uncomplicated: It's a big, bad bully with so much money-- $53 billion to be exact--that it is practically above the law. Even after the U....

Opening the door to open sourceupdated: Sun Mar 14 2004 01:46:00

When it is time to upgrade technology operations, most corporations turn to Microsoft, but this behavior is changing.

CNNMoney: SCO's year of living litigiouslyupdated: Tue Feb 24 2004 10:39:00

It's never a good sign for the tech sector when some of its biggest news involves lawyers, but that's been the situation so far this year.

Fortune: How The Open-Source World Plans To Smack Down Microsoft, And Oracle, And...updated: Mon Feb 23 2004 00:01:00

Steve Ballmer made a sudden and unscheduled trip to Munich last winter. The CEO of Microsoft had been vacationing with his family in Europe when he got word that the Bavarian capital was about to s...

Fortune: 4 Open Source Opens Its Wings As Linux battles Microsoft, another 86,000 open-source projects prepare to updated: Mon Feb 23 2004 00:01:00

The trends in this package all provide tantalizing markets for business and new ways for customers and consumers to spend money. Except this one: Open source, the free software movement that starte...

Security firm: MyDoom worm fastest yetupdated: Wed Jan 28 2004 00:41:00

The MyDoom virus has become the fastest-spreading virus yet, hitting hardest in the United States and Australia, security firm MessageLabs said Wednesday.

CNNMoney: Of worms and penguins?updated: Tue Jan 27 2004 12:40:00

Another day, another e-mail worm. But unlike the creators of past worms, it looks like the writers of the latest one, known as MyDoom, are not going after Bill Gates and his fellow merry knights of Windows.

Experts: Vicious worm 'Linux war' weaponupdated: Tue Jan 27 2004 10:49:00

A sneaky e-mail worm continued to clog Internet traffic Tuesday, spreading faster than previous Web bugs by appearing as an innocuous error message.

Fortune: Why "Bottom Up" Is On Its Way Upupdated: Mon Jan 26 2004 00:01:00

What do these things have in common: the TV show American Idol, Howard Dean's presidential campaign, eBay, and the open-source Linux operating system? They're all manifestations of a key trend of o...

Why 'Bottom Up' is on its way upupdated: Thu Jan 15 2004 11:50:00

What do these things have in common: the TV show American Idol, Howard Dean's presidential campaign, eBay, and the open-source Linux operating system?

Fortune: 40 Under 40 The celebration of youth flamed out with the dot-coms, but these 40 (plus one brother act) show that updated: Mon Sep 15 2003 00:01:00

YOUNG, RICH, POWERFUL, AND CHANGING THE WORLD Work your way up from the bottom? Forget it. Our list of 40 (okay, 41) who have vaulted to the top before they hit 40.

Fortune: Penguin Slayer Tiny SCO Group thinks it can do what Gates can't: Hurt IBM by fighting Linux.updated: Mon Jul 21 2003 00:01:00

In mid-may, CEOs at every company on the FORTUNE 1,000 and FORTUNE Global 500 opened a letter to discover that despite their various industries, languages, and far-flung locations, they all had som...

Business 2.0: At Orbitz, Linux Flies First-Class Leon Chism went open-source to cut hardware costs--and boost power--in the cutthroat travel bupdated: Tue Jul 01 2003 00:01:00

PROBLEM

Fortune: Tech Where The Action Is Some in Silicon Valley have learned to stop worrying and love the bust. Here's why.updated: Mon May 12 2003 00:01:00

The blessings were bouncing off the walls of New York's Carnegie Hall. It was a late February evening, and the banquet crowd of 350, dressed in everything from jeans to suits, sat silently as six T...

Fortune: Penguins Take On Titans Linux is suddenly gaining traction on Wall Street. Watch out, Sun.updated: Mon Feb 03 2003 00:01:00

How do you stop an army of penguins? That isn't a question from a South Pole scientist's bad dream. But it is a question Sun Microsystems and Microsoft are asking. The penguin, in case you don't kn...

Fortune: Bringing Linux to the Masses He took on the music labels with MP3.com. Now, with Lindows, Michael Robertson is updated: Mon Feb 03 2003 00:01:00

For as long as anyone can remember, Michael Robertson has been fighting with someone or something. He sparred with his political science professors in college because they were too liberal; he star...

Business 2.0: The Penguin Takes Flight After creating a program that makes Linux as easy to use as Windows, Miguel de Icaza updated: Sun Dec 01 2002 00:01:00

Five years ago, Miguel de Icaza had what most hackers would consider a comfortable gig. A 24-year-old dropout at the national university in Mexico City, he spent most of his time in a cramped room ...

FSB: Five Not to Grow On in 2003 Hot technologies for business that leave me ice-cold.updated: Sun Dec 01 2002 00:01:00

Hype springs eternal in the tech world. Last year I picked five technologies not worth your time and money, and four of the five are still duds (instant messaging, which I disparaged as a business ...

Business 2.0: Linux for the Rest of Us With the long-awaited emergence of dirt-cheap new applications, the desktop alternative to Microsoft fiupdated: Fri Nov 01 2002 00:01:00

The clerks at Zumiez, a national chain of snowboard and skateboard shops, tend to stick out from the crowd. And it's not just because they sport black hooded sweatshirts or smack their gum while ri...

Fortune: Servers With a Smile It will never beat Windows on the desktop, but the Linux operating system has an undeniable charm in the woupdated: Mon Sep 30 2002 00:01:00

Microsoft's Bill Gates may be richer, but when it comes to unvarnished business aggression, no one in the high-tech world can top Larry Ellison, the 58-year-old founder and CEO of Oracle. This is a...

Fortune: Can The Brash Brothers Bounce Back? No matter what they say, Sun's Scott McNealy and Oracle's Larry Ellison can't get their custupdated: Mon Jun 10 2002 00:01:00

What a horrid time to be a technology company! The economy stinks. Corporate customers don't have money to spend, and even if they did, why would they? They're swimming in hardware and software the...

Fortune: Tech's Great Inventor? Europe Linux, HTML, and MP3: all crafted in Europe, all exploited in the U.S. This updated: Mon Jul 09 2001 00:01:00

When President Bush visited Europe in late June, it felt as if the U.S. and the Continent were separate planets: The leaders clashed on missile defense, global warming, and other issues. But while ...

Fortune: Microsoft Slayersupdated: Mon Jun 25 2001 00:01:00

Talk about a retro trend: Microsoft looms large in the news these days, with competitors worrying anew that the revitalized giant is about to release a series of products that will link everything ...

FSB: It's a Windows World. Do We Have to Live in It?updated: Thu Feb 01 2001 00:01:00

Dale Lancaster, CTO of ReallyEasy.com, is in something of a quandary. He's debating whether his company, a 20-employee Austin, Texas-based application services provider, should move its entire offi...

Fortune: Wall Street Doesn't Get the Cult of Linuxupdated: Mon Jul 24 2000 00:01:00

Of all the tech stocks toasting the potential split of Microsoft, the most joyous should have been VA Linux Systems and Red Hat. The two companies--which both market the free, open-source operating...

Fortune: The New Player [SUN MICROSYSTEMS NO. 150] Perpetual underdog Sun is now part of the tech elite. To stay there, it must merely houpdated: Mon Apr 17 2000 00:01:00

Think of Sun Microsystems as the Big-Picture computer company. From its founding 18 years ago, Sun's executives have been thinking Big Thoughts. Even now they're thinking big, about where computing...

Fortune: Why Free Code Makes Sense THE TRIUMPH OF RAGTAG DEVELOPERSupdated: Mon Aug 02 1999 00:01:00

You say you got a real solution/Well, you know, we'd all love to see the plan./You ask me for a contribution?/Well, you know, we're all doing what we can.

Fortune: VA Linux Systemsupdated: Mon Jul 05 1999 00:01:00

LINUX COMPUTERS hq: Sunnyvale, Calif. founded:1993 sales: $50 million (est.) employees:132 privately held address: www.valinux.com

Fortune: Some Promising Software for Linuxupdated: Mon May 10 1999 00:01:00

In my last column I reported on my battle to install Linux on a notebook computer (FORTUNE, April 26). After some difficulty--and a lot of technical help--I was finally able to run a PC on this fre...

Fortune: Sun's a Cool Company--But Not a Net Stockupdated: Mon May 10 1999 00:01:00

Sun Microsystems certainly seems to pass the Internet-company smell test. Its R&D lab is brimming with promising Net-centric technology. It has a catchy slogan ("We're the dot in .com"). And its st...

Fortune: An Investing Guy Tries To Figure Out This Linux Businessupdated: Mon May 10 1999 00:01:00

So I'm at the local Schlotzky's in Research Triangle Park, N.C., with Bob Young, CEO of Red Hat, the red hot company that sells Linux operating system software. I'm trying to gobble down a sandwich...

Fortune: Linux Holds Promise, but Microsoft Doesn't Have to Worry--Yetupdated: Mon Apr 26 1999 00:01:00

"What about Linux?" my editor asked, looking up from yet another article about the maverick operating system that is presumed to be shaking the foundations of Microsoft. "What about it?" I asked, t...

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