SOURCE: CNET NEWS.com Microsoft preps XP push, mulls Longhorn 'priorities' Published: August 26, 2004, 4:00 AM PDT By Ina Fried , Paul Festa and John G. Spooner Staff Writer, CNET News.com With a long-awaited security update to Windows XP now complete, Microsoft is preparing a holiday season push for the 3-year-old operating system--and is set to revisit ambitious plans for the next major revision, News.com has learned. That revision, code-named Longhorn, o...
SOURCE: CNET NEWS.com Citing threats, entrepreneur to quit caller ID venture Published: September 4, 2004, 7:57 AM PDT By Ken Belson The New York Times It may be known as caller ID spoofing, but it is evidently no laughing matter. Three days after the start-up company Star38 began offering a service that fools caller ID systems, the founder, Jason Jepson, has decided to sell the business. Jepson said he had received harassing e-mail and phone messages and even a death threat...
SOURCE: NEW YORK POST Online GOOGLE PICKS GATES' BRAINS By STEPHEN LYNCH September 19, 2004 -- Google, $1.67 billion richer from its August initial public offering, is spending its money poaching the brightest minds from arch-rival Microsoft and other tech giants. Based on the half-dozen hires in recent weeks, Google appears to be planning to launch its own Web browser and other software products to challenge Microsoft. Google has wooed Joshua Bloch, one of the main devel...
SOURCE: USA TODAY Can money buy the Beatles' Apple love? By Jefferson Graham, USA TODAY Search any fee-based digital music service for the best-loved musical artists of the 20th century and most of the expected names show up. Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix and Frank Sinatra are all accounted for, with their complete catalogs available per song, at 99 cents apiece. There are holdouts, but none bigger than the best-selling recording group of all time: the Beatles. That c...
SOURCE: BNET e-Medicine Is Bigger Than Google While all the attention about the e-World has been focused on the selling of Google stock, what will impact you far more are the significant advances in e-Medicine. First, a tip of the hat to Google. I use it, almost exclusively, for web searching. This has been the case for some time, although I fondly recall the days of Alta Vista, Excite, Northern Light, and all the rest. And from time to time I'll enjoy an offbeat search engine li...
SOURCE: CorpLawBlog A Light Touch, After All With distance comes perspective. For instance, before my vacation from Corp Law Blog I was leaning towards the view that the Sarbanes-Oxley/Spitzer response to a few aberrant cases of financial fraud was getting a little heavy-handed and hysterical. Then, when I read that Jamie Olis had been sentenced to 292 months in federal prison without the possibility of parole, I was sure that things had gotten out of hand. But with my newf...
SOURCE: PRWEB Many Falling Short On The Sarbanes-Oxley Act The Sarbanes-Oxley Forum (http://www.sarbanes-oxley-forum.com) reports that almost 50% of organizations still haven't developed plans to comply with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. (PRWEB) September 21, 2004 -- The Sarbanes-Oxley Forum (http://www.sarbanes-oxley-forum.com) reports that almost 50% of organizations still haven't developed plans to comply with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. Their onsite survey, of over 2000 different o...
SOURCE: BNET SOX insights from an IT auditor By Jeff Davis In this column, it's my pleasure to introduce you to Nick Edmunds. In his role as senior IT auditor for a Fortune 300 company in the food services industry, Mr. Edmunds has spent the majority of his time in the past year on ensuring his company's compliance with Sarbanes-Oxley. I managed to hijack a bit of Mr. Edmunds' precious free time to talk about his experiences and recommendations to fellow internal auditors. He...
SOURCE: CNET IT Physical Security in Mission-Critical Facilities Source: American Power Conversion Physical security — controlling personnel access to facilities — is critical to achieving data center availability goals. As new technologies such as biometric identification and remote management of security data become more widely available, traditional card-and-guard security is being supplanted by security systems that can provide positive identification and tracking of human ac...
SOURCE: NETSCAPE Money and Business Multiplayer Games Coming to Cell Phones By MATT SLAGLE AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - As millions buy increasingly powerful cell phones, many companies are racing to develop video games to take advantage of the newfound portability. The newest twist is multiplayer: You can face real people in space battles or fishing tournaments. Until recently, multiplayer on cell phones game meant at most posting high scores on a leader board. It's difficult to co...
SOURCE: FOOL.com Is This Taser for You? By W.D. Crotty September 15, 2004 Taser International (Nasdaq: TASR) is soaring today after the announcement of its new X26C Citizen Defense System for "private citizens seeking responsible, nonlethal self-defense protection." For a mere $999, the company will sell you six cartridges, a 40-minute training video, and a certificate for "one free in-home professional training session." This weapon is sold exclusively by Taser, which elimin...
SOURCE: FOOL.com The Next Home Run Stock Many of the decade's greatest investments rose to prominence from relative obscurity. Tom Gardner has made it his mission to uncover the greatest stocks for the next 10 years. To this end, he's mining the market's great, unloved small-cap companies. By Tom Gardner September 15, 2004 This article was first published on Sept. 24, 2003. It has been updated. I assume that you, like everyone and his Aunt Avis, would love to find the next...
SOURCE: Baseline Outsourcing: What Ratio Is Right? By Paul A. Strassmann What a company purchases from suppliers of goods or services defines the amount that firm outsources. Innovations in global commerce have lowered the costs and expanded the reach of purchasing transactions. This has made it possible to search for the lowest costs of materials, components and assemblies anywhere. Companies find profit in divesting work whenever pay and overhead can be replaced by more e...
I say cover response because sometimes the cover 'letter' sent to the employeer isn't actually a cover letter in the traditional sense. Wehn you sending by email, more likely than not, it will be in text format only. So the top formal parts about your name and such and the name of the person your sending your resume to isn't needed. So sending that cover responce that is just "I am a proven great whatever..." More examples on the way. SOURCE: YAHOO! Hotobs.com How to Find a...
SOURCE: YAHOO! HotJobs.com It's Your Turn: What to Ask an Interviewer By Erin Hovanec The interviewer asks you, "Do you have any questions for me?" You say ... "Yes!" This is the easiest interview question out there. Always say yes. Asking questions shows that you're interested in the job. It also gives you a chance to show how knowledgeable you are about the position and the industry. Most important, it lets you highlight why you're the perfect candidate. You have to c...