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TrueVUE Platform from Vue Technologies
In my research on the RFID middleware market, I came across a number of vendors that were new to me. In a series of articles, I will provide a short overview of these products. The seventh of these is Vue Technologies.
IT-Analysis |
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Internet speech may not be so free
Service providers have right to delete what they don't like Rant all you want in a public park. A police officer generally won't eject you for your remarks alone, however unpopular or provocative.
Baltimore Sun |
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Microsoft to sell $70-a-year subscriptions for Office bundle / Package including OneCare would cost $200 to buy the ...
Microsoft Corp. will begin selling its Office programs to consumers on a subscription basis starting in mid-July, in a bid to reach thrifty PC buyers who would otherwise pass on productivity software. The move may also set the stage for Microsoft to offer its...
San Francisco Chronicle |
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The Facebooker Who Friended Obama
When a Clinton strategist said Barack Obama’s supporters “look like Facebook,” Chris Hughes took it as a compliment.
NYTimes.com via Yahoo! Finance |
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Poof! You’re Unpublished.
A flurry of intense and angry comments erupted on BoingBoing.net when it was discovered that the Web site had unpublished all references to the blogger Violet Blue.
NYTimes.com via Yahoo! Finance |
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Google, Zen Master of the Market
Microsoft challenged the rules on competition and antitrust law. Now, it’s Google’s turn.
NYTimes.com via Yahoo! Finance |
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Blackjack Makes a Move From the Web to Television
With the premiere of “Catch 21,” a TV version of a popular online blackjack game, winners on the Internet get a chance to say “hit me” on the living room screen.
NYTimes.com via Yahoo! Finance |
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Metal, tissue and silicon
More than ever, technology is a mainstay of our day-to-day routines. On the job and at play, you probably rely on a cell phone, computer, or — to shave prep time from a home-cooked meal — the microwave in your kitchen. But how would you feel if a surgeon enlisted the help of a robot for your next surgical procedure?
Napa Valley Register |
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Drawing: not a lost art for architects
Even in an age when most architectural design work is carried out on computers, many architects still draw by hand at least part of the time. As a precursor to the city's annual Artscape festival later this month, the Baltimore Architecture Foundation is presenting four exhibits on Sunday to display the range of work architects produce when they aren't sitting in front of a computer terminal. ...
Baltimore Sun |
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Railhawks to show Clarets game live
This coming Thursday night we are set to play the Cary Railhawks PDL team at the Wakemed Soccer Park in Cary, North Carolina and the Railhawks will be providing a live streaming internet video of the game via their USLLIVE.COM service.
TykesMAD |
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Mayhem for Microsoft over £500m bill for Xbox 360 red ring of death
Computer giants Microsoft are facing a £500million repair bill after their Xbox Elite consoles were hit by the notorious "red ring of death".
Daily Mirror |
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Newsletter Subscription
Sign up for our ARN newsletters! The premier provider of daily news to the IT channel, covering business, technology, products, and services. Altech Computers has signed on as a distributor for motherboard vendor, DFI, to expand its high-end gaming line.
ARNnet |
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Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 18th Oct 2007 13:56 UTC, submitted by Witek Wasilewski
Ubuntu 7.10 has been released. " Ubuntu 7.10 Desktop Edition adds an enhanced user interface, improved hardware support, multiple monitor support and integrated desktop search.
New Mobile Computing |
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Railhawks to show Clarets game live
This coming Thursday night we are set to play the Cary Railhawks PDL team at the Wakemed Soccer Park in Cary, North Carolina and the Railhawks will be providing a live streaming internet video of the game via their USLLIVE.COM service.
Norwich City MAD |
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Free games to beat the pirates
Computer games experts devise a way to beat the pirates who cost their industry a fortune - give their games away for free.
BBC News |
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Google era reshaping business dynamics
Bill Gates, who ended full-time work at Microsoft last month, was perhaps the foremost applied economist of the second half of the 20th...
Seattle Times |
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Qualcomm's power play in chip market
From mainframes to minicomputers and then PCs, each new computing generation has displaced its predecessor by reaching a broader audience...
Seattle Times |
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Linked by Xavier Calbet on Thu 10th Nov 2005 19:15 UTC
At the end of October I attended the Alantejo Linux congress and LAN party, which was held in the city of Évora . Évora is a marvelous UNESCO World Heritage city which has from Roman ruins to 18th century buildings, not to mention the superb food.
OS News |
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Navteq maps out next stop: phones
Navteq has 1,000 analysts who drive around in vehicles outfitted with computers, microphones and high-resolution video cameras, gathering...
Seattle Times |
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Cloak-and-dagger made colorful
The Wall Street Journal's major rehash of the Microsoft-Yahoo acquisition saga last week included some great color in painting corporate...
Seattle Times |
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Airlines hedge to guard against soaring fuel costs
DALLAS — The computer screen on Scott Topping's desk at Southwest Airlines flickered with rows of dates and numbers, but they had nothing to do with arrivals and departures.
The Tennessean |
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Software promises serenity for sleep doctors
A weekly column profiling companies and personalities. This week: Sagittarius Software.
Seattle Times |
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Microsoft to gain MSN Israel control
Microsoft will buy the 50. 1 percent stake it doesn't already own in the MSN Israel Internet portal from Israeli communications company...
Seattle Times |
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Obama harnesses power of Web social networking
Borrowing from Facebook's playbook and personnel, the Democratic candidate has used the Internet as no politician has done before — and with stunning success.
Seattle Times |
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Baltimore-area libraries thrive amid adaptations, economy
The immediate wealth of information the Internet provides has led many people to believe it is quickly replacing the library as an information warehouse.
Baltimore Examiner |
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