Silicon Valley is back - 2010 best year in its history
Silicon Valley had a great year in 2010 as profits by its publicly traded companies rose to an all-time high.
Silicon Valley had a great year in 2010 as profits by its publicly traded companies rose to an all-time high.
Can you say 60 million hits an hour? What's more, Saturday's global songfest aims to put the hurt on global hunger.
The networking company also announces that CFO Larry Carter plans to retire in May, and predicts flat to slight sales growth for the next quarter.
Telecommunications carriers are driving a hard bargain while shopping for networking equipment--and some networking companies are giving in with steeper-than-usual discounts.
Cisco CEO John Chambers ran on stage and then strolled throughout the crowd giving his vision of the networked future during his Network + Interop keynote presentation. As he walked and talked throughout the ballroom with the verbal passion and polish of a televangelist, Chambers proclaimed that Web 2.
It's called 'Web-access blocking,' a little-known technology that sites are using like a guard at the gate. Will you pass muster and be allowed entrance?
A downbeat outlook from Sun Microsystems' dashes hopes of imminent recovery in the beleaguered tech sector and pushes the Nasdaq a step back at midday.
The site is using video to offer a peek into the networked lives of cool people like basketball star Shane Battier or big city video blogger Meghan Asha. They're using networking technology to shoot a pic or video clip from an iPhone and wirelessly upload it to a blog or create an ultimate living room, complete with DVR, surround sound, HDTV and satellite radio.
A funny thing happened on Polycom's alleged road to becoming roadkill after Cisco acquired Tandberg. Polycom played up its independent status and forged partnership with damn near every company that goes toe-to-toe with Cisco.
Another low-cost HD video system introduced today is the latest sign that 2010 will be spent pushing megaprecise video tech into our businesses and homes. To me that's all very nice, spending an inordinate amount of time overseas, but the reality is that before any HD video play has much play at home or work, interoperability is going to have to be addressed.