Can Microsoft's coders crank it up?
Under fire from all quarters, the pressure is on MS as never before. Can a big company move as swiftly as a startup? Read on.
Under fire from all quarters, the pressure is on MS as never before. Can a big company move as swiftly as a startup? Read on.
It doesn't take long for word to get around when a company attempts to turn a "standard" into a piece of proprietary code. Especially when the company in question is the increasingly scrutinized Microsoft.
Backing down on McVeigh Unplugged. Plus: MS disses GPL. Also:Another Paul Allen stinker
A long-term temp says the software giant fired him after he posted a photograph on his Web site of Macintosh G5 computers being delivered to the company's Redmond, Wash., campus.
Office rebels are digging into the past to use labor laws as a defense in high-tech invasion of privacy claims.
The rivalry to become the software at the core of information appliances has just now begun.
A long string of private antitrust suits could keep the company in court for years to come. What's at stake and who are the likely winners?
XP is just a revved up version of Microsoft 2000 with no added benefits. Microsoft didn't keep its promise for a 64-bit Windows. Did you expect a company that makes a living off of false claims and marketing scams to deliver?
The software titan, poised to end a series of private lawsuits, once again may snatch a victory at the settlement table that it might not have been able to achieve in the courtroom.
A proposed settlement agreement to donate some $500 million in technology to schools could give the software maker a chance to erode Apple's position in education.