Did ICANN help the rich get richer?
The Internet's governing body was supposed to open up the landscape to small Web address registrars. So why were so many big players awarded new top-level domains?
The Internet's governing body was supposed to open up the landscape to small Web address registrars. So why were so many big players awarded new top-level domains?
Here are today’s notable headlines. You can get News To Know via email alert and RSS daily.
Notable headlines:Ed Bott: Is Hyper-V ready for the Windows desktop?Mary Jo Foley: Microsoft looks to make product planning more science than art.
The local arm of IBM has copped a AU$72 million profit drop, posting AU$82 million in pre-tax profit for 2015, while parting with AU$590 million in software licencing and business service fees to related entities.
Veteran computer scientist Frances Allen looks back on Ptran, "primitive" computing and what it was like making her way in a man's world.
commentary Impossible?OK. So anti-trust lawyers would have a field day but consider this -- the software giant is on an official spending spree and this is the best time to spread its wings ...
Researchers are using IBM's World Community Grid, which provides huge amounts of free, crowd-sourced computing power, to learn how bacteria may contribute to autoimmune diseases.
Fujitsu Australia's chief Rod Vawdrey last week backed Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's $42 billion stimulus package, saying the intended consumer-led recovery was the best way forward.
More Net marketers are realizing there can be valuable marketing insight in cookies.
Examining the various twists and turns in the saga involving Linux and SCO, strategists Peter Skarzynski and Pierre Loewe look back to history to find other examples where movements collided with established institutions.