- Fri Apr 4 2003 Internet and the fog of war
CNET News.com's Charles Cooper curses the cheerleading TV anchors determined to outdo each other in dumbing down the complexity of war to the simplicity of a football match.
- Wed Jun 23 2004 Organizer cancels Comdex 2004
It had been one of the biggest events in the tech world. Can it return in 2005?
- Fri Oct 3 1997 Readers shun browser-OS integration
Although readers appreciate the thought, they don't think they need browsers that are integrated directly into the operating system, such as IE 4.0.
- Thu Oct 4 2001 Survey: Anger at Microsoft's new licensing
Many corporate customers are upset about Microsoft's new software-licensing rules and are looking into alternatives such as Linux, a just-released survey says.
- Mon Nov 20 2000 Potpourri of election-related links
Millions of Americans are turning to the Web for information on the photo-finish U.S. presidential race. CNET News.com compiles an eclectic list of links to election-related Web sites and news stories.
- Wed Apr 11 2001 Microsoft tool "Clippy" gets pink slip
The software giant is responding to customer feedback on unpopular Office assistant Clippy by setting up a mock layoff site that also trumpets Office XP's lack of need for the feature.
- Wed Oct 25 2000 Analyst reports: Volatile Nortel OK for risk-takers
Analysts scratch their heads over whether Nortel Networks' surprisingly poor third-quarter financial performance is a sign of a gloomy future or a lucrative buying opportunity.
- Mon Nov 16 1998 When worlds collide
The television, computing, and telecom industries are obsessed with talk of "convergence." But it's more like a massive, head-on collision.
- Wed Feb 14 2001 HP tries to hold tight amid wild ride
Some analysts are concerned that Hewlett-Packard, which reports earnings Thursday, could miss estimates for the second straight quarter and lower growth projections again.
- Tue Jun 18 2002 Web services: Ready, set, wait
The much-hyped new way to build software may someday emerge as a standard piece of every big company's technology arsenal. But for now, it won't do much to revive tech spending.




