This article from the Boston Globe’s digitalMass surmises, for Flash to live up to its promise, its fans have to move beyond the current flavor-of-the-month.
The deal adds live broadcasting technology and management to Inktomi’s suite of licensed products that provide online searches and manage Internet traffic, reports Reuters.
According to the Bloomberg News, Napster Inc. told a federal appeals court that control of Internet technology, not copyright law, is the issue in the recording industry’s legal fight against the popular music-sharing Web site.
The Wall Street Journal is reporting, FCC staffers want to require AOL to open instant messaging to rivals and make Time Warner further open its high speed cable lines.
“I think I speak for everyone out there (the entire planet), when I say you guys need to get your collective asses in gear with the price of crude,” was part of the message that appeared on the bottom of the OPEC web site, according to CNN News.
Just days after his Web venture was hit with one of the stiffest legal penalties of the Internet era, MP3.com CEO Michael Robertson defended his company’s music downloading service before an audience of venture capitalists and Internet entrepreneurs, from NetworkWorldFusion News.
From a Korea Times announcement: “The government, in collaboration with the private sector, will be investing heavily for the development
of non-memory semiconductor technologies and foster a strong pool of research manpower.”
Press release at businesswire.com says, “Red Hat Completes C2Net Acquisition for Approximately $42.7 Million; Strengthens
Offering of Internet Infrastructure Solutions with Added Security.”