Microsoft Corp. plans to unveil its new Pocket PC operating system, which the company claims was designed around the requests of business customers, at the Demomobile 2001 conference
Dell Computer Corp. will take on competitors such as 3Com Corp. and Cisco Systems Inc. when it unveils its new devices for the networking market later on Wednesday. Dell, best known as a direct seller of PCs, announced in July that it was planning to jump into the low-end networking market. Targeting the small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) market, Dell will introduce its first line of networking products, four workgroup switches, later in the day on Wednesday, a U.K. spokeswoman from Dell confirmed. Dell, which will still resell switches from vendors including 3Com, Foundry Networks Inc. and NetGear Inc., will market its own switches under the Dell PowerConnect brand.
A friend recently showed me a copy, albeit dated (April 20, 2001), of you periodical. I was quite impressed. However, it was not impressed at your reference to Aliant Inc., the parent of xwave, as a "Maritimes-based company" (
Manchester, N.H.-based NTP Software this month announced its newest release of NTP Software Quota & File Sentinel (QFS), what the company calls Storage Resource Management (SRM) technology. According to a press release, the new offering provides a self-managing, end-to-end SRM architecture, and offers a quota and file-screening environment with messaging. A new feature added to this release is the ability to push QFS across a network using the embedded technology in Enterprise Application Services Extension (EASE) without the need to reboot servers or workstations. Available now, pricing for QFS begins at US$995 per server. Free trial software can also be downloaded from the company