It is Microsoft`s day in today`s world tech roundup: XP faces new woes, Yukon updates and debuts, and Microsoft ships SMS 2003.
In today`s world tech wrap: Nokia N-Gage may have been cracked; Eolas browser patent re-examined; .Net/Java interop platform updated; new Sun security specs; and Websphere update.
In today`s technology world wrap: Apple pulls G5 ads in UK; Oracle may drop PeopleSoft bid; online competition too much for porno purveyors; Motorola buys ultra-wideband maker; Singapore tough on cyber terrorists.
In today`s technology wrap: IBM plans to tout desktop Linux; Nokia considers Psion buyout; Windows shows up in biggest databases; Office add-on; and HP merges management lines.
In today`s technology roundup: Google desktop search tested; Linux attack foiled; WiFi password warning; father of Java moves; researchers paid good money to build and break Internet model; and Panther bug haunts Apple.
In today`s tech wrap: Apple is happy with IBM, but can easily run on Intel; public WiFi takes shape; Office 2003 patched; and Bluetooth SIG adopts v1.2.
In today`s technology wrap: Microsoft expected to announce MSBlast bounty; Novell to buy SuSE Linux; new tech to move mainframe apps onto .Net and Windows; and HP cracks a million transactions per minute.
In today`s technology roundup: Longhorn may pose security risks; Xbox to use PowerPC chip; camera phones slim down; IBM reworks desktop services; and IBM is expected to announce a supercomputing deal today.
In today`s tech wrap: Microsoft rebuffed in Google take-over bid; Motorola launches Linux phone; MS moves Virtual PC off Linux; Chinese Internet dissident trial opens; and Apple`s FireWire storage problems.
In today`s technology roundup: Microsoft tweaks its new patches and fires a worker for putting company info on his blog, Mandrake issues a fix for its CD-ROM problem and Leapster launches an educational handheld gaming device.
In today`s tech roundup: the Sober worm is spreading in Europe; Apple has patched security flaws in Panther, but not in earlier versions; eBay thinks it can sustain growth; and Intel ships its 802.11a chip.
In today`s tech roundup: Nokia sees a change in the air in the mobile telecoms market; MS to shut down its troublesome Messenger; SCO challenges the legal foundation for Linux; and Dell launches a high-end gaming PC.