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[January 12, 2006] Samsung Bets on NAND Flash Memory for the Future Storage: (IT News)- NAND flash memory has been associated, at least up until now, with digital music players, especially with Apple's famous iPod. However, Samsung says that it's much more to NAND than meets the eye, and that the company intends to prove this in 2006.
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[January 12, 2006] Microsoft Provides "Elixir" for Outlook: A year after first disclosing its internal "Project Elixir," Microsoft has begun releasing sample code and documentation so that developers can use it as a pattern to design their own integrated front-end and back-end systems around Outlook 2003.
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[[January 12, 2006] Apple Files "Mobile Me" as U.S. trademark: SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters)-Apple Computer Inc. has filed to trademark the phrase "Mobile Me" for use in a wide range of businesses, furthering speculation it could introduce an iPod phone.
"We believe this is further indication of (Apple's) strategic direction to extend its iPod + iTunes and Mac franchises into new business areas including smart phones, value-added mobile content services, and the broader consumer electronics space," American Technology Research analyst Shaw Wu wrote in a note on Thursday.
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[January 11, 2006] Microsoft's FAT File Patents Upheld: (eWeek Storage Report) - The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has reaffirmed a pair of patents held by Microsoft related to its File Allocation Table system, which allows for the use of certain file names in its Windows operating system as well as in many electronic devices and forms of removable media.
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[January 5, 2006] Gates Unveils Windows Vista: LOS ANGELES (Reuters)- Microsoft chairman and co-founder Bill Gates has unveiled the new "Windows Vista" OS, which aims to provide users with a central hub for digitally-connected homes, a Reuters report said.
The report said Gates also downplayed the threat from Web search leader Google, saying Microsoft faced a host of rivals ranging from IBM to Apple to Sony to Nokia in its bid to control the next generation of software.
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[November 1, 2005] Altova's XML Tools Focus on Semantics, RDF: ( SDTimes) While it is still 2005 for the rest of us, Altova has already flipped the calendar ahead to next year with the release of its 2006 line up of XML tools. New in this revision of the Altova XML suite is the ability to create web services using a point-and -click interfaces without writing actual code. The roster also includes a new tool, Altova Semantic Work 2006, which is designed to ease the handling of RDF and OWL Coding.
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