The Linux Internationalization Initiative
announced today the general availability of the LI18NUX2000, Globalization Specification at http://www.li18nux.net, reports Business Wire.
Reuters reports, Walt Disney has asked Time Warner and America Online, which are seeking to merge, to provide copies of confidential documents filed with regulators to verify promises the companies will not discriminate against competitors.
InternetNews reports, the race between cable Internet service providers Road Runner and Excite@Home got a little more interesting on Wednesday with both companies touting their milestone achievements.
TechWeb News reports, Cypress, Philips, Lucent and others plan to flex their USB 2.0 muscles by demonstrating new controllers and transceiver chips for PC-to-peripheral interfaces running 40 times faster than the existing USB 1.1 standard.
Novell, as expected, unveiled a two-year blueprint for NetWare, featuring plans to deliver a new version of its flagship product with much-needed applications server capabilities, by mid-2001, reports Techweb News.
President Clinton will allow Japan’s NTT Communications to buy U.S. Internet service provider Verio Inc., a U.S. official said Wednesday, a decision suggesting he sees no espionage threat from the deal, reports the Associated Press.
Hong Kong probably will be the first launch pad for an emerging WAP technology that could open up mobile commerce to major consumer purchases, reports IDG News.
IDG News reports, Sprint on Wednesday introduced Sprint PCS Wireless Web for Business that offers access to applications, corporate e-mail, intranets and corporate directories.