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InternetNews July 8, 2004 Dan Muse |
Groove to Unveil Virtual Office 3.0 Groove Networks, a bellwether company in the peer-to-peer networking market, will announce next week a new version of its collaboration application. The company touts a new look, slicker synchronization, better performance and a new name. |
InternetNews July 2, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
Ray Ozzie, CEO, Groove Networks The programming vet compares Groove to Notes and weighs in on the P2P's bad rap. |
InternetNews February 17, 2006 Ed Sutherland |
Office 2007 Unveiled Office 2007 provides enterprise users with a new interface and enhanced integration of recently-acquired applications. |
InternetNews March 10, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Microsoft to Buy Groove Networks Redmond to enhance its collaboration software offerings by scooping up P2P play Groove. The deal includes founder Ray Ozzie. |
eCFO June 2001 Dave Cook |
All Together Now To keep workers in touch but on-site, some companies are turning to collaboration software, which provides online workspaces that let users create, share, and track documents... |
InternetNews March 11, 2005 Clint Boulton |
Groove: Microsoft's Middleware Move Analysts see the deal as a way for Microsoft to eventually enhance Longhorn and improve its competitive position. |
InternetNews May 19, 2005 Clint Boulton |
A Group Effort in Microsoft Office Bill Gates and company officials discuss sweeping improvements in the Office 12 productivity suite coming this fall. |
New Architect April 2002 Charlie Cho |
Making Connections Emerging platforms for peer-to-peer application development... |
Fast Company May 2001 Bill Breen |
Jazzed About Work Ray Ozzie's latest creation is "intended for people who want to get together and jam -- to interact and improvise with each other. Here's his take on how we will work in the future... |
JavaWorld July 2001 Tom Yager |
From poor to powerful The InfoWorld Test Center pits peer-to-peer products HornShark and Groove 1.0 against each other. Find out whether the Java-based HornShark bests Groove 1.0 for your business needs... |
Entrepreneur July 2003 Liane Cassavoy |
Hot Disks The latest in data recovery software, contact management applications and more |
BusinessWeek April 18, 2005 |
"IBM Isn't Doing That Much" Microsoft's chairman says when it comes to productivity software, his company "has to push the frontiers on our own." |
InternetNews September 9, 2005 |
Microsoft Punches Clock on Office 12 Miscommunication and unproductively are the problems Microsoft is trying to solve with the upcoming Microsoft Office 12. |
InternetNews July 29, 2005 |
MSN's Enterprise Ambitions Microsoft plans to link its consumer web-services with its enterprise applications through Microsoft Exchange. |
PC World December 2004 Steve Bass |
Get More Work Out of Your Day Your next group project will be a snap with one of these cool new tools. |
The Motley Fool March 11, 2005 Tom Taulli |
Microsoft Grooves to M&A Bill Gates liked Groove Networks' programmer so much he bought the company. |
PC World June 2, 2006 Jacobi, Larkin & Bass |
Store It on the Web Seventeen free and low-cost services that make it easier than ever to back up and share your files online. IBackup... XDrive... FirstBackup... Data Deposit Box... ElephantDrive... Mozy... Godaddy... Box.net... Simdesk... FlipDrive... etc. |
InternetNews October 2, 2007 Larry Barrett |
IBM's Web 2.0 Approach to E-Documents IBM's new Lotus Forms 3.0 offering lets customers create, fill out and sign documents from a Web browser, saving time, money and lots of trees. |
Information Today January 2001 Shirl Kennedy |
Internet Waves: A Trendmeister's Technology Forecast It's your amateur trendmeister here. Although there are no mega-corporations lining up to pay me Big Bucks for my prognostications, the good folks at Information Today are willing to compensate me to fill this space with my amateur technology forecast... |
PC Magazine January 12, 2005 Cade Metz |
The New Internet First came the Boom. Then came the Bust. And when the dust cleared, the Internet found itself in a bit of a rut. In the nineties, as countless users logged on to the Internet for the first time. |
PC Magazine January 1, 2008 Matthew D. Sarrel |
Use Office to Collaborate on Projects Use the collaboration features in Microsoft Office to track the development of a document. |
InternetNews September 25, 2007 Stuart J. Johnston |
Behind The Curtain of Microsoft's 'Great Oz' Ray Ozzie took over Bill Gates' role as Microsoft's chief software architect last year, but just who is he really and what's he doing with his 'vision thing?' |
Bank Technology News February 2001 Karen Epper Hoffman |
Peer-to-Peer is Here Venture capital is drying up for most Internet "wannabes," but it's pouring into P-to-P computing... |
Inc. June 2004 Michael Fitzgerald |
The Next Best Thing to Being There A new breed of collaboration software lets far-flung employees work as though they're face to face. |
InternetNews February 24, 2004 Jim Wagner |
Sun: Security is a Lifestyle Choice The Java Desktop System is first to get Sun's new super-security and authentication treatment, which puts the OS up against Microsoft's Windows platform. |
Fast Company May 2001 John Ellis |
Groove makes it possible to light up the edge Looking back, you can see how software programs have changed business -- and the culture of business -- forever. In 20 or 30 years, people will probably look back at the present moment and say that peer-to-peer computing changed the game... |
PC World May 2001 Brad Grimes |
Enterprise Technology: Peer-to-Peer Gets Down to Business Napster put peer-based networking on the evening news. Now businesses are using similar technology to collaborate, share data, and more... |
InternetNews May 12, 2010 Stuart J. Johnston |
Microsoft SharePoint Key to Office 2010 Rollout In what it describes as a one-two punch, Microsoft is betting big on the enterprise with the twin rollouts of SharePoint and Office 2010, hoping that the collaboration server will drive sales of the productivity suite. |
InternetNews July 28, 2005 Susan Kuchinskas |
Microsoft On Demand? Microsoft plans a move toward Web-based services connecting with Windows and Office. Customers might buy "cloud-based services" (Microsoft's description) as a way to leave the server and software with Microsoft. |
BusinessWeek April 18, 2005 Jay Greene |
Combat Over Collaboration Microsoft and IBM are fighting to control the info-sharing software market. |