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- 1From:Government Computer News (Vol. 17, Issue 1)A list of workstations, which carry the newest Intel Pentium II chips running at speeds of 233-MHz, 266-MHz and 300 MHz, is presented. Users can convert Pentium II PCs into full-fledged workstations and save thousands of...
- 2From:Searcher (Vol. 7, Issue 9)I know exactly when I lost my patience. It wasn't unexpected, just sudden. One of those moments when something snaps and you think, "Enough." It wasn't a key piece of hardware, just something that had finally slipped...
- 3From:Government Computer News (Vol. 21, Issue 27)The Air Force Pentagon Communications Agency will replace 400 Compaq Computer Corp. servers with 100 Dell PowerEdge rackmounted Pentium 4 servers. Company chairman Michael Dell, in a speech at the Air Force...
- 4From:Information Today (Vol. 19, Issue 9)Are you making the most of your PC? Probably not, judging from my own observations and those of others. To get a better feel for this, I talked with a product manager at Hewlett-Packard. HP recently merged with...
- 5From:Government Computer News (Vol. 21, Issue 12)An expandable, partionable 16-way Intel Xeon MP server from IBM Corp. comes in a 14-inch-high rackmount case like the company's other eServers. But the new eServer x440 has XpandOnDemand architecture, said Mike Nelson,...
- 6From:Government Computer News (Vol. 18, Issue 28)Plebe envy joins the list of challenges that upper-class midshipmen at the Naval Academy face this year, right after beating Army on the football field. The class of 2003 just became the first academy class to...
- 7From:Government Computer News (Vol. 16, Issue 35)Compaq Computer Corp. this month expanded its parallel server line, adding new ProLiants. The ProLiant 5500, starting at $8,470, comes with as many as four 200-MHz Pentium Pro processors, up to 512K cache and 3G...
- 8From:T H E Journal (Technological Horizons In Education) (Vol. 27, Issue 1)Overcrowding at schools in Glendale, California has led to the formation of Clark Magnet High School which focuses on high technology education. The school was put together by a task force that worked with large...
- 9From:Information Today (Vol. 6, Issue 11)Flatbed Scanner For IBM And MAC Systems New DEST Corporation, a leading supplier of scanner technology to the PC, compatible, and Macintosh markets, has introduced the newest member of its PC Scan family of scanner...
- 10From:Searcher (Vol. 10, Issue 3)Compaq Computer Corporation's Presario 5000 ($998). Source: Marh E. Behr, "Family Values," PC Magazine, December 26, 2001, pp. 108-16, 120-1....
- 11From:T H E Journal (Technological Horizons In Education) (Vol. 29, Issue 5)With IBM's NetVista A Series, educators get a range of desktop systems to choose from. The NetVista A Series aims to deliver both power and performance in a sleek, but practical design without breaking the bank. Like...
- 12From:Government Computer News (Vol. 15, Issue 7)New PCs from Hewlett-Packard Co. and IBM Corp. can be accessed remotely even when turned off. HP's LAN Remote Power Ethernet controller, built into the motherboard, turns on a Vectra XM Series 4 or wakes it from sleep...
- 13From:Government Computer News (Vol. 16, Issue 23)Compaq Computer Corp. has designed its ProSignia 200 server for field service with automatic recovery features previously found only in larger models. Pricing for the ProSignia 200 starts at $2,373 on Compaq's...
- 14From:Government Computer News (Vol. 16, Issue 25)In Aug 1997, PC prices are dropping rapidly, and systems employing 166MHz Pentium MMX chips may cost as little as $1,000. The price includes a monitor and compares dramatically with the $1,500 charged in fall 1996 for a...
- 15From:Government Computer News (Vol. 16, Issue 26)Hewlett-Packard Co.'s Vectra XA desktops come with HP's TopTools PC management software, which simplifies asset management as well as assignment and changing of passwords. The XA line features 32M RAM, Microsoft...
- 16From:Government Computer News (Vol. 17, Issue 2)The $1,000 barrier has been cracked. Average users are snapping up low-end, name-brand PCs, and a power user on a budget can snag some workstation buys, too. I recently got my hands on a 233-MHz Microflex Pentium 11...
- 17From:Government Computer News (Vol. 21, Issue 19)An Air Force medical clinic in Utah is testing more than just blood pressure and eyesight. With stopwatch precision, the 75th Medical Group at Hill Air Force Base is trying out a centralized system of rackmount blade...
- 18From:Government Computer News (Vol. 18, Issue 25)Army National Guard Bureau officials say the system that performs daily administrative, operations and training tasks has turned years of struggle into success. In its third year as a redesigned program, the Reserve...
- 19From:Government Computer News (Vol. 14, Issue 7)Compaq Computer Corp. separated the LAN from the standalones last month, offering buyers a choice of smaller price tags or built-in network management tools. Compaq introduced 67 DeskPro and 51 ProLinea computers with...
- 20From:Online (Vol. 14, Issue 3)I think one of the most interesting things about the microcomputer scene in general is the continual interplay between advances in hardware and developments in software. There are two groups of experts at work in an...