Participating Companies

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Participating Companies PARTICIPATING COMPANIES COMDEX.com Las Vegas Convention Center November 16–20, 2003 Keynotes Oracle Corporation IDG Ergo 2000 AT&T Wireless O’Reilly Publishing InfoWorld Media Group Expertcity, Inc. Microsoft Corporation PC Magazine Network World Garner Products PalmSource Salesforce.com Computer World Inc. Magazine Siebel Systems, Inc. SAP PC World Infineon Technologies Sun Microsystems Sun Microsystems IEEE Media Kelly IT Resources Symantec Corporation The Economist IEEE Spectrum Lexmark International, Inc. Unisys IEEE Computer Society Logicube, Inc. Innovation Centers Verisign IEEE Software LRP ApacheCon Yankee Group Security & Privacy Luxor Casino/Blue Man Group Aruba ZDNet International Online Computer Society MA Labs, Inc. ASCII Media Partners Linux Certified Maxell Corporation of America Avaya Mobile Media Group MediaLive Intl. France/UBI France Animation Magazine Cerberian Handheld Computing Magazine Min Maw International ApacheCon Imlogic Mobility Magazine Multimedia Development Corp. Bedford Communications: Lexmark National Cristina Foundation MySQL LAPTOP LinuxWorld Our PC Magazine National Semiconductor Corp. PC Upgrade McAfee Pen Computing Magazine Nexsan Technologies, Inc. Tech Edge Mitel Networks Pocket PC Magazine Qualstar Corporation Blue Knot Mozilla Foundation QuarterPower Media Rackframe—A Division of Starcase CMP Media LLC MySQL Linux Magazine Ryan EMO Advertising CRN Nortel Networks ClusterWorld Magazine Saflink Corporation VARBusiness NVIDIA RCR Wireless News Server Technology, Inc. InformationWeek Openoffice.org SC Magazine and Check Mark Siebel Systems, Inc. Optimize Open Source Software Initiative ISECOM Society of Internet Professionals USA Today Network Computing O’Reilly SSC Communications Videx, Inc. Network Magazine PalmSource Linux Journal Visionarts, Inc. CNET Séance Software SYS-CON Media Windward Software, Inc. ZD Net SnapGear Java Developer’s Journal Xtore Extreme Storage Compu-Mart SonicWALL Linux World Magazine Computer Technology Review Conferences WebEx Communications Web Services Journal Computer Hot Line AirFlow Networks, Inc. WOW—World Organization of Webmasters .Net Developer’s Journal Corry Publishing: Apache Software Foundation X.ORG XML Journal Business Solutions Magazine Aruba Wireless Networks Wireless Business & Technology Power Panels Integrated Solutions Magazine Atheros Communications Ticker Magazine Amazon.com Cyber Defense Magazine Atomz Corporation Webcom Communications Apache Software Foundation The Economist Bluesocket Software Business Magazine AT&T Wireless Enterprise Systems Cambridge University Windows and .Net Magazine Cisco Systems, Inc. EUROTRADE Media Co., Ltd. Carbon Nanotechnologies, Inc Ziff Davis Media Collab.Net Fierce Markets Cigital PC Magazine Computer Associates Fierce Wireless CipherTrust, Inc. CIO Insight Counterpane Internet Security Fierce Enterprise Cisco Systems, Inc. EWeek Enderle Group The 802.11 Report CMP Media LLC Baseline FedEx Foreign Direct Investment Magazine CollabNet Extreme Tech Fortune Magazine FORTUNE Group: Commerce One Grand Central FORTUNE Promotional Partners Computer Associates (CA) Hewlett-Packard Fortune Small Business AMD Counterpane Internet Security Inc. IBM Business 2.0 Battery Technology, Inc. Cryptography Research META Group GOOGLE Cablewholesale.com Exagrid Systems Microsoft GVS—Grande Vitesse Systems Castelle, Inc. FaceTime Communications MySQL Chain Store Guide Flarion Newsweek DriveSavers Data Recovery GlassHouse Technologies, Inc. Nokia Eagle Teleconferencing Grand Central Group Copyright © 2003 MediaLive International, Inc., 795 Folsom Street, 6th Floor, San Francisco, CA 94107-1243. All Rights Reserved. CX03-0250. MediaLive International, COMDEX, and associated design marks and logos are trademarks or service marks owned or used under license by MediaLive International, Inc., and may be registered in the United States and other countries. Other names mentioned may be trademarks or service marks of their respective owners. PARTICIPATING COMPANIES COMDEX.com Las Vegas Convention Center November 16–20, 2003 Handspring Aceex Corp. Beijing Control Technology Development Corp. Digital Media and Technology from the N.E. of England Hitachi Consulting Acer America, Inc. Bestsoft Digital Media Network IBM Corporation ACL/Staticide BIPS Computer, Inc. Dinss Co., Ltd. IFS Research Action Star Enterprise Co., Ltd. Biscom Dipo IMLogic, Inc. Actis Corp. Bit Micronetworks Disc Makers Infowave Software ActivePDF Inc. Bits, Ltd. Discreet Surveillance Technologies Institute for Scientific Research, Inc. Adamentium Blick Rothenberg Dolangtext Intelliden AdRem Software Blue Knot Double-H Technology, Ltd. International Biometric Advance Mega Magnetic Media Broadcom Corp. Co., Ltd. Draper Inc. IP Wireless Brooktrout Technology Advanta Bank Corp. DreamFree Inc. Legra Systems BSD Concept AFAC Industrial Co., Ltd. DriveSavers Data Recovery Lindows.com BYD America Corp. Agere Systems DS International Linux Professional Institute Bytecom Fanner Corp. Ahatpe Technology Co., Ltd. Durham Associates MeshNetworks, Inc C&C Technic Taiwan Co., Ltd. Aico Systems, Inc. Eagle Teleconferencing Microsoft Corporation Cable Caddy AIST—National Institute of Advanced Industrial Easy Cover Mozilla.org Science and Technology CableWholesale.com, Inc. Easy Products SL Newbury Networks, Inc. Alis Electric Co., Ltd. Cabling System Warehouse The Economist Nextwave Communications Altima Technologies, Inc. Canon USA/Broadcast & Communications Division Eely-ECW Optoelectronics Novell AM Tech Co., Ltd. CareerBuilder.com EIAK—Electronic Industries Association NTT DoCoMo, Inc. American International Electric, Inc. of Korea CBC (America) Corp. Openwave Systems Inc. American Megatrends Inc. ELA Innovation Celltrend International Co., Ltd. Opera Software ASA Amitec Technology Co. Electrovaya Chain Store Guide Osterman Research, Inc. Amtek Systems Co., Ltd. Elite Marketing Group/MBNA Cheung Tat Electrical Company Ltd. PalmSource Anhui Technology Import and Export Co., Ltd. Emic Networks Chief Manufacturing Inc. PeopleSoft, Inc. Anthology Solutions, Inc. Enable Corp. Chilli Media Proxim, Inc. Anystream Enermax Technology Corp. China Chamber of Commerce for I/E of Salesforce.com, Inc. Anywhere Computer Accessories, Inc. Machinery & Electronics Enigma Interactive Ltd. SAP Labs LLC Anyware Technologies Chois Technology Co., Ltd. Enterprise Incubator Foundation Seven Apack Inc. CIP Software A/S EPN Siemens Secure Network Services APC CIT Ltd. Ergo 2000 Inc. Sleepycat Software Area Electronics, Inc. Clevrware, Inc. eSe Security Systems ApS Sonic Software AreaBe Inc. Cloudmark Eslo Enterprise Co. Ltd Sprint Argosy Technology Inc. CLUSIR Espace Multimedia Teros Arise Compter, Inc. CMP Media LLC Eurotrade Media Co., Ltd. The Seattle Times Arkeia CMS Produucts, Inc. Evercase USA, Inc. Vignette Corporation Armenian IT Industry CNet Technologies Inc. Excel Scientech Co., Ltd. Visto Arro Superconducting Technology Co., Ltd. Coach Europ Executive Software International Wavelink Artwhere Comartsystem Co., Ltd. Exes, Inc. Whirlpool Corporation AT&T Wireless CommDEK CVG Ezos Wi-Fi Alliance ATC—Computer Trading Post Compucage International Fedco Electronics, Inc. WOW Aten Technology Inc. Compu-Mart Fingerprint Cards AB Yahoo! Communications ATI Technologies Incorporated Computer Associates FingerSystem U.S.A. Zone Labs, Inc. Atpath Technologies Ltd. Comtek Firmafrance Exhibitors AuthenTec Inc. Concerto Networks, Inc. Firstec Co., Ltd. 14 South Networks Auto Electronic Corp. Continental Datalabel Forcom Technology Corp./Addongo 3 Tier Systems AVC America, Inc. Convergence Technologies Ltd. Foreign Direct Investment Magazine 360 Technologies Awex Copia International, Ltd. Formosa Electronic Industries Inc. 3-D Album Axiohm, Inc. CrossTec-NetOp G.G. Telecom Inc. 3JTech Co., Ltd. Axiomtek CRS, Inc. Gale Gate Inc. 4P Mobile Data Processing AxS.co.uk Crystal Decisions Garner Products 9G Communications Azerty, Inc. Cubeboard Input Device Gateway A.H.A. International Co., Ltd. B&N Software AG Cyber Defense Magazine Genovation, Inc. ABBYY USA Software House Bangladesh Export Promotion Bureau Dell Inc. Geotexel Acard Technology Corp. Barbados Investment & Development Corp. Dering Corp. Giga-Tms Inc. Accusys, Inc. Battery Technology Inc. Devlin Electronics Ltd. Global Graphics Software, Inc. Ace Pavilion Battery-Biz Inc. Digent Co., Ltd. Global IT Training BDG Publishing/TMC Trading Digi International Global Market PARTICIPATING COMPANIES COMDEX.com Las Vegas Convention Center November 16–20, 2003 Exhibitors cont. Global Sources USA Kemp Technologies National Semiconductor Raritan Computer Globespan Virata Kerio Technologies NEC-Mitsubishi Electronics Display Red Peacock International Glory Mark Electronic Ltd. KingCase Industrial Co., Ltd. Netac Technology Co., Ltd. Rose Electronics Good Man Corp. Konferex.com Neosonica Technologies Inc. Saflink Corp. Google Koncept Technologies, Inc. Nerac Samxon Electronic Components LLC Griffin Technologies, LLC Korea Software Industry Association (KOSA) Net Integration Technologies, Inc. Savannah Digital Communications Group West International Kouwell Electronics Corp. NetCell Corp. ScanSoft, Inc. GVS, Inc. KTI Networks, Inc. Netforyou Secom by OK Security Hanmacstone Co., Ltd. Largan Digital Co., Ltd. NetSupport SecurSoftware, Inc. Hann Hwa Industrial Co., Ltd. LaserFiche Document Imaging and NetSupport Ltd. Sejak Document Management Hanvit Information Technology Neuzok Optics LLC Seju Engineering Lea-Dai Enterprises Co., Ltd. Hash Inc. Nexsan Technologies,
Recommended publications
  • In the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas Marshall Division
    Case 2:05-cv-00199-TJW Document 3 Filed 10/31/05 Page 1 of 13 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS MARSHALL DIVISION QINETIQ LIMITED, § § Plaintiff, § § v. § CIVIL ACTION NO. 2:05-CV-00199 § PICVUE ELECTRONICS, LTD. § JURY TRIAL DEMANDED § Defendant. § § FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINT Plaintiff, QinetiQ Limited (hereinafter “QinetiQ”), by and through its undersigned attorneys, files this First Amended Complaint against Picvue Electronics, Ltd. (hereinafter “Defendant” or “Picvue”) and alleges as follows: NATURE OF THIS ACTION 1. This is an action for patent infringement arising under the Patent Laws of the United States, 35 U.S.C. § 101 et. seq. THE PARTIES 2. QinetiQ is a company registered under the laws of the United Kingdom with its principal place of business at 85 Buckingham Gate, London SW1E 6PD, United Kingdom. QinetiQ is engaged in the research and development of various technologies, including liquid crystal display (LCD) technologies. 3. Defendant Picvue Electronics, Ltd. is a company organized under the laws of Taiwan with its principal place of business at 526, Sec. 2, Chien-Hsing Rd., Hsin-Fung, Hsin Chu, Taiwan. Defendant may be served by means of Letters Rogatory. Defendant develops, designs, manufactures, and provides after-sales service for LCD products, including super- QinetiQ’s First Amended Complaint for Patent Infringement Case 2:05-cv-00199-TJW Document 3 Filed 10/31/05 Page 2 of 13 twisted nematic (“STN”) liquid crystal modules and panels that infringe the patent-in-suit, U.S. Patent No. 4,596,446 (the “‘446 patent”). JURISDICTION AND VENUE 4.
    [Show full text]
  • Fair Information Practices in the Electronic Marketplace
    FAIR INFORMATION PRACTICES IN THE ELECTRONIC MARKETPLACE PRIVACY ONLINE: FAIR INFORMATION PRACTICES IN THE ELECTRONIC MARKETPLACE A REPORT TO CONGRESS FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION MAY 2000 PRIVACY ONLINE: Federal Trade Commission* Robert Pitofsky Chairman Sheila F. Anthony Commissioner Mozelle W. Thompson Commissioner Orson Swindle Commissioner Thomas B. Leary Commissioner This report was prepared by staff of the Division of Financial Practices, Bureau of Consumer Protection. Advice on survey methodology was provided by staff of the Bureau of Economics. * The Commission vote to issue this Report was 3-2, with Commissioner Swindle dissenting and Commissioner Leary concurring in part and dissenting in part. Each Commissioners separate statement is attached to the Report. FAIR INFORMATION PRACTICES IN THE ELECTRONIC MARKETPLACE TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary ................................................................................ i I. Introduction and Background ............................................................. 1 A. The Growth of Internet Commerce .............................................................. 1 B. Consumer Concerns About Online Privacy .................................................... 2 C. The Commissions Approach to Online Privacy - Initiatives Since 1995 .................. 3 1. The Fair Information Practice Principles and Prior Commission Reports ........................ 3 2. Commission Initiatives Since the 1999 Report ........................................................ 5 D. Self-Regulation
    [Show full text]
  • Spinoff: Handspring
    Stanford eCorner Spinoff: Handspring Jeff Hawkins, Numenta October 23, 2002 Video URL: http://ecorner.stanford.edu/videos/43/Spinoff-Handspring Hawkins shares the various reasons why he and his team finally spun off from 3Com to start Handspring. Although they were reluctant to leave and start a company from scratch, they felt that Palm did not belong in 3Com- a networking company. Palm was the only healthy division in 3Com and they could not continue growing and competing with a financial hand tied behind their backs. Transcript We were then a division of 3Com at Palm. And we were doing our thing. We were having a fair amount of success. We introduced a series of products, including the Palm 3 and the Palm 5. But actually, we left. Now again, I was reluctant this time. This is when we started Handspring. I was reluctant to do this. We didn't want to leave; starting a company is a lot of work. Just who wants to do that again? But in turns out that we felt at the time, and I still believe it was the right thing, that Palm really didn't belong as part of 3Com. 3Com was a networking company and it sick. It was ailing. They were not very profit. Their margins were falling. We were the only healthy division in the entire company and they were not reporting our earnings but they were using it to prop up the rest of the business. So we were growing and made it look like 3Com was growing but really, it was only Palm that was growing.
    [Show full text]
  • Palm Treo 700P User Guide
    Sprint PCS® Service Sprint Power Vision Smart Device Treo™ 700P by Palm www.sprint.com © Sprint Nextel. All rights reserved. No reproduction in whole or in part without prior written approval. Sprint, the “Going Forward” logo, and other trademarks are trademarks of Sprint Nextel. Printed in the U.S.A. PN: 406-10412-00 v. 1 0 Intellectual Property Notices © 2006 Palm, Inc. All rights reserved. Blazer, HotSync, Palm, Palm OS, Treo device, VersaMail, and the Palm and Treo device logos are among the trademarks or registered trademarks owned by or licensed to Palm, Inc. This product con- tains ACCESS Co., Ltd.’s NetFront 3.0 Internet browser software. © 1996-2005 ACCESS Co., Ltd. and ACCESS Systems America, Inc. NetFront is the trademark or registered trademark of ACCESS Co., Ltd. in Japan and in other countries except the United States of America. NetFront is a registered trademark of NetFront Communications, Inc. in the United States of America and is used under a license. A portion of this software includes software modules developed by the Independent JPEG group. Documents To Go is a trademark or registered trademark of DataViz, Inc. A portion of the enclosed product is © copyrighted by Fraunhofer IIS (2005). GoodLink is a trademark or registered trademark of Good Technology, Inc. in the United States and/or other countries. Microsoft, Excel, and PowerPoint are either regis- tered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. All other brand and product names are or may be trademarks of, and are used to identify products or services of, their respective own- ers.
    [Show full text]
  • Sarah K. Solum
    Sarah K. Solum US Managing Partner and Head of US Capital Markets Financing and capital markets She does the work to get up to speed on the industry very quickly and in the room she almost becomes a banker, not just a lawyer, because of the diligent work that she puts in. Chambers 2021; Band 1 for Equity, Debt & Convertible Offerings Primary practice Financing and capital markets 02/10/2021 Sarah K. Solum | Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer About Sarah K. Solum <p>Sarah has extensive experience in capital markets transactions, including IPOs, investment grade and high yield debt offerings, convertible notes transactions and preferred stock offerings. She also regularly represents companies on mergers and acquisitions and advises on SEC compliance, disclosure and corporate governance matters.&nbsp;</p> <p>Sarah was recently on the Global Advisory Board of the Women in Law Empowerment Forum (WILEF) and a Co-Chair of the Northern California chapter. She was also a member of HiPower, an executive leadership program for women.&nbsp;</p> <p>Sarah is a member of the Board of Visitors at Duke University School of Law. She is also on the Board of Trustees at St. Matthew&rsquo;s Episcopal Day School. Prior to joining Freshfields, Sarah was a partner at Davis Polk.</p> Recent work <p>Sarah advises issuers and underwriters in IPOs and a variety of other equity and debt capital markets transactions, including:</p> <ul> <li><strong>IPOs:</strong> AMIS Holdings, AppNet, Apropos, CAI International, Chipotle Mexican Grill, Coupa Software, DocuSign, Etsy,
    [Show full text]
  • Manufacturers Page 1 of 20
    Manufacturers Manufacturers Manufacturer Name Date Added 3COM 3M 7-Zip 11/13/2013 Aaron Bishell 11/13/2013 AASHTO ABISource Access Data 10/25/2013 Acer ACL ACRO Software Inc Acronis ACS Gov Systems ACT Actiontec Active PDF ActiveState ActivIdentity 11/13/2013 Adaptec Adaptive ADC Kentrox ADI ADIC ADIX Adkins Resource Adobe ADT ADTRAN Advanced Dynamics Advanced Toolware Advantage Software AE Tools Agfa AGILENT AHCCCS 11/13/2013 Ahead Ai Squared, Inc. 11/13/2013 Aladdin Alera Technologies Alex Feinman 11/13/2013 Alex Sirota 11/13/2013 ALIEN Allegro Allison Transmission Alltel AlphaSmart Altec Lansing Altiris Altova Altronix AMC AMD Amdahl Page 1 of 20 Manufacturers Manufacturer Name Date Added America Online American Business American Cybernetics American Dynamics 11/13/2013 AMX (Formerly ProCon) Analog Devices 11/13/2013 Analytical Software Andover Andrew Antony Lewis 11/13/2013 ANYDoc AOL AOpen AP Technology Apache APC Apex Apple Applian Technologies Appligent Aptana ArcSoft, Inc. 11/13/2013 Artifex Software Inc 11/13/2013 ASAP 11/13/2013 Ascential Software ASG Ask.com 11/13/2013 Aspose AST Astaro AT&T ATI Technologies 11/13/2013 Atlassian Attachmate Audacity AuthenTec 11/13/2013 Auto Enginuity Autodesk AutoIt Team 11/13/2013 Avantstar Avaya Aventail Avenza Systems Inc Averatec Avery Dennison AVG Technologies Avistar Avocent Axosoft Bamboo Banner Blue Barracuda BarScan Bay Networks Page 2 of 20 Manufacturers Manufacturer Name Date Added Bay Systems BEA System BEE-Line Software Belarc Belkin Bell & Howell Bendata BENQ BEST Best Software
    [Show full text]
  • Consumption of Information Goods and Services in the United States
    Consumption of Information Goods and Services in the United States There is a trendsetting technology elite in the U.S. who chart the course for the use of information goods and services. Embargoed until 6pm Eastern on 23 November 2003 John B. Horrigan, Senior Research Specialist PEW INTERNET & AMERICAN LIFE PROJECT 1100 CONNECTICUT AVENUE, NW – SUITE 710 WASHINGTON, D.C. 20036 202-296-0019 http://www.pewinternet.org/ Summary of Findings Americans’ love affair with technology is one of the defining characteristics of their culture. For many Americans, having the latest electronic gadget or experimenting with the newest tech fad is a habit they develop at an early age and never break. Although these ardent technophiles are a minority of the population, their trendsetting ways often ripple widely in society. Many people, in time, wind up following the technological trail cleared by these pioneers. In fact, Americans have become steady adopters of devices and services that enable them to gather and distribute information, and these have given us flexibility in how we communicate, altered the patterns of how we stay in touch with others, and even influenced the content of our messages. In this report, we take an inventory of the communications gadgets and services that American use and examine the variations within the population of technology users. There is clearly a technology elite in the United States – the 31% of the population (Internet and non-Internet users alike) who are high-end technology adopters. This elite comprises three distinct sub-groups of Americans who are the most voracious consumers of information goods and services in the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • Sun IBM Walmart Blockbuster Circuitcity Gateway SBC
    Netopia Tellabs JuniperNetworks GE NetworkSolutions Citibank GeneralInstrument Lumeta Fujitsu CheckPoint Siemens SonusNetworks Juno CharlesSchwab NetZero Harbinger GM Broadcom Alcatel NetworkAssociates Lucent BofA ComputerAssociates MicroStrategy Tibco CommerceOne Netegrity Ericsson AmEx GlobalCrossing ALLTEL Verizon VeriSign PwC UPS MapInfo Lawson RIM RSA AnswerThink KMart NortelNetworks 3COM i2 CheckFree MasterCard Verity VISA BaltimoreTechnologies Handspring AvantGo Macromedia SAP CareerMosaic Livelink Nokia ATG Motorola Palm CIBER JDEdwards MP3.com BT Unisys Interwoven Staples Qualcomm Yahoo! Ariba Veritas EMC Oracle Peoplesoft Sun FoundryNetworks EDS Ford Sprint DeloitteToucheTohmatsu divine WebMethods Drugstore Adobe IBM E.piphany iPlanet HP Siebel BMCSoftware CSC bowstreet Borders Agency.com Vodafone Cisco Amazon Novell Intel AT&T Kana ExodusComm WebTrends BroadVision ToysRUs Monster KPNQwest Vignette InfoSpace CDNow Nextel D&B CacheFlow METAGroup Accenture BEASystems Apple Interliant Participate.com AP Sony NewsCorp Kodak Loudcloud C|Net SoftBank KPMG SAS GartnerGroup TARGET EarthLink Fidelity Compaq RedHat RealNetworks BankOne Universal Dell moreover.com ForresterResearch OfficeMax C&W CNN Travelocity XOComm. RadioShack AberdeenGroup E*Trade VerticalNet AltaVista CircuitCity Audible Akamai MSFT McAfee WebMD Inktomi Cablevision Samsung SportsLine InterNap QXL.com CVS MediaOne theStreet AOL WalMart BestBuy Buy.com Teleglobe CMGI NBC Starbucks Gateway CapGemini BellSouth RoadRunner AskJeeves DigitalIsland Blockbuster CBS Excite TerraLycos PivotalSoftware Intuit NTT Slate ViacomCBS Genuity SBC Comcast LookSmart LibertyMedia Spyglass eLance IDT Disney/ABC BellCanada B&N NaviSite AAdvantage EMI DoubleClick Net2Phone eBay Prodigy Netcentives Kinko's LiquidAudio MapQuest Bertelsmann Oxygen MercuryInteractive WellsFargo Level3 AutoTrader Sears CareerBuilder napster USATODAY Pajek.
    [Show full text]
  • WR Bulletin Vol 4 Issue #24 16-Jun-03
    The Wainhouse Research Bulletin ONLINE NEWS AND VIEWS ON VISUAL COLLABORATION AND RICH MEDIA COMMUNICATIONS Not much product news this week, but we are expecting some dramatic announcements later this month from one big player in the videoconferencing product space and another in the audio/web services space. Stay tuned. As always, please feel free to forward this newsletter to your colleagues. SUBSCRIBE NOW! IT’S FREE! To be added to our automated email distribution list, simply visit www.wainhouse.com/bulletin. Andrew W. Davis, [email protected] Wire One Set to Unload its Videoconferencing Equipment Division Wire One has entered into a definitive agreement to sell its videoconferencing reseller business to Gores Technology Group, the same company that bought a similar operation from Forgent six months ago. The transaction is valued a $23 to $25 million, including $22 million in much-needed cash. The sale price represents about 1/3 the revenue level of this operation. The Wire One operation includes equipment distribution, system design and engineering, installation, operation, and maintenance activities. Our understanding is that this business will continue to do business under the Wire One moniker, but be wholly owned by Gores, a private company. Remaining as a publicly held company and lead by Rich Reiss (see interview at end of this newsletter) will be a newly named company, almost certain to have the word Glowpoint in its name, that will focus exclusively on IP video network services. Here’s What I Think. You don’t have to be a genius to see that in tough times companies have to stick to their knitting, focus on their core competencies, etc.
    [Show full text]
  • VISORTM Prism the Infinitely Expandable Handheld Computer with Vivid Colour
    VISORTM Prism The infinitely expandable handheld computer with vivid colour. The Handspring Visor Prism is the first infinitely expandable full-colour handheld computer. This pocket-sized wonder displays over 65,000 vibrant colours so everything is crisper, brighter and easier to read. And, with Palm-compatible applications, TM the unique Springboard expansion including those with colour. slot, you can snap in a digital camera or global positioning system and And if all that weren’t enough, the instantly view full-colour photos and USB connection makes synchronising maps. Best of all, it’s plug-and-play with your desktop computer really so there are no drivers to load. Just fast—and really easy. Which means snap in a module and it works! you can quickly back up, update or exchange information between your ® Based on the popular Palm OS , Visor Prism handheld and desktop Visor Prism does everything the computer with the USB charging TM Palm organiser does…and more. cradle and HotSync® technology. So, in addition to an address book, And the Visor Prism’s internal battery to do list and memo pad, there are recharges right in the cradle. new features like an enhanced date book, advanced calculator and a world The Visor Prism comes in one great clock to make its organisational colour on the outside—with 65,536 capabilities even better. And, since more displayed on your screen. Plus it uses the Palm OS, you can beam there are lots of accessories to choose information with other Palm users from like custom cases, keyboards and or download thousands of existing styli.
    [Show full text]
  • Yahoo! and Palm Team to Deliver Web Services to Palm Handheld
    Yahoo! And Palm Team To Deliver Web Services To Palm Handheld Computers Yahoo! Mail and Yahoo! Messenger To Be Bundled With Industry-leading Palm III, Palm V and Palm VII Series Handheld Computers SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- March 21, 2000 -- Yahoo! Inc. (Nasdaq: YHOO), a leading global Internet media company serving more than 100 million users worldwide, and Palm, Inc. (Nasdaq: PALM), today announced an agreement to bundle a suite of Yahoo!'s Web-based services with the Palm™ family of handheld computers, including all current Palm III™, Palm V™ and Palm VII™ series products. Today's announcement highlights Yahoo!'s commitment to deliver Web-based services to leading wireless and mobile devices, as well as Palm's commitment to provide the best of Internet content to Palm users from its leading handheld computers. Yahoo! will offer services - including Yahoo! Messenger (http://messenger.yahoo.com) and Yahoo! Mail (http://mail.yahoo.com) - which are expected to be bundled with current Palm handheld computers beginning later this year. The agreement marks the first time Yahoo!® has bundled its Web-based services with handheld computers. "Through our agreement with Palm, we're advancing our Yahoo! Everywhere® strategy of enabling access to our popular Web-based services and content anywhere, at any time, from any device," said Mohan Vishwanath, vice president, Yahoo! Everywhere, Yahoo! Inc. "This relationship further offers our users a seamless, integrated solution that allows them to get their personalized content on Palm handhelds, and for Palm users to take full advantage of the rich content and easy-to-use services that Yahoo! provides." From their Palm handheld computers, registered Yahoo! users will have access to Yahoo! Mail, enabling them to view, originate, reply and delete e-mail messages; Yahoo! Messenger, enabling them to send and receive messages instantly; and customized preferences drawn from their My Yahoo! pages.
    [Show full text]
  • What Is Avantgo and How Do I Use It?
    1 1. What is AvantGo and how do I use it? AvantGo is a free software service that brings the Web to your PDA or smartphone. AvantGo enables you to load specially formatted Web sites, known as channels, into your PDA's memory, and then read them anytime. When you register with AvantGo, you can select from more than 1200 Web sites to download to your handheld for viewing anywhere, online or off. You can subscribe to the New York Times and Rolling Stone and all points of view in between, all for free! We have designed a tutorial using our newest 5.7 software that can be viewed here: http://www.avantgo.net/demos/tutorial/index.php 2. How to install AVANTGO in my PDA? What do you need? A PDA or a smartphone, and a desktop internet connection. That's it. The AvantGo mobile internet service works on nearly all Palm OS® (palmOne, Sony, Handspring, etc.), Pocket PC (HP, Dell, Toshiba, etc.), Win CE, and Symbian Series 60 (Nokia 3650, etc.) devices. Just choose your content, then download and install the free software. If you have a wireless connection or Wi-Fi service, great! You can refresh away from your desktop. Otherwise just sync content with your desktop cradle and go — same great experience either way. Device Requirements Note: The absence of a particular device from this list does not mean that it is incompatible with AvantGo; it simply means that it has not been tested. Palm: Palm OS Version 4.x or prior running on the following devices: Palm III, Palm IIIx, Palm IIIe, Palm IIIc, Palm V, Palm Vx, Palm VII, Palm m100, Handspring Visor, Handspring Treo, Symbol SPT 1500, 1700; TRG Pro; Palm Zire.
    [Show full text]