Results for really in news
News
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AMD really will drop Athlon 64 prices to compete with Intel Core 2 Duo
Friday 14 July 2006 – 02:26
Yes, AMD does intend to drop its prices for Athlon 64 processors, at or about the same time Intel announces its Conroe processor availability later this month. TG Daily re-confirmed the news with AMD spokesperson Damon Muzny. Now that Intel may have at least evened the stakes in the performance-per-watt battle, AMD's plan appears to be to shift the focus to performance-per- dollar. -
AMD 1GHz Athlons really 1.5GHz chips?
Tuesday 10 April 2001 – 08:10
Tony Smith of The Register reports that Advanced Micro Devices may already be shipping 1.5GHz Thunderbird Athlons labeled as either 1GHz or 1.33GHz chips. -
Update: Vista not really helping PC sales, says report
Thursday 24 May 2007 – 12:27
Although Microsoft wants consumers to believe that Vista has reinvigorated the computer market, research firm In-Stat says it really has no impact at all. ... -
Microsoft didn't really pioneer open source...did it?
Tuesday 11 April 2006 – 11:21
A TG Daily article last Friday on Microsoft's new open source software laboratory, and the blog devoted to it, opened by saying Microsoft may have pioneered the open source movement. Whenever there's a floodgate, leave it to us to open it. -
IBM 'really committed' to Java community
Thursday 30 June 2005 – 06:12
IBM made a public show of its love for all things Java on Wednesday, following an agreement to renew its Java license with Sun Microsystems for the next 10 years. -
Next Big Thing Is a Really Small Battery
Friday 29 August 2003 – 03:32
Tiny devices so small that they can only be seen with powerful microscopes could someday carry drugs through your veins to exactly the spot where you need them, or detect hazardous materials that are invisible to the unaided eye, or power a cell phone for months. -
TG Daily's Week in Review: Processors, lawsuits and one really expensive phone
Friday 19 May 2006 – 11:05
Three processors, three high-profile lawsuits, the future of the hard drive and one really expensive phone: Click through our week in review image gallery to recap the most important events and get up to speed on news you may have missed. -
Polaroid's Inexpensive (Really) PhotoMAX 620 Digital Camera
Thursday 26 July 2001 – 08:29
Just about everyone's tightening their belts this year, but you need to have a little fun and you deserve a few more gadgets. -
WiMax To Roll Out In September, Really
Tuesday 15 July 2008 – 10:30 in Business
San Francisco (CA) - Xohm president Barry West announced that Sprint and the companies that saved the company's WiMax network in May will be offering the high-speed wireless technology in September of this year on a very limited basis. -
Really 'light' computers
Thursday 26 October 2006 – 08:55
We've been told for a while that our computers will one day use light instead of electricity. -
Google + YouTube: Really smart or truly insane?
Wednesday 11 October 2006 – 06:23
One thousand six hundred and fifty million dollars. With that, you could buy the latest US nuclear powered aircraft carrier and have $250 million left over to fuel and staff it. You could hire 16,500 people and pay them each $100,000 to work for you for a year. Or, you could have bought YouTube, which employs 65 people. -
Is Intel's UMPC really Origami incognito at IDF?
Wednesday 8 March 2006 – 03:47
No, Origami has not been announced. At least not officially. But several sources hinted that a UMPC shown at IDF would be "very similar" to the mysterious Origami device Microsoft will be unveiling on 9 March at the CeBIT tradeshow in Hanover, Germany. -
In tech world, is small really beautiful?
Friday 5 September 2003 – 04:07
Three decades after E. -
Amazon music store not really denting iTunes
Wednesday 16 April 2008 – 11:40 in Mobile
Around 90% of customers at Amazon's digital music store had not shopped regularly at iTunes before, according to research firm NPD. -
Who's really in charge of search tools at Microsoft?
Thursday 18 May 2006 – 11:02
Microsoft's announcement yesterday of the development of a new, single-point-of-access search tool, integrating other search tools and applications, generated some confusion. This morning, a Microsoft developer contacted us to try to set the record straight. But if he's right - and we have no reason to believe he's not - then what's the real status of his company's efforts to challenge Google?
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