SCO's finances reverse as legal fees mount
As its legal fees mount and Unix System V licensing revenue drops, SCO Group has developed a multipart plan to keep the company fiscally fit enough to continue its legal battles against Linux and to develop its Unix-on-Intel operating systems.
In addition to making several new Unix product announcements during its third quarter, ended July 31, SCO exchanged 40,000 shares of SCO Series A-1 convertible preferred stock owned by BayStar Capital LP for $13 million in cash. It also revised its fee agreement with its lead law firm Boies, Schiller & Flexner, and adopted a shareholder-rights plan.
Read the Share:
Microsoft waltzes into online music
- Dell to introduce its first color laser printers
- Phishers suspected of eBay Germany domain hijack
- New Bagle worm drops in and downloads
- Hitachi redesigns tiny hard drive
- Logitech launches laser-tracking mouse
- Sony bids to win over disc makers to Blu-ray format
- Samsung phones to double as wallets
- One in ten could suffer with SP2 problems
- Intel to launch 600-series CPUs in 1Q 2005, remove 700-series from roadmap
Microsoft strips Longhorn of WinFS
- Blu-ray Disc BD-ROM spec adds Microsoft's video codec
- First practical plastic magnets created
- PostcardPC enters race for smallest computer
- Intel: Dual-core Xeon at IDF
- Intel still plagued by delays, to postpone Madison 9M to 4Q
- Flood of spam hit 92.5% of email in August
- Intel likely to support DDR2-667 memory
- Slack users blamed for virus longevity
- XP SP2 glitches to trip up one in 10 upgrades
Sponsored
See more
Latest news
Miscellaneous Previous news
Partners




