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TOP STORY FROM SILICONVALLEY.COM |
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Start-ups duel big guns on wireless chip frontier
In the not-too-distant future, a single box in your home will be able to send different cable channels and Web sites to multiple screens over a wireless network. Your car will eventually be able to download maps, MP3 music files and detailed traffic reports as you drive by specified ``info-fueling'' stations.
By Therese Poletti / Mercury News
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Weasels rule, Scott Adams says
What better way to market a new book about corporate weasels than to act, well, a bit weasely yourself? Dilbert creator Scott Adams on Tuesday staged "National Weasel Day" in San Francisco, a spoof on Groundhog Day, to drum up sales of "Dilbert and the Way of the Weasel." If the live weasel popped inside its cubicle, the economy would rebound in 2003. If the weasel refused, the economy would continue to cast a long, gloomy shadow on long-tailed carnivorous cubicle dwellers everywhere. The sun never...
By Jessica Guynn
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| | Mike Langberg / San Jose Mercury News
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Color laser printers becoming affordable
Color laser printers are finally becoming affordable for individual consumers, with Minolta-QMS offering the new Magicolor 2300 DL at the precedent-shattering price of $799.
By Mike Langberg / Mercury News
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Firms jump on demand for security
Technology companies are enlisting in the war on terrorism, seeking to profit by making Americans more secure. But some of the new technologies, including lie detectors that claim to read brain waves, raise concerns about possible invasions of privacy.
By Robert S. Boyd / Inquirer Washington Bureau
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| Updated Monday, Oct 28, 2002 | |
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