Fujitsu to build software robot to pass college entrance exams
The electronics giant aims to make software that can compete with students on the math entrance exam of a top Japan college.
The electronics giant aims to make software that can compete with students on the math entrance exam of a top Japan college.
Hewlett-Packard CEO Meg Whitman recently alluded to some ongoing difficulties within Autonomy.
The new 8.9-inch Kindle Fire HD tablet will be priced at $299, the 7-inch at $199, and an LTE model at $499.
A judge ruled that a contract with HP obligates Oracle to continue porting its software until Itanium is discontinued.
In another dispute with Samsung before the court, the jury awarded Apple about US$1 billion in damages last month.
Samsung must pay Apple $1.05 billion for infringing several of its patents in Samsung smartphones and tablets, a California District Court jury decided on Friday.
The Fair Labor Association revisited three Foxconn factories to check changes being made to improve their safety and working conditions
Apple has opposed a government proposed judgment in an e-books price-fixing lawsuit, stating that the judgement seeks to terminate and rewrite its contracts "before a single document has been introduced into evidence, before any witness has testified, and before the court has resolved the disputed facts."
The U.S. government lost a bid on Thursday to withhold some evidence in advance of the extradition hearing for four Megaupload defendants charged with criminal copyright infringement.
Open-source blogger Florian Mueller previously revealed his relationship with Oracle.
AMD takes a new direction with the FirePro A300 and A320 chips, which are targeted at professional workstations.
An Apple executive recommended the smaller iPad, according to a 2011 email.
Facebook said it can detect click fraud despite a company's claim that 80 percent of its ad clicks were generated by bots.
The move might help the company monetize its massive user base.
Kodak vows to appeal.
Industry observers are expressing concerns about Apple's environmental commitment, but also question the EPEAT process.
Judge Richard Posner's ruling 'with prejudice' means neither side can refile the case.
The company briefly reported the problem had been solved before the site went down again.
A lawsuit seeking class-action status said the company failed to implement 'industry standard' security measures.
Facebook said its conversations with underwriters were 'customary' and 'did not violate any rules'.
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