AT&T deal won't mean iPhones for T-Mobile users … yet
Giddy T-Mobile users hoping to get their hands on an <a href="https://www.networkworld.com/slideshows/2010/120101-iphone-quiz.html">iPhone</a> shouldn't hold their breath.
Giddy T-Mobile users hoping to get their hands on an <a href="https://www.networkworld.com/slideshows/2010/120101-iphone-quiz.html">iPhone</a> shouldn't hold their breath.
AT&T’s surprise buyout of T-Mobile USA for $39 billion has industry watchers scrambling to figure out what the deal means for subscribers, the U.S. cellular industry and investors.
Antenna Software has made the latest acquisition in its bid to create a complete toolset for designing, building, running and managing mobile applications, for everything from feature phones to tablets. The vendor is buying U.K.-based Volantis Systems, which has a set of tools for building mobile Web applications.
Time Warner Cable (NYSE: TWC) has announced plans to buy NaviSite (NASDAQ: NAVI) in a $230 million deal through which Time Warner will inherit more than a thousand business customers who use managed services.
A recent CNBC interview with an HP executive is focusing attention on the company's expected webOS device news, including a possible tablet, on Feb. 9 in San Francisco.
It's been a busy week for Juniper Networks.
ShoreTel has bought Agito Networks for its wireless technology that enables handsets to switch between Wi-Fi and cellular networks while attached to corporate networks.
Cisco this week said it will acquire Arch Rock Corporation, a privately held developer of IP-based wireless network technology for smart grids.
Cisco is reportedly looking to buy Skype before the Internet phone provider goes public.
Shareholder lawsuits may be looming over the proposed Intel acquisition of McAfee, with at least two law firms signaling they are looking into whether McAfee's board of directors acted in the best interests of shareholders in approving the deal.
Juniper Networks this week announced it is acquiring privately held SMobile Systems, a developer of security software for smartphones and tablets, for $70 million in cash.
Oracle buys Sun. HP buys 3Com. SAP buys Sybase. Just when it seemed like consolidation among the big data-center vendors had played itself out, we're off again at full tilt. Multiple trends are driving the latest acquisitions wave: The economy is recovering, customers are demanding systems that are easier to implement and vendors seem intent on collapsing the divide between servers, network and storage.
A union between IBM and Sun Microsystems would give Microsoft a competitive advantage during the time IBM worked to incorporate Sun's copious assets into a combined company, Microsoft's Steve Ballmer said Thursday.
US investment expert Ken Bender insisted he needed two hours for his NZX seminar talk — he was offered an hour and the parties settled on an hour-and-a-half with lunch in-between to give everyone a breather.
Oracle's offer to purchase BEA Systems for US$6.7 billion (NZ$9 billion would be the company's 10th acquisition in 2007. Here's a look at each purchase and what it means for Oracle, one of the industry's dominant applications vendor.