Latin America should take it slow and easy.
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The future of the wireless Internet.
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Advice to the winner: here's your chance to become the real Internet president.
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Israel's technology sector stands strong.
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Americans want their cookies -- and their privacy, too.
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'Only when consumers perceive their online profiles as real benefits will profile databases grow rapidly.'
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Beware of companies that point fingers overseas.
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Let the Christmas 2001 games begin.
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The times are out of joint for a New York Times Digital IPO.
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Ciphers, spies, and a new algorithm shake up the security marketplace.
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For armchair travelers, Novica.com serves up tribal art from Bali to Zimbabwe, letting artists cast a broader net for their work.
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Ciena and Cisco Systems have conducted the first successful interoperability test of 10-Gbps very short reach (VSR) optics, a technology that should lower connectivity costs.
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For Europe's venture capitalists, 2000 was a year of both cheers and fears. Now they're retrenching for 2001.
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Carstation.com hits a pothole
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This year was a roller-coaster ride for many companies hoping to change the world.
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Unanswered questions plague slow mobile payment plans, including the biggest of all: why bother?
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The downturn in the economy and the narrow IPO window will make it tough for small VCs to repeat their strong performance next year.
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The year 2000 has been one of emergence for biotech companies. Information once known only to the science community made front-page news and stock prices soared. But what will the sector do in 2001?
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The Palestinian crisis and a contrary Nasdaq may deal a double blow to Israel's promising technology industry, already divided over the Chromatis acquisition.
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After a devastating year in 2000, the wireless industry offers some attractive stocks, if you know where to look.
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