- Wed Oct 15 2003 The grail of utility computing
Dell VP Jeff Clarke says the contention that IT can be delivered to customers as if it were electricity on tap is a misreading of the tech map.
Posted by Jeff Clarke
- Wed Mar 23 2005 Dell plugs in new enterprise servers
Touting its development work with Intel and Oracle, Dell launches its newest enterprise servers, along with related database services.
Posted by Matt Hines
- Tue Mar 27 2001 Dell taps new head of corporate PCs
Dell Computer appoints Jeff Clarke, a 14-year company veteran, to take over the division responsible for corporate PCs, notebooks and workstations.
Posted by Michael Kanellos
- Fri May 18 2007 Dell confirms rumors, will build tablet PC
Latitude Tablet PC will be a lightweight convertible notebook with a pen and touch interface. It will be available later this year.
Posted by Erica Ogg
- Fri Jun 1 2007 The best idea Jeff Hawkins ever had
That's what the inventor of the Treo and Palm Pilot says about the Palm Foleo. He has a tough sell ahead.
Posted by Ina Fried
- Tue Apr 2 2002 Dell to unsheathe blade servers
In a news conference to be held Wednesday morning in New York, the company is expected to announce a blade-server line, along with related management software and services bundles.
Posted by John G. Spooner
- Wed Apr 3 2002 Dell unsheathes blade servers
The computer maker announces a new blade-server line, dubbed PowerEdge 1655MC, along with management software to go with it, as it looks to move beyond PCs.
Posted by John G. Spooner
- Thu Jun 30 2005 Dell lures away high-ranking HP server exec
Brad Anderson will become a senior vice president at Dell, HP's rival in the market for servers using x86 processors, News.com has learned.
Posted by Stephen Shankland
- Mon Sep 8 2003 Dell calls for blade server standards
Michael Dell, chief executive of the PC giant, takes the stage at the OracleWorld trade show, rallying for "a common blade architecture."
Posted by Michael Kanellos and Ina Fried
- Fri Aug 8 2003 IBM campaign targets Dell servers
Big Blue's new sales campaign takes aim at Dell's lukewarm backing for blades and lack of eight-processor servers, then offers a price break on its rival machines.
Posted by Stephen Shankland