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Multibillionaire professor David Cheriton has bankrolled a startup called Apstra, which has been working on software for managing networking devices from multiple vendors. He has funded 20 companies to date.
Hewlett Packard Enterprise is betting on a new approach to memory that it says can bring dramatic speed improvements to companies wrestling with growing troves of data.
In today’s environment of lowered expectations for integrity, Andy’s past actions were like a beacon. We need more people like him.
China is putting $24 billion toward building a world-class semiconductor industry, exploiting a partnership with a U.S. company for the production of memory chips used in a wide array of electronic devices.
Computer programmers, some of the oldest workers in the tech industry, have the largest gender pay gap compared to all other professions across all industries, according to a new study.
Amazon.com, under pressure to release details of gender pay equality, said it found that among its U.S. workforce, women and men earn essentially the same.
Escaping from Communist Hungary and building an American business career that changed the world.
Corrections & Amplifications for the edition of March 23, 2016.
Andrew S. Grove, the Holocaust survivor who turned Intel Corp. into one of high tech’s most influential trend-setters, died at the age of 79.
Silicon Valley, rarely a harmonious place, is united today remembering Andy Grove, the former CEO at Intel Corp. who passed away Monday at 79. Although not a founder, Mr. Grove put a decisive stamp on the company, successfully guiding Intel through one technology-inspired existential crisis after another—sound familiar CIOs?—and along the way turning the company into one of the few consumer brands to emerge from the semiconductor industry.
Andrew S. Grove, the Holocaust survivor who turned Intel Corp. into one of high tech’s most influential trendsetters, died at the age of 79.
Tencent is pushing online advertising aggressively as the Chinese company tries to earn money from its WeChat mobile social-media platform.
Corporate venture capital arms, which invested more money in startups last year than in any since 2000, weren’t immune to the fourth-quarter slowdown that impacted the broader venture capital market.
Restrictions imposed by the U.S. Department of Commerce on sales to ZTE Corp. will hurt U.S. suppliers, as The Wall Street Journal reported last week. But how badly and in what ways? A legal expert provided some reasons.
A roundup of venture-capital news and analysis from VentureWire and around the Web.
It seems that this skills gap, which is at the top of the agenda for many CIOs, reflects a much deeper problem in the U.S., where workers rank last among 18 industrialized countries when it comes to using technology to solve problems. The consequences of that emerging competitive disadvantage are energizing the volatile undercurrent of this year’s presidential race
Intel agreed to acquire Replay Technologies, an Israeli virtual-reality startup specializing in the digitization of sports, a business the Silicon Valley giant is eager to grow.
U.S. companies are cutting emissions voluntarily and buying clean energy at the fastest pace ever, as lower renewable energy prices and easier availability of these sources makes these economical options.
China’s ZTE Corp. is an unfamiliar name to many American consumers. But it is well known among U.S. technology vendors, who face a sudden roadblock in selling to a big customer.