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Displaying listings 11-20
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Coming soon: Voice mail on the Net
10/8/99, Anick Jesdanun, AP Internet Writer. Voice mail on the Internet? E-mail over the phone? Both are coming soon, as the line separating phones and computers continues to blur. New products and services will let callers leave messages as e-mail attachments or check e-mail by phone.
www.star-telegram.com/news/doc/1047/1:COMP61A/1:COMP61A100899.html
Hands-free surfing, anybody?
10/4/99, Grant DuBois, PC Week. New interactive language technology lets surfers talk with their PCs and navigate the Web using natural speech.
www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2347531,00.html
New Palm device puts Internet at your fingertips
10/4/99, DEBORAH CLAYMON, Mercury News. Palm Computing -- the company that made personal digital assistants the accessory professionals on the run can't live without -- now aims to put Internet access at your fingertips.
www.mercurycenter.com/business/top/038347.htm
Nuance touts voice as next Web interface
10/8/99, Ed Scannell, InfoWorld Electric. Hoping to do for the emerging "voice Web" what browsers did for the Web, Nuance has unveiled a voice browser, dubbed "Voyager," that lets phone users access information and conduct electronic business on voice-enabled Web sites.
www.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/displayStory.pl?99108.hnnuance.htm
Intelligent devices meet the Internet
10/8/99, Michael Vizard, InfoWorld Electric. The ability to remotely monitor and troubleshoot any piece of equipment is about to fundamentally alter the way most businesses handle product support.
www.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/displayStory.pl?99108.hnembed.htm
Concentric Pulls Cobalt Into Linux Circle
10/6/99, Matthew W. Beale E-Commerce Times. This week, Internet business solutions provider Concentric Network Corp. (Nasdaq: CNCX) debuted an open-source Linux solution developed in collaboration with server appliance developer Cobalt Networks, Inc.
www.ecommercetimes.com/news/articles/991006-7.shtml
New company has developed self-destructing e-mail
10/7/99, AP. Here's a product for you: e-mail that becomes impossible to read after as little as a few seconds or minutes, using a self-destruct feature set by the sender.
spyglass1.sjmercury.com/breaking/docs/075919.htm
High-Flying Execs To Send E-Mails At 35,000 Feet
10/1/99, Reuters. It will be business as usual for high-flying executives even at 35,000 feet from next year when airline passengers will be able to use their mobiles, surf the Web and send e-mails in mid-air.
news.excite.com/news/r/991001/07/net-airlines-internet?printstory=1
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