Word: hewlett
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Hewlett-Packard Home PC Pavilion "Sibling Rivalry" Using a pair of warring 10-somethings, this TV spot inventively shows us just how much an HP PC can do. Little sis wants her diary back, big brother won't budge, so she evens the score the way any '90s child would: the kid snaps a photo of her sibling playing air guitar, scans it into her computer and E-mails the image to his crush...
Good PC service and reliability are doubly important when you're working out of a small office or at home and your tech support staff is your brother-in-law. Hewlett-Packard's Vectra is a super machine, but it's the service that really makes the difference: you get a three-year warranty and software that enables technicians to dial in to your PC over a modem line to diagnose and fix problems. An optional networking kit lets you link PCs to share files or a printer. Configurations cost up to $3,264 for a 200-MHz Pentium system...
...things are incontrovertible. Vice President Al Gore announced the new encryption initiative at midweek, timed to coincide with support from an alliance of high-tech businesses that included such hardware heavyweights as IBM, Sun Microsystems and Hewlett-Packard. However, most of the big software makers--and every civil liberties group--still opposed...
...over. Instead of coining money, companies that have come to market lately have discovered that the easy pickings are gone. An increasing number of new issues have fallen at the opening bell, and the market won't let them get up. With high-tech powerhouses such as Motorola and Hewlett-Packard reporting earnings problems, smaller companies of all sorts have had to delay long-planned sales. "This is no market for people with ulcers," says Steven Samblis, who heads an investment firm in Longwood, Florida...
...from its June 5 record. The recent sell-off began July 5 when the Dow fell 114 points following a surprisingly positive jobs report, raising fears of an interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve. Last Thursday, the Dow fell 83 points, in response to disappointing earnings reports from Hewlett-Packard, Motorola and United HealthCare. Investors took that news as a signal that continued earnings growth could not be relied upon to prop up a pricey market already suffering from inflation jitters. Ironically, Monday's plunge was not triggered by stunning earnings reports or major economic news. The question...