Word: hitachis
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MODERATE $800 HITACHI 32UX01S If you load a TV with bells and whistles, better make sure the picture is perfect too. The 32-in. UltraVision has a digital three-line comb filter: don't worry about what it does; just enjoy the rich colors and razor-sharp lines. Plus, the bells and whistles: S-Video and component-video inputs, dual-tuner picture-in-picture and two cable-TV jacks. www.hitachi.com...
...news. Not all DVD devices will play the discs you record on the Panasonic. In a replay of that old VHS vs. Betamax duel, there are two formats duking it out for DVD supremacy?one backed by a group that includes Panasonic, Hitachi and Samsung, the other backed by Sony, Philips and others. A third format, championed by JVC and Mitsubishi, is about to join the battle. When the dust settles, convergence between your computer and your home theater will be reality. Many potential buyers will wait for a clear winner to emerge...
...best-known players in the storage industry are the ones that peddle big iron: EMC, Hitachi Data Systems, IBM and Hewlett-Packard sell global companies $100,000-per-terabyte, refrigerator-size cabinets stocked with software on whirling discs that bring order, accessibility and protection to proprietary data. Veritas sells much less expensive software packages that back up data on other companies' hardware and that companies such as IBM Global Services and SunGard use to facilitate disaster recovery...
...Sept. 25, HP, which has a partnership with cabinetmaker Hitachi, completed its $310 million purchase of StorageApps, a company based in Bridgewater, N.J., that competes with Veritas in making tools that allow companies to pool their storage devices and access unused space. Last month EMC bought Luminate Software of Redwood City, Calif.--its seventh software acquisition in nearly two years...
...protected them like the bullion at Fort Knox. Brokerages, banks and other finance companies are required by law to back up securities transaction data, and in the last decade those organizations became some of the most sophisticated buyers of IT storage services, contracting with companies such as EMC and Hitachi for the latest devices, and archiving their digital records in remote, bunker-like facilities operated by companies like Iron Mountain, based in Boston. Account records and trading transactions are typically backed up in real time...