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Sun Microsystems is becoming a bit of a battleground company for analysts. On the plus side, Sun has implemented good cost controls and ongoing profits. The negative : There's no growth. Given these two largely offsetting developments it's no surprise that analysts are torn. Sun reported fiscal first quarter net (updates.zdnet.com....round.html)
The Lewis Clark Railroad, with a history dating backbefore the town was established, has its headquarters in BattleGround . In the early days it was planned to extend from Vancouveras far as Yakima, but it was never built beyond northeasternClark County. (www.columbian.com....ground.cfm)
In my opinion, the start of the tectonic shift to universal internet telephony will be signaled when VoIP becomes ubiquitous, in the sense of "connect from anywhere and at any time." Mobility is the next battleground . Although some of the combatants are easy to list (Skype, Google, Microsoft, and a whole host of lesser players), it is by no means clear who will emerge victorious. Skype has non-mobile VoIP more or less to itself, and will remain dominant in that space for the foreseeable future, provided it doesn't fumble things badly. However, mobile VoIP is up for grab (www.oreillynet.com....-voip.html)
In this category I would include such things as how to seamlessly hand off a live VoIP call when switching from one Wi-Fi access point to another overlapping Wi-Fi access point while on the move. No open standards exist in these areas yet, but they are effectively being cordoned off by software patents.) That is why current VoIP providers and companies with very deep pockets indeed seem to me the only likely combatants on this new battleground (www.oreillynet.com....-voip.html)
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