Western Digital pitches in on US$17.4B Toshiba chip unit offer
A consortium that includes Western Digital is offering 1.9 trillion yen (US$17.4 billion) for Toshiba Corp's memory chip business, according to sources.
A consortium that includes Western Digital is offering 1.9 trillion yen (US$17.4 billion) for Toshiba Corp's memory chip business, according to sources.
Samsung Group has no 'Plan B' for taking big decisions if its billionaire de facto leader, Jay Y. Lee, is jailed for corruption, sources indicate.
HP reported a slightly higher-than-expected quarterly profit as it sold more personal computers.
Toshiba is reportedly prioritising talks with Western Digital to sell its memory chip business, as negotiations with a previously preferred bidder have stalled.
Google's forthcoming Titan computer chip, an elaborate security feature for its cloud computing network, could see it steal a march on Amazon.com and Microsoft.
Fujitsu is looking to sell off its mobile operations as the Japanese information technology company faces stiff competition from bigger rivals.
Investors don’t appear to be happy about the shock resignation of former Infosys CEO and MD, Dr. Vishal Sikka.
Lenovo has posted a first-quarter loss, citing higher costs and slower growth in the PC market.
Reports suggest that telecommunications equipment maker, Ericsson, could be shedding up to 25,000 jobs in a global cost-cutting drive.
A start-up backed by iPod guru, Tony Fadell, is working on a new way for mobile phones to transfer large amounts of data.
Cisco's latest quarterly security business revenues missed estimates, raising concerns about the vendor's efforts to transform into a software-focused company.
Now, LinkedIn plans to fight the decision, which tests how much control a social media site can wield over information its users have deemed to be public.
Qualcomm has disclosed further details about the impact of its ongoing dispute with Apple.
Toshiba's listed status remains largely dependent on whether it can close the sale of its chip business by March.
Nvidia Corp's quarterly revenue in its data centre and automotive businesses missed estimates, despite seeing revenues surge.