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Hardware Reviews

Daniel Fleshbourne   on 04 August 2002 - 09:21 · 1 comment & 61 views

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Geil DDR-400 vs. Samsung DDR-400
TweakTown has just posted a new article comparing Geil and Samsung’s latest DDR-400 memory offerings. Here's a snip:

“DDR-400 memory has been one of the most talked about memory standards since the introduction of DDR. While 400Mhz DDR memory still isn't a JEDEC endorsed standard, companies have already begun to release memory modules running at 400Mhz. Today Cameron "Sov" Johnson takes a look at two new DDR-400 memory modules from Geil and Samsung, who will win the battle for supremacy? Read on and find out!”

View: Geil DDR-400 vs. Samsung DDR-400

Freaking Fast Computers Watercooled 2.4Ghz Intel P4 System
Today Warp2search will be looking at a special PC custom designed, watercooled, window modded and cold cathode lighted complete PC. Sporting a 2.4Ghz Intel Pentium 4 and GeForce 4 Ti4600 as well as 1066 RDRAM this could be your next gaming system.

View: Freaking Fast Computers Watercooled 2.4Ghz Intel P4 System


Sources familiar with the SEC probe said the regulatory agency, which has oversight over the financial reporting of U.S. companies, has so far had only preliminary talks with attorneys for PurchasePro about its business dealings with AOL. It was unclear yesterday which aspect of the AOL-PurchasePro partnership was under review. The SEC probe follows a Washington Post report that examined various business dealings between the two companies.

In one unorthodox arrangement, AOL gave $9.5 million in cash to PurchasePro for $30 million in stock warrants in the firm, and AOL booked the difference -- $20.5 million -- as ad and commerce revenue. PurchasePro also bought advertising space from AOL and paid AOL commissions for selling PurchasePro software.

AOL earned its warrants under a marketing deal that included distributing PurchasePro software. The warrants, similar to stock options, gave AOL the right to buy shares in PurchasePro for 1 cent each, according to internal company documents. AOL calculated the value of the warrants and booked it as $20.5 million in advertising and commerce revenue in the quarter ended December 2000 and another $7 million in the quarter ended March 2001.

The PurchasePro deal was one of several unconventional transactions carried out by AOL at a critical time before and after its takeover of Time Warner Inc. in January 2001.

AOL has said it booked these deals properly, and its outside auditor Ernst & Young LLP has confirmed the accounting.

At least two AOL executives have already retained attorneys in connection with the company's partnership with PurchasePro, sources said. That includes Myer Berlow, a former AOL advertising executive who now is a company consultant, and David M. Colburn, executive vice president and president of business affairs and development for AOL Time Warner's subscription services and advertising and commerce businesses, the sources said. The firm declined to make Berlow or Colburn available for comment.

Colburn recently relinquished his day-to-day duties overseeing the Internet division's business affairs unit, which negotiated many of the company's unconventional transactions. Colburn's move follows the recent resignation announcement of Robert W. Pittman as AOL Time Warner's chief operating officer.

PurchasePro has faced its own turmoil -- widening financial losses, hundreds of layoffs and a plunging stock price that closed yesterday at 33 cents. In November 2001, Arthur Andersen LLP resigned as PurchasePro's independent auditor after noting what it considered deficiencies in the design and operation of PurchasePro's internal controls.

Also last year, Eric Keller, an AOL senior vice president, was placed on administrative leave, pending an internal investigation of the company's relationship with PurchasePro, sources said.

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