As Growth Slows Ex-Allies Square ff in a Tech Turf War
The News Review:
- As Growth Slows Ex-Allies Square ff in a Tech Turf War
- Dutchess towns’ web content has grown but gaps remain
- Philip Roth is well-served by ‘Elegy’
As Growth Slows Ex-Allies Square ff in a Tech Turf War
Wall Street Journal
9 billion over the course of the decade. But even into the new millennium the company remained focused on selling routers and switches to corporations. In the past few years the company’s core networking business has grown more slowly than the company as a whole. In its 2008 fiscal year which ended last July Cisco’s networking business grew 10% down from 16% the year before.
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Dutchess towns’ web content has grown but gaps remain
Poughkeepsie Journal
“Certainly there’s been an explosion in the amount of information that governments make available online” Freeman said. “When information is available on a Web site the public does not have to submit written requests pursuant to the Freedom of Information Law. The records are simply there for the taking. “(2 of 4)For those residents who do not have computers they can simply search the Internet on computers at their local library Freeman said. “I’ve never had a problem finding anything on there” Mihans said.
Philip Roth is well-served by ‘Elegy’
Macon Telegraph
Patricia Clarkson is perfect as a long-time sexual partner of Kepesh’s someone with whom he might have settled down years earlier but did not. Dennis Hopper plays brilliantly against type as Kepesh’s best friend and colleague a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet who repeatedly and unremorsefully cheats on his wife (Deborah Harry). And Peter Sarsgaard as Kepesh’s son a successful doctor captures the unquenched resentment and hurt of a grown man still seething over his father’s long-ago abandonment of his mother and himself and his father’s continual detachment. “Elegy” takes several dramatic turns that will not be mentioned here but at every step the authenticity of Kingsley and Cruz prevent the story from becoming obvious in its portrayal of a May-December romance. Kingsley whose character narrates the story brings his usual energetic intensity to his role as a man whose supreme intellectual confidence masks his insecurities while Cruz delivers a performance that begins with her astonishing beauty but quickly turns into something much deeper than skin. “Elegy” received mixed reviews upon its release last year with most critics praising the actors’ performances but some decrying the film as a fantasy for aging males a “typical” Roth meditation on lust and aging. But that criticism grievously underestimates the depth of Roth’s work.