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More than 400 people packed the Beechwood Hotel last night for the WBJ's ninth annual 40 Under Forty event and we've got a special video and photos to prove it!
In a ruling Monday, U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Joel B. Rosenthal tweaked the procedures for the sale of Cyphermint Inc., a Marlborough-based maker of mobile payment software.
Spencer Technologies Inc. has consolidated its Massachusetts operations in its Northborough headquarters.
Owners, investors, creditors and at least one interested buyer are battling over Cyphermint Inc., a Marlborough-based maker of potentially lucrative mobile payment software, in U.S. Bankruptcy Court.
Charles Agosta, chairman of Worcester-based Clark University’s physics department, figures 2006 was the perfect time for he and business partner Arthur Williams to found MachFlow.
Blue-green eggs and pink veal may sound unusual, but they may end up beings keys to keeping some family farms in New England economically viable.
NMS Communications Corp. of Framingham is selling part of its business, changing its name and getting a new CEO.
Acton-based drug tester Psychemedics Corp. says it will bail from the American Stock Exchange and begin trading on the Nasdaq stock market later this month.
Marlborough-based 3Com Corp. says it has been hired to convert Swisscom, Switzerland's largest telecommunications company, to an entirely 3Com network.
Eight percent of Boston-area CIOs expect to hire IT personnel during the fourth quarter, according to the
Worldwide factory revenues from external disk storage systems grew 16.7 percent over the past year, according to Framingham technology analyst IDC.
Cyphermint Inc., a Marlborough-based mobile payment software maker, was back in U.S. Bankruptcy Court Wednesday, as a storm over who will control the company's potentially lucrative technology brewed.
Worcester Polytechnic Institute graduate and Southborough native Marine Sgt. Jason Cox has been awarded the U.S.
Marlborough-based Communication Technology Services LLC has paid the Business Software Alliance $80,000 to settle claims that the company was using bootleg
Empty parking lots and shuttered buildings sprouted up in the wake of Digital Equipment Corp.’s purchase by Compaq Computer Corp. in 1998, which in turn was bought by Hewlett Packard in 2002.