| The Wall Street Journal Western Edition 1993 David P Hamilton |
| Title | Subject | Authors |
| After initial fuzziness, AT & T clears up signal to Asia. | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| Apple's failure to win Japanese order reflects barriers for computer makers. | Business, general | David P. Hamilton, Yumiko Ono |
| Chip makers call for easing burden on Japan. (semiconductor industry) | Business, general | David P. Hamilton, Bob Davis |
| Compaq plans to intensify Japan PC war. | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| Computer firms, menaced by Microsoft, are planning new effort to unify Unix. (Microsoft Corp.)(Unix standardization) (Technology and Health) | Business, general | David P. Hamilton, Jim Carlton |
| Computer makers face hidden vulnerability: supplier concentration; checkpoints; many of their crucial parts and materials are made by just a few factories; tracing the PC's ingredients. | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| Dell Computer escalates price war in Japan by introducing low-cost PCs. | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| Fujitsu expects to post a loss in current year. | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| Fujitsu readies new products as mainframes wane; company, like IBM, has been slow to see the danger as the industry changed. (Corporate Focus) (Company Profile) | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| Fujitsu waives right to study IBM software. (cost-cutting move should help firm move from mainframe development towards smaller computer manufacture) | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| Hitachi returns to chip market that Japan left. | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| IBM Japan begins to show signs of parent's illness. (Company Profile) | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| Japan chip makers act to raise prices to counter yen. | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| Japan seeks to end numerical goals for chip market. | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| Microsoft opens Windows in Japan, bringing fresh air to market's PC wars. (Microsoft Windows 3.1 Japanese-language version) | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| Microsoft targets software piracy by Japan PC users. | Business, general | David P. Hamilton, Jacob M. Schlesinger |
| NEC says loss to be wider than expected; figure surprises analysts, reflects ills of Japan's electronics companies. (prediction for FY 1993) | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| New battleground: U.S. computer firms, extending PC wars, charge into Japan; Americans such as Compaq slash prices, swap ideas, with NEC a chief target; fighting an image problem. | Business, general | David P. Hamilton, Kyle Pope |
| NTT's cutbacks signal uncertain transition in Japan. (Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Co.) (Company Profile) | Business, general | David P. Hamilton, Jacob M. Schlesinger |
| U.S. companies rush to fill Japanese software void. (Industry Focus)(absence of Japanese firms in market for personal-computer software) (Industry Overview) | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| U.S. supercomputer makers poised for Japanese sales; technology, trade pressure and stimulus plan help give them an edge. (Industry Focus) | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
| X-rays may be key to smaller microchips. (researching X-ray lithography for making integrated circuits) (In the Lab) | Business, general | David P. Hamilton |
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