Sarah Tolkoff covers technology and international Trade for the Business Journal. She can be reached at tolkoff@ocbj.com.
Recent Stories
Stability, Sales Growth Eyed as Boost Shakes Out Latest Buy
TECHNOLOGY: Smith putting “life back” in Irvine hub office
Boost Mobile is seeing stability after a rocky combination with Virgin Mobile
Ingram Takes Aim at Higher Margins With Cloud Service
TECHNOLOGY: Distributor seeks new role, revenue in trend
Ingram Micro is branching into cloud computing
Circuit Board Maker Finds Grass Greener in S. Dakota
Legacy Electronics Moves HQ, Leaves San Clemente
Legacy Electronics has moved to South Dakota, in Technology
Jazz Links to French Nonprofit in Bid for Global Deals
Deal Calls for Joint Effort on “Multi-Project Wafers”
Jazz Semiconductor inked a deal with a French nonprofit, in Technology
From $100 to $280M
Drumwright Started Trace3 With Nearly Nothing, Eyeing $500M in Sales by 2014
ENTREPRENEURS: Profiles of the Business Journal’s Entrepreneur of the Year award winners: Hayes Drumwright, founder and Chief Executive, Trace3.
Clarke: Ups, Downs, Growing Stability for Local Search Site
TECHNOLOGY: Local.com’s seen boom, busts, Web scrutiny
ENTREPRENEURS: Profiles of the Business Journal’s Entrepreneur of the Year award winners: Heath Clarke, Local.com Corp. cofounder and Chief Executive
Microsemi Pops on Analyst's Bullish Sales Outlook
Shares of Irvine-based Microsemi Corp., a maker of chips for military, aerospace and consumer uses, jumped on Thursday after an analyst said its March quarter sales could come in above its outlook.
San Clemente's Legacy Electronics Moving HQ to South Dakota
Legacy Electronics Inc., a local maker of memory boards for computers, is moving its headquarters to South Dakota from San Clemente.
EA Planning Push Into Blizzard’s Realm: Online Games
Console King Eyes Profits in Multiplayer PC Games
Blizzard’s top rival plans a new online game, in Technology
Japan Fallout?
Kingston Had Banner 2010, $6.5B in Sales; Earthquake Poses Questions for This Year
Japan’s recent earthquake and tsunami could disrupt production for Kingston
