On Thursday, Shares of Hewlett-Packard Company (NYSE:HPQ), gain 2.51% to $27.79.
Hewlett-Packard Company, declared the HP mt42, the world’s thinnest, lightest and most powerful quad-core mobile thin client.1 At just 3.41 pounds light, .74 inches thin and up to 3.0 GHz fast with AMD quad-core processing technology — the HP mt42 offers 10% higher clock speed2 and an additional two cores of processing power than the previous generation.
The HP mt42 is ideal for business customers in the financial, healthcare, training, services and government sectors looking for a reliable and secure mobile-cloud access point that’s packed to perform and built for virtualized environments.
“The business world is moving to the cloud more and more, creating a demand for mobile-cloud endpoints that allow users to stay productive and secure on the go,” said Jim Zafarana, vice president and general manager, Workstations and Thin Clients, HP. “The HP mt42 gives our customers that exact kind of power and flexibility, while allowing for streamlined deployments with our HP-exclusive administration software.”
HP Thin Clients offer customers a tremendous amount of variety with a large portfolio of hardware, software and services — and a strong partnership with our trusted partners, like VMware®, Citrix®, and Microsoft®. HP plans to unveil the HP mt42 at VMworld’s 2015 “Ready for Any” conference in San Francisco, CA.
Hewlett-Packard Company, together with its auxiliaries, provides products, technologies, software, solutions, and services to individual consumers and small- and medium-sized businesses (SMBs), in addition to to the government, health, and education sectors worldwide.
Shares of Centurylink Inc (NYSE:CTL), inclined 1.37% to $26.73, during its last trading session.
Centurylink Inc, declared that it will bring high-speed Internet services to about 1.2 million rural households and businesses in 33 states by accepting about $500 million a year for six years from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)’s Connect America Fund (CAF).
CenturyLink is accepting 33 CAF phase II statewide offers from the FCC to bring Internet service with speeds of at least 10 Mbps download and 1 Mbps upload to locations in FCC-designated, high-cost census blocks.
CenturyLink has decided to decline the CAF II statewide offers for the states of California, Mississippi, Oklahoma and Wyoming. According to the CAF II rules, companies must decide whether to accept CAF II funding and related service obligations for their service areas on a statewide basis. If a company declines to accept a CAF II statewide offer, that funding will be subject to a competitive bidding process prescribed by the FCC whereby eligible providers can bid to serve all or part of those areas. CenturyLink remains committed to meeting the communications needs of its customers and may elect to take part in the FCC’s bidding process and compete for CAF II support once the auction rules and requirements are finalized by the FCC.
CenturyLink, Inc. provides various communications services to residential, business, governmental, and wholesale customers in the United States. It operates through two segments, Business and Consumer.
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