- Fri Nov 20 3:20 PM PST 2009 Reporters' Roundtable Podcast: Tech biz turkeys
In the history of tech, some decisions stand out as truly awful. This week, Rafe Needleman, Charlie Cooper, and Jim Kerstetter go over some of the worst ever.
- Wed Nov 18 12:14 PM PST 2009 Driverless Audi TTS considered for Pikes Peak run
Volkswagen and Stanford University build an autonomous Audi TTS.
- Tue Nov 17 4:30 PM PST 2009 Observations from an EMC analyst day
EMC has made VMware an integral part of its story in a dramatic departure from years past.
- Mon Nov 16 7:29 AM PST 2009 So long, and thanks for all the hits
Peter Glaskowsky wraps up the Speeds and Feeds blog with the announcement that he has been hired by Intel.
- Tue Nov 10 3:00 PM PST 2009 Google hopes to remake programming with Go
A Unix co-creator is among those behind a language Google hopes will speed computers and programming. Today, Go becomes open-source software.
- Tue Nov 10 1:15 PM PST 2009 When open source isn't (open enough)
It's very possible to be completely open-source without being completely open, but this may fade as more companies learn to use open source effectively.
- Tue Nov 10 8:30 AM PST 2009 SAP wants an open Java process (pot, meet kettle)
SAP apparently doesn't understand the irony of a proprietary software company demanding that complements like Java be open.
- Mon Nov 9 3:13 PM PST 2009 EC formally objects to Oracle buying Sun
European regulators have formally objected to Oracle's acquisition of Sun Microsystems. Oracle vows to fight the conclusion.
- Fri Nov 6 6:00 AM PST 2009 Intel's James Reinders on parallelism - Part 2
In Part 2 of my discussion with Intel's Director of Marketing and Business for the company's Software Development Products, we move on to cloud computing, functional and dynamic languages, and what needs to happen with computer science education.
- Thu Nov 5 4:00 AM PST 2009 Google tries its own take on customer service
Not surprisingly, the search giant thinks automation and innovation are important. But as CEO Eric Schmidt says, everyone wants to wring a neck when things go wrong.




