February 23, 1998 5:15 PM PST
Short Take: HTML Guild joins W3C
February 23, 1998 5:15 PM PST
March 20, 2010 11:58 AM PDT
March 20, 2010 8:27 AM PDT
March 20, 2010 6:00 AM PDT
Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Related quotes
Health Tech
Trial of human retinal implants quite successfulGerman company Retinal Implant unveils the results of its first human clinical trial, which involved retinal implants of 11 patients since 2005.
Gallery
At long last, the Plastiki sets sail (photos)
Technically Incorrect
iPad ad goes viralApple's launch ad for its "magical and revolutionary" product succeeds in attracting 2.4 million views online, making it the second-most-watched online ad.
Beyond Binary
Microsoft pulls Bing iPhone app outside U.S.Redmond says the application was always meant to be only for the United States and that it is in the process of pulling the app from international iTunes stores.
Video
Premiere of 'Hubble 3D'
Crave
Message from the grave, straight to your cell phoneRosettaStone products use near-field communication to stream personal information, photos, and even messages from the deceased lying beneath to any mobile device.
Video
What to expect from CTIA 2010
The Social
Nestle mess shows sticky side of Facebook pagesFood company's Facebook fan page became a lesson in how not to deal with social-media backlash this week, when a company rep snapped back at environmentally motivated critics.
Technically Incorrect
Cloak of invisibility becomes more foreseeableScientists in Germany successfully cloak a bump in a layer of gold. The new cloaking device, made of seemingly light-bending crystals, even works in three dimensions.
Gallery
Top-rated reviews of the week (photos)
Technically Incorrect
Teen gets carpal tunnel from texting, wants iPhoneA 16-year-old is diagnosed with carpal tunnel syndrome apparently brought on by her 100-texts-a-day habit. She reportedly feels an iPhone might be the only cure.
Green Tech
Survey: Consumers intrigued by electric carsConsumers Reports finds about one quarter of adults will consider a plug-in when shopping for new cars, even though there are few available.