Just in
Blogs and opinion
-
Elinor
Mills: - Hacker 'Mudge' gets DARPA job
-
Stephen
Shankland: - Facebook, AOL link instant messaging
-
Rafe
Needleman: - Rafe and Josh debate Google's Buzz
-
Elizabeth
Armstrong
Moore: - Microsoft looks at health potential of Xbox, apps
-
David
Carnoy: - What would you pay for an e-book?
-
Hacker 'Mudge'
snags DARPA jobA computer security expert who ran one of the early hacker spaces before launching several security start-ups has been hired as a program manager at the Defense Department's research agency for military technology.
Read full story -
The back story on Glitch's back stories
It took Tiny Speck--which revealed its efforts Tuesday--many months to agree upon the official back story for its new game.
Read full story
Images: Glitch's aesthetics
A gaming start-up's birth pangs
In depth with Tiny Speck's Glitch
-
Sprint sheds fewer customers in fourth quarter
A recovery is slowly taking shape as Sprint Nextel narrows its losses and loses few subscribers--as rivals gain wireless customers.
(Posted in Signal Strength by Marguerite Reardon) -
PayPal explains Indian service suspension
Country's new licensing rules are behind the suspension, the company says, adding that it may go on for at least a few months.
(Posted in Digital Media by Liau Yun Qing) -
Shuttle Endeavour docks with space station
The shuttle, carrying a 15-ton habitation module and a multi-window observation deck, joins up with the International Space Station in a picture-perfect rendezvous.
(Posted in The Space Shot by William Harwood) -
Google's social side hopes to catch some Buzz
Facebook and Twitter are the darlings of the social-media world, not Google--which hopes to change that with Buzz, betting it can organize your online social life.
(Posted in Relevant Results by Tom Krazit)
Debating Google's Buzz
Live blog: Google Buzz
Podcast: Sergey Brin on Buzz
Google struggles with social skills -
A Toyota Prius owner waits for the recall
Last summer, CNET's Martin LaMonica wanted to see if his spiffy new hybrid could hit the magic 50 mpg mark. Now he's wondering when it will get a fix for faulty brakes.
(Posted in Green Tech by Martin LaMonica)
Toyota adds 2010 Prius to global recall list -
Facebook, AOL link instant messaging
Good news: AIM can be used to chat with Facebook pals. Bad news: Instant messaging still has more barriers than openness.
(Posted in Deep Tech by Stephen Shankland) -
YouTube's traffic data for music questioned
The number of visitors to Warner Music Group's YouTube videos doubled in January and outpaced the much larger Vevo. But those numbers are now being questioned.
(Posted in Media Maverick by Greg Sandoval) -
RealNetworks, Viacom to spin off Rhapsody
Real and Viacom say the subscription music service will be more nimble as a standalone company. The move means that Real is satisfied to give up control.
(Posted in Media Maverick by Greg Sandoval) -
Microsoft patches 26 Windows, Office holes
Patch Tuesday update addresses vulnerabilities in DirectShow, SMB Protocol, ActiveX, Windows Shell Handler, and 32-bit Windows.
(Posted in InSecurity Complex by Elinor Mills)
Microsoft, Google split over browser bug bounty -
Micron to buy Numonyx for $1.27 billion
One of the world's largest flash memory makers agrees to be acquired by Micron Technology in a deal worth approximately $1.27 billion.
(Posted in Nanotech - The Circuits Blog by Brooke Crothers) -
Hints of a bubble in green-tech IPOs
Electric car maker Tesla, solar company Solyndra, and others have plans for public offerings. Is it too much too soon or will there be more start-up acquisitions?
(Posted in Green Tech by Martin LaMonica) -
Microsoft looks at health potential of Xbox, apps
Software giant is researching how gadgets like the Xbox and technologies like accelerometers in cell phones could improve personal health, and health care in general.
(Posted in Health Tech by Elizabeth Armstrong Moore) -
Intel taps student's robot for processor demo
University of Arizona engineering student creates a six-legged Atom-powered bot that can "learn" to walk on its own, and Intel brings it along on the company road show.
(Posted in Crave by Leslie Katz) - All CNET News headlines









