Just in
- See what's under McAfee's new interface
- Highway to hell: Exhaust is bad for your heart
- Microsoft on iTunes in 2003: 'We were smoked'
- RealNetworks, Viacom to spin off Rhapsody
- A Toyota Prius owner waits for the recall
- Brangelina kiss lands Paul Allen on TMZ
- Google co-founder Sergey Brin on Buzz
- All CNET News headlines
Blogs and opinion
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Elizabeth
Armstrong
Moore: - Highway to hell: Exhaust is bad for your heart
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Matt
Rosoff: - Microsoft on iTunes in 2003: 'We were smoked'
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Caroline
McCarthy: - Brangelina kiss lands Paul Allen on TMZ
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Larry
Magid: - Google co-founder Sergey Brin on Buzz
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Brooke
Crothers: - Intel meets its match in IBM
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Google's social side
aims for some BuzzFacebook 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.
Read full story
Live blog: Google Buzz
Podcast: Sergey Brin on Buzz
Google struggles with social skills -
Hints of a bubble
in green-tech IPOsElectric 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?
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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) -
A Toyota Prius owner waits for the recall
Last summer, CNET's Martin LaMonica wanted to see if his new Prius could hit the magic 50-mpg mark. Now he's wondering when his spiffy hybrid will get a fix for faulty brakes.
(Posted in Green Tech by Martin LaMonica) -
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) -
Ex-Sun CEO ponders penning a book
Jonathan Schwartz was a prolific blogger and now has begun tweeting. The next possibility: a book about being Sun's chief executive.
(Posted in Deep Tech by Stephen Shankland) -
Ford to debut all-electric Transit Connect van
Automaker to unveil 2011 Transit Connect Electric van at Chicago Auto Show. New model expected to go into production late 2010.
(Posted in The Car Tech blog by Lance Whitney) -
McAfee: Spammers exploiting more news stories
Spammers continue to capitalize on news headlines to try to trick people into clicking on e-mails to spread malware, says McAfee in its latest threats report.
(Posted in Security by Lance Whitney) -
Watching the birth of a gaming start-up
Stewart Butterfield and pals are back with a new company. CNET's Daniel Terdiman got exclusive, behind-the-scenes access as they built it from scratch.
(Posted in Geek Gestalt by Daniel Terdiman)
In depth with Tiny Speck's Glitch
Images: Behind the start-up -
Olympic snow still in short supply at Cypress
Organizers have now shortened training, stepped up trucking of snow, and even turned to adding dry ice to the mix to make sure the venue is ready for the start of the Games.
(Posted in Beyond Binary by Ina Fried)
Roundup: Winter Games tech -
Tweeting a book by its cover
An indie magazine in Brooklyn has launched a Twitter account that broadcasts what books people are reading on the New York subway--an attempt to show that e-readers have their voyeuristic disadvantages.
(Posted in The Social by Caroline McCarthy) -
Alleged Mario pirate agrees to pay $1.3 million
An Australian man who allegedly copied and then uploaded to the Web the New Super Mario Bros. for the Wii has agreed to pay up.
(Posted in The Digital Home by Don Reisinger) -
Apple's Aperture 3 adds face recognition, GPS
New version of Apple's professional photography software adds more than 200 new features, including the popular Faces and Places introduced in iPhoto '09.
(Posted in Apple by Jim Dalrymple) -
Microsoft, Google split over browser bug bounty
Google follows Mozilla in launching program to pay researchers who find bugs, but critics say it won't necessarily pay off.
(Posted in InSecurity Complex by Elinor Mills) -
Motorola, RIM leading, with Apple on the rise
Although Apple gets all the attention, Motorola and RIM are still the top handset and smartphone makers in the U.S.
(Posted in The Digital Home by Don Reisinger) - All CNET News headlines






