Just in
- Pink Floyd wins court fight on downloads
- New OpenGL 4.0 aims to match DirectX 11
- Motorola bringing Bing to China, via Android
- Opera releases Mini browser beta for Android
- Wearing your Stickybit on your sleeve, or elsewhere
- Chasing Groupon, LivingSocial raises $25 million
- Google tries to make its RSS reader fun, too
- All CNET News headlines
Blogs and opinion
-
Josh
Lowensohn: - GDC: What's next for video game AI?
-
Matt
Rosoff: - Windows Phone 7 won't kill Zune HD
-
Larry
Magid: - Net oversight board to consider .xxx domains
-
Sony unveils Move, its
PS3 motion controllerThe motion-sensitive controller, shown off at this week's Game Developers Conference, is Sony's counter to Nintendo's Wii controller and Microsoft's Project Natal.
Read full story
OnLive to go live June 17
Roundup: GDC 2010
Hands-on: Move vs. Natal -
Meet the new CEO
at Ubuntu Linuxq&a Canonical veteran Jane Silber took over from founder Mark Shuttleworth on March 1. She has more of an operations focus, but the same patient approach to profitability.
Read full story
-
Opera releases Mini browser beta for Android
Google's phone operating system gets a new browser choice as Opera begins the upgrade process for its lower-end mobile browser.
(Posted in Deep Tech by Stephen Shankland) -
Google tries to make its RSS reader fun, too
The Net giant unveils Google Reader Play, an attempt to put an easy-to-use, entertaining interface on its feed-reader Web application
(Posted in Deep Tech by Stephen Shankland) -
Motorola bringing Bing to China, via Android
Microsoft's Bing search engine hitches a ride to China aboard handsets from Motorola.
(Posted in Wireless by Larry Dignan)
Google-China resolution coming 'soon,' says CEO -
FTC wants more input on Google-AdMob deal
The FTC is asking Google competitors to weigh in on its proposed $750 million acquisition of mobile advertising company AdMob, according to a report.
(Posted in Relevant Results by Tom Krazit) -
SXSWi: Wear Stickybit on your sleeve, or elsewhere
One of the start-ups hoping to make a splash at this year's South by Southwest Interactive Festival is Stickybits, a set of bar code stickers that you can "tag" with anything.
(Posted in The Social by Caroline McCarthy)
In geolocation wars, SXSWi is mere skirmish
SXSWi: Let the geolocation games begin -
Chasing Groupon, LivingSocial raises $25 million
Despite the fact that Groupon dominates all of its smaller competitors in the daily-deals market, rival LivingSocial is trying to draw some blood by expanding with the help of a new infusion of venture funding.
(Posted in The Social by Caroline McCarthy) -
European Parliament slams digital copyright treaty
Secret negotiations over a once-obscure draft treaty called the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement prompted an unusual rebuke from the European Parliament.
(Posted in Politics and Law by Declan McCullagh) -
Intel debuts six-core gaming chip
Chipmaker introduces its first desktop chip packing that many processing cores for gaming boxes.
(Posted in Nanotech - The Circuits Blog by Brooke Crothers) -
Report: Time for next stage of sustainable business
Activist investor group urges companies to track their use of energy and resources as closely as it does its hiring and cash flow.
(Posted in Green Tech by Reuters) -
Microsoft Outlook makes friends with MySpace
The software maker says it is ready with a version of its Outlook Social Connector that links the e-mail program with the youth-oriented social network.
(Posted in Beyond Binary by Ina Fried) -
Attention shoppers: Target offers mobile coupons
Target claims it's the first major retail chain to launch mobile coupons nationwide for eager bargain hunters.
(Posted in Signal Strength by Marguerite Reardon) -
Green tech can't shake the bubble question
Investors say we've already experienced "mini bubbles" driven by hype or subsidies. But there remains a societal push for cleaner and domestic sources of energy.
(Posted in Green Tech by Martin LaMonica) -
Twitter to block malicious links
Links in direct messages on Twitter and e-mail notifications about direct messages will be filtered in an attempt to stop phishing attacks.
(Posted in InSecurity Complex by Elinor Mills) - All CNET News headlines







