April 12, 2001 11:15 AM PDT
SuSE sends Linux to school
Subsidizing educational computing efforts is popular among companies that hope today's students will become tomorrow's experts and corporate computer buyers.
April 12, 2001 11:15 AM PDT
Subsidizing educational computing efforts is popular among companies that hope today's students will become tomorrow's experts and corporate computer buyers.
November 23, 2009 1:51 PM PST
November 23, 2009 1:49 PM PST
November 23, 2009 1:35 PM PST
Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Related quotes
Digital Media
IBM taps into group language translationIBM employees are testing n.Fluent, software that can instantly translate documents between English and 11 other languages.
Gallery
Top-rated reviews of the week (photos)
The Open Road
The 'wisdom of crowds' loses steamThe gurus said that the community would change the way the industry develops and sells software. The gurus were wrong.
Beyond Binary
Windows 8 in 2012?It's not clear what Microsoft's desktop plans are, but the Windows Server team included slides at PDC suggesting a new major release coming around 2012.
Video
Google Chrome OS demonstration
Digital Media
Google picks up ad company TeracentSearch giant enters into an agreement to acquire the online ad-optimization for an undisclosed sum. The deal is expected to be completed by the end of the quarter.
Video
Google Chrome OS unveiling
The Social
LinkedIn's platform loosens upThe professional networking site now lets developers access its API to import LinkedIn features into external sites.
The Space Shot
Atlantis astronaut's wife gives birth 220 miles belowAstronaut Randy Bresnik, in orbit on a space station supply mission, celebrated the birth of his daughter 220 miles below in Houston, saying "momma and baby are doing very well."
Gallery
Home energy displays show you the juice (photos)
Crave
Technology that's totally impossibleSimple gadgets like TVs and mice leave us unperturbed. But there are some things that are just beyond reasoning. We've ranked the most impossible technologies on the planet in order of their level of impossibility.
Green Tech
Time short to agree on smart-grid standardsThe next phase of smart-grid standards is due to start next year but vendors pushing their own home networking options threatens to slow the process, says a NIST official.