Yahoo was set to unveil on Thursday enhancements to its My Web service that lets people archive search results and share the links with each other. Now, users will be able to share interesting Web links not just with people who use Yahoo 360, but anyone, the company said.
Users will have more control over who they share their bookmarks with, according to Yahoo. For instance, they could set permissions to access pages to be only for themselves, only for a certain set of contacts, or for anyone. Users also can add a nickname and photo or image to their profile. And, Yahoo said, the homepage has been modified to allow users to better keep track of their contacts, bookmarks and messages.
Chamtech's spray-on antenna uses a nano material to provide a low-power boost to antenna range. The wireless-in-a-can product may some day bring an end to unsightly cell towers.
Whether Apple will release a new iPad next month doesn't seem to be the question as much as what day it will happen. A new rumor has it down to the day.
Tommy Jordan, the man who shot his daughter's laptop for YouTube, gets a visit from police and child protection services. Oh, and Good Morning America.
Along with green-lighting Google's buy of Motorola, the Justice Department today OKs an Apple-Microsoft-RIM partnership deal to buy Nortel patents, and Apple's plan to acquire Novell patents.
EnerG2 opens a plant to make an engineered carbon that will improve performance of energy storage devices and make storage for start-stop hybrid cars less expensive.
"Never Stop Playing" campaign for upcoming portable marks Sony's largest platform launch marketing spend, with ads to reach YouTube, Facebook, TV, and billboards in major cities.
As UC Berkeley students, the co-founders of "Back to the Roots" discovered they could grow mushrooms using recycled coffee grounds. Now their mushroom kit sells at grocery stores across the country.
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