The latest from twitter
- Another solar plant to open in Tibet
- Oracle declares Intel's Itanium dead
- Mac software VP Bertrand Serlet leaving Apple
- Study: LimeWire demise slows music piracy
- Robotic algorithms help pose life's big questions
- What does AT&T's T-Mobile merger mean to you? (FAQ)
- AT&T and T-Mobile: Wireless megamerger
- Adobe Pass to push multidevice video rights
- Firefox 4 doubles IE9's 24-hour download tally
Another solar plant to open in Tibet | Top |
Suntech, a China-based solar manufacturing giant, plans to build a 10-megawatt plant in Tibet. | |
Oracle declares Intel's Itanium dead | Top |
The software and server company says Intel itself maintains that the server chip family is "nearing the end of its life," though Intel says otherwise. | |
Mac software VP Bertrand Serlet leaving Apple | Top |
Serlet, responsible for developing Mac OS X, will be leaving the company to focus more on science and less on products. | |
Study: LimeWire demise slows music piracy | Top |
The percentage of Internet users that illegally obtained music from peer-to-peer services has fallen from a high of 16 percent in the 4th quarter of 2007 to just 9 percent in the same period in 2010. | |
Robotic algorithms help pose life's big questions | Top |
Interactive sound installation at San Francisco's Contemporary Jewish Museum rigs up camera, speakers, and robotic know-how to get visitors asking questions from the silly to the sublime. | |
What does AT&T's T-Mobile merger mean to you? (FAQ) | Top |
The $39 billion deal bodes a shakeup for the wireless industry. For consumers, the upshot is likely a mixed bag. CNET digs into the good, the bad, and the in-between. | |
AT&T and T-Mobile: Wireless megamerger | Top |
The No. 2 and No. 4 wireless carriers announce a $39 billion merger deal that would create a company with nearly 130 million subscribers, easily leapfrogging Verizon Wireless for the No. 1 spot. | |
Adobe Pass to push multidevice video rights | Top |
The Flash- and HTML-based Adobe Pass technology will usher in a "TV everywhere" era, Adobe says. It'll also give the company a bridge to places its Flash Player can't reach. | |
Firefox 4 doubles IE9's 24-hour download tally | Top |
Such 24-hour download statistics don't make or break a browser, but no matter how you slice it, 4.7 million is a really big number. | |
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