The latest from twitter
- Opera Next makes it easier to get 'dev'
- Marketers rethinking social media
- How to avoid sharing personal info online
- News agencies don't race Twitter on bin Laden
- Mobli: The latest of the video Twitter services
- Mayo Clinic: Man survives 96 minutes without pulse
- Republican tweet govt.'s first word of bin Laden
- Bin Laden's death and the Web response (roundup)
- Bin Laden's compound, seen from space (photos)
- 1st Rex commercial bionic legs go to Paralympian
- Analysts: Intel seeks chip business at Apple
- Gazelle sells original iPads on new Web store
- How mobile tracking can benefit consumers
- Sony Online Entertainment data may have been stolen
- E Ink: No successor to Pearl this year
- How tweets helped document Bin Laden's demise
- AT&T makes broadband data caps official
- Hackers working on Safari-based app installer
- Planetary app turns music library into galactic art (Q&A)
- Bin Laden, Twitter, and the frenzy of noise
| Opera Next makes it easier to get 'dev' | Top |
| Opera releases the alpha version of its next browser, Opera 11.50, improving its much-copied Speed Dial feature and announcing a more streamlined process for automatically downloading Opera's in-development builds. | |
| Marketers rethinking social media | Top |
| A new survey shows that marketers' expectations of social media have come back down to earth. | |
| How to avoid sharing personal info online | Top |
| The recent breach of Sony's PlayStation Network shows the value of supplying Web sites with disposable e-mail addresses, temporary credit card numbers, and flat-out bogus private data. | |
| News agencies don't race Twitter on bin Laden | Top |
| Twitter was where news of Osama bin Laden's death supposedly appeared, but the service was also filled with false reports. CNN exec says beating Twitter is far less important than filing accurate stories. | |
| Mobli: The latest of the video Twitter services | Top |
| When will the onslaught of nanoblog video services end? Probably when Facebook or Twitter build the function into their services... | |
| Mayo Clinic: Man survives 96 minutes without pulse | Top |
| In what they say may be a first, researchers at the Mayo Clinic helped keep a man with no pulse alive--and healthy--for 96 minutes using continuous chest compressions, 12 defibrillator shocks, and capnography. | |
| Republican tweet govt.'s first word of bin Laden | Top |
| First U.S. government report of Osama bin Laden's demise came from Tea Party Republican, not the White House. | |
| Bin Laden's death and the Web response (roundup) | Top |
| News that U.S. special forces had killed al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden traveled fast via Twitter and other Web outlets. | |
| Bin Laden's compound, seen from space (photos) | Top |
| DigitalGlobe and GeoEye, two companies competing to provide customers with satellite imagery, offered views of the Pakistani compound where Osama bin Laden was killed. | |
| 1st Rex commercial bionic legs go to Paralympian | Top |
| New Zealand's Rex Bionics marks a milestone, selling its first commercial robotic exoskeleton to a paralyzed athlete who hasn't walked for three decades. | |
| Analysts: Intel seeks chip business at Apple | Top |
| Industry watchers say Intel is trying to drum up business at Apple. If realized over the next few years, Intel would become a world-class contract chip manufacturer. | |
| Gazelle sells original iPads on new Web store | Top |
| Beginning with the original iPad as a test case, gadget trade-in service Gazelle is now selling on its own Web store devices that it's bought from customers. | |
| How mobile tracking can benefit consumers | Top |
| Apple, Google, and Microsoft have recently all come under scrutiny for how they've handled their users' location information on their mobile devices. CNET's Kara Tsuboi reports on why that data is so valuable, and even beneficial to the consumer, when used with consent. | |
| Sony Online Entertainment data may have been stolen | Top |
| Following PlayStation Network news, Sony takes down online entertainment service and warns even more customers that their data may have been exposed in the intrusion into their systems two weeks ago. | |
| E Ink: No successor to Pearl this year | Top |
| What's in store for e-ink this year? Not much--but expect improvements nevertheless. | |
| How tweets helped document Bin Laden's demise | Top |
| An informal CNET poll finds almost half of its readers learned of Osama bin Laden's death online through social media sites like Twitter and Facebook or news Web sites. CNET's Kara Tsuboi reports. | |
| AT&T makes broadband data caps official | Top |
| AT&T has officially started enforcing its data caps on wired broadband services for DSL and U-Verse customers. | |
| Hackers working on Safari-based app installer | Top |
| A tool in the works called Lima lets iOS users browse and install apps and other system tweaks through Safari, completely bypassing Apple's App Store and third-party app installers. | |
| Planetary app turns music library into galactic art (Q&A) | Top |
| 45 Minutes on IM: Bloom President Ben Cerveny sits down with CNET to talk about how his new company's approach to data visualization could forever change the way people interact with information. | |
| Bin Laden, Twitter, and the frenzy of noise | Top |
| There were unparalleled levels of raw emotion pouring through Twitter when it was announced that terror leader Osama bin Laden had been killed. There was also noise and confusion like never before. | |
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