The latest from twitter
- The white iPhone: Does size matter?
- Sony CEO Stringer apologizes for PlayStation breach
- Exclusive: Third attack against Sony planned
- Demand Media results beat the Street
- Super Mario, Doom II, WoW in Smithsonian show
- Five lazy ways to find great live music
- Chat up a live parrot on Facebook
- Best Buy hit with another e-mail breach
- At SRI, bomb-disabling robots go mini (photos)
- Fellowup: The grandma-approved social service you should use
- SRI shows the benefits of shrinking tech
- Why an iMac now is in the cards for me
- Why potential LastPass data breach isn't last straw
- FDA OKs mammogram that halves radiation exposure
- Microsoft to issue critical Windows patch next week
- Microsoft: Google Apps have 'hidden costs'
- Photos: Pictures that lie
- N.Y. attorney general subpoenas Sony
- PSN breach exposes records of millions (roundup)
- SIM card thief sentenced to hard time
| The white iPhone: Does size matter? | Top |
| Of course, after the rumors, everyone wants to know if the long-awaited white iPhone 4 really is thicker. That's why CNET took the handset to experts to find out. | |
| Sony CEO Stringer apologizes for PlayStation breach | Top |
| Stringer offers explanation for Sony's slow response, as meanwhile company offers year of free ID-theft monitoring to U.S. customers who were registered with PlayStation Network and Qriocity prior cyberattack. | |
| Exclusive: Third attack against Sony planned | Top |
| A source tells CNET a third major cyberattack is planned on Sony this weekend and could lead to the release of information copied from the company's servers. | |
| Demand Media results beat the Street | Top |
| Online content company reports decent results, but many people are more interested in its efforts to improve the quality of its content. The company is promising to clean up its content act. | |
| Super Mario, Doom II, WoW in Smithsonian show | Top |
| The public voted to include many predictable titles in the 2012 exhibition of 40 years of gaming, but sports and simulators were left out. | |
| Five lazy ways to find great live music | Top |
| CNET's Donald Bell evaluates five Web sites that provide personalized local concert recommendations based on your iTunes, Facebook, Last.fm, Slacker, or Pandora listening habits. | |
| Chat up a live parrot on Facebook | Top |
| Not getting enough Facebook action? No problem. Gigaset's chatty parrot will be happy to blather with you live on the site to promote the company's L410 cordless speakerphone clip. Just don't ask him about his personal life. | |
| Best Buy hit with another e-mail breach | Top |
| Another group of customer e-mail addresses were stolen through a third-party vendor used by the consumer electronics chain. | |
| At SRI, bomb-disabling robots go mini (photos) | Top |
| Road Trip at Home: At SRI International, miniaturization is key, including remote robots for disarming bombs, and tiny satellites. | |
| Fellowup: The grandma-approved social service you should use | Top |
| Web service keeps up with your contacts, tells you when you should send them congrats and condolences. | |
| SRI shows the benefits of shrinking tech | Top |
| Road Trip at Home: The technology R&D institution is applying Moore's Law to robots that disarm bombs remotely and tiny satellites that create a mesh network in the sky. | |
| Why an iMac now is in the cards for me | Top |
| Thunderbolt ports and new CPUs are nice in the new iMacs, but it's an external monitor feature that has CNET's Stephen Shankland considering one. Too bad about the USB 3, though. | |
| Why potential LastPass data breach isn't last straw | Top |
| Online password vault and browser extension LastPass announced that it may well have suffered a security breach of its own yesterday. Is it time to find another password protector? | |
| FDA OKs mammogram that halves radiation exposure | Top |
| Swedish company Sectra's digital mammography system uses "photon counting" tech to reduce the radiation dose by half of what's found in other digital or film-based systems. | |
| Microsoft to issue critical Windows patch next week | Top |
| A light Patch Tuesday gives Microsoft a bit of a breather after last month's 17 bulletins. But computer users still need to take note. | |
| Microsoft: Google Apps have 'hidden costs' | Top |
| Software giant takes another slap at Google Apps, saying that enterprise adopters run into a variety of unforeseen costs that amount to a "Google tax." | |
| Photos: Pictures that lie | Top |
| Photograph alteration has a long, seedy history. Digital technology, however, is taking the art to new levels. | |
| N.Y. attorney general subpoenas Sony | Top |
| Eric Schneiderman requests more details on Sony's security methods in the wake of the breach of 100 million of its customers' personal information. | |
| PSN breach exposes records of millions (roundup) | Top |
| Belatedly after taking its PlayStation Network offline, Sony finally explains it did so because of security breach that exposed personal information for potentially more than 75 million of its users. | |
| SIM card thief sentenced to hard time | Top |
| Australian woman reportedly imprisoned after pleading guilty to stealing a SIM card and racking up close to $200,000 in data charges. | |
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