The latest from twitter
- IBM leaps two hurdles for next-gen memory
- iFixit teardown confirms active Thunderbolt cable
- Sergey Brin fans test Google+ limits
- The next big thing: Co-opting hackers
- Sprint VP on machines talking to machines (podcast)
- Macintosh designer linked to Google+ user interface
- Cisco takes the tablet to work
- This Day in Tech: Pope is tweeting with an iPad; MySpace sells for $35 million
- Google+: It's friending, with benefits (images)
- Intel exec's bizarre memo about LeBron and Miami
- HP: Number of mobile apps doesn't matter
- Android app offers Wi-Fi hacking of Facebook accounts
- Four years of the iPhone
- The next big thing: Co-opting hackers
- A hands-on look at Google+, using Google+
- Hackers shut down Al Qaeda Net communications
- World of Warcraft now free for 20 levels
- Justin Timberlake an investor in MySpace buy
- AMD loses sizable market share to Intel in quarter
- Next thing in wind energy: Stealth turbines
IBM leaps two hurdles for next-gen memory | Top |
Big Blue finds a way to double the data that a cell of phase-change memory can store for a long time. It expects the new memory technology in servers in 2016. | |
iFixit teardown confirms active Thunderbolt cable | Top |
iFixit takes apart Apple's new Thunderbolt cable and confirms it does include active circuits to work with the high-bandwidth Thunderbolt technology. | |
Sergey Brin fans test Google+ limits | Top |
Brin jumps on a Google+ Hangout video conference, triggering a rush of members of the social network to try to join in. Most failed. | |
The next big thing: Co-opting hackers | Top |
Facebook has hired iPhone and Sony PS3 hacker "Geohot," but it's not the only company to bring a well-known hacker into the corporate fold. | |
Sprint VP on machines talking to machines (podcast) | Top |
Sprint Vice President Wayne Ward tells Larry Magid about his company's efforts to use its cellular data networks to let machines exchange data with other machines. | |
Macintosh designer linked to Google+ user interface | Top |
Google+ circles, swooshes, and fadeaway menus can be attributed, in part, to one of the original designers of the Macintosh software, Andy Hertzfeld. | |
Cisco takes the tablet to work | Top |
Cisco Systems sees big opportunity for its new tablet PC that focuses exclusively on business users. | |
This Day in Tech: Pope is tweeting with an iPad; MySpace sells for $35 million | Top |
Too busy to keep up with the tech news? Here are some of the more interesting stories from CNET for Wednesday, June 29. | |
Google+: It's friending, with benefits (images) | Top |
Google gives social a boost with video chats and groups. Take a visual tour of the new social network with these screenshots. | |
Intel exec's bizarre memo about LeBron and Miami | Top |
In a leaked memo, an Intel executive ponders the lessons to be learned from the Miami Heat's Greek tragedy of an NBA season. The lessons might seem, to some, a little banal. | |
HP: Number of mobile apps doesn't matter | Top |
HP is starting far behind Apple and Google in recruiting developers for its WebOS mobile ecosystem. So the pitch it's using for recruiting developers is where WebOS is going, not where it's at right now. | |
Android app offers Wi-Fi hacking of Facebook accounts | Top |
Video demo shows how easy it is to use a new Android app to hijack Facebook accounts on Wi-Fi networks. | |
Four years of the iPhone | Top |
As we observe the fourth birthday of the iPhone, CNET takes a look back at all the models, their highs and lows, and how they changed the cell phone industry. | |
The next big thing: Co-opting hackers | Top |
Facebook becomes the latest tech company to hire a notorious hacker - but it's not the only one. | |
A hands-on look at Google+, using Google+ | Top |
The CNET News staff takes a look at Google's new social-networking site. We like how Circles lets users segment friends, but we think the way the system suggests connections is challenging. | |
Hackers shut down Al Qaeda Net communications | Top |
Unknown hackers manage to temporarily knock Al Qaeda's communications offline in 'well coordinated' attack, NBC News reports. | |
World of Warcraft now free for 20 levels | Top |
The highly addictive online role-playing game replaces its 14-day trial period with a level-capped trial system. New patch, Rage of the Firelands, also goes live. | |
Justin Timberlake an investor in MySpace buy | Top |
MySpace's new owners say they'll divulge the details of where they're taking the social network a little later this year. In the meantime, they're putting investor and pop star Justin Timberlake in charge. | |
AMD loses sizable market share to Intel in quarter | Top |
Advanced Micro Devices lost a chunk of market share to Intel in the first quarter, despite the fact that Intel had to deal with a major chip glitch, according to a report from IHS iSuppli. | |
Next thing in wind energy: Stealth turbines | Top |
Wind turbines that do not interfere with radar systems used by aircraft have been tested successfully and are close to becoming commercially viable, according to turbine maker Vestas. | |
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