Just in
- TomTom $99 GPS app heads to iPhone
- Sony Ericsson taps Nordberg as next president
- OpenGoo is no competition for Google Docs
- How 10 digits will end privacy as we know it
- Twitter going after buy-more-followers services?
- Huffington Post, Facebook sync up on social news
- Preview of Jolicloud: The social Netbook OS
- All CNET News headlines
Blogs and opinion
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Josh
Lowensohn: - Preview of Jolicloud: The social Netbook OS
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Rafe
Needleman: - Starbucks: Stay as long as you want
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Dave
Rosenberg: - Twitter needs to die for microblogging to live
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How to finance
a green-tech revolutionVenture-backed tech companies create lots of buzz, but many companies that create green jobs rely on different--and troubled--funding sources.
Read full story -
Modern power moms flock to smartphones
Busy, multitasking mothers are turning to sophisticated devices to keep organized and stay connected.
Read full story
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MySpace to acquire iLike?
Though it rose to fame thanks to an app on Facebook, TechCrunch reports that iLike is about to be sold to onetime rival MySpace.
(Posted in The Social by Caroline McCarthy)
• iLike's download store debuts -
Final chapter coming in HP spying scandal
Was Bryan Wagner just a patsy? The low-level investigator who helped HP spy on journalists is due to be sentenced for identity theft, but the planners of the espionage will apparently get off.
(Posted in Digital Media by Greg Sandoval) -
TomTom $99 GPS app heads to iPhone
The latest entry into iPhone land navigation features IQ Routes, which taps into the actual experiences of other TomTom drivers to determine the fastest route.
(Posted in Apple by Lance Whitney) -
Sony Ericsson taps next president
Bert Nordberg, who's been heading the handset maker's R&D efforts in Silicon Valley, will start the executive transition as co-president in September.
(Posted in Wireless by David Meyer) -
Huffington Post, Facebook sync up on social news
In a rare official partnership for the social network, Facebook Connect comes to the Huffington Post to fuel its new HuffPost Social News service.
(Posted in The Social by Caroline McCarthy) -
Qtrax faces more financial, legal problems
First Oracle and now two other vendors are suing the online music start-up, charging it with unpaid bills. Qtrax also appears to be behind payments to at least one label.
(Posted in Digital Media by Greg Sandoval) -
Twitter going after buy-more-followers services?
One company that sells followers, uSocial, claims that Twitter is trying to shut it down over allegations of spam.
(Posted in The Social by Caroline McCarthy)
• Study: Twitter is 40 percent 'pointless babble' -
What would be inside an Apple tablet
It's, at the very least, an interesting exercise to speculate on what would be inside an Apple tablet.
(Posted in Nanotech - The Circuits Blog by Brooke Crothers) -
Borders survey presumes a future 'iPAD' e-reader
Question in survey asks customers about e-readers and whether they plan to buy one of Apple's mystery "iPAD" large-screen reading devices.
(Posted in Apple by Michelle Meyers) -
The rise of the $299 Wal-Mart laptop
First Acer, then Hewlett-Packard, now Toshiba. The $299 laptop is a force to be reckoned with.
(Posted in Nanotech - The Circuits Blog by Brooke Crothers) -
Evoking the romance of space travel, 1940s style
The Raygun Gothic Rocketship is a retro space ship "built" in 1944. In reality, it is one of the biggest art projects for the forthcoming Burning Man festival.
(Posted in Geek Gestalt by Daniel Terdiman)
• Photos: Raygun Gothic Rocketship -
The corporate lab as ringmaster
Big research and development laboratories are reaching out to smaller, more varied groups of researchers.
(From The New York Times) -
Researchers prove kernel is secure
An Australian research organization says it has absolute mathematical proof of the security of an operating system core.
(Posted in Security by Tom Espiner) - All CNET News headlines








