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- Sub DiggerPlus simplifies your Digg friend activity
- Scattered reports of iPhone OS 3.0 update problems
- Intel spells out Core i3, i5, i7 branding
- iPhone 3G S full review: Mostly, it delivers
- Data Domain sued over NetApp deal
- IBM investing $100 million in mobile research
- Palm responds to Apple's warning
- All CNET News headlines
Blogs and opinion
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Scott
Stein: - Augmented reality: iPhone 3G S killer app?
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Lowensohn: - How well do Netbooks work with Web apps?
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Shankland: - Will new browsers really upgrade the Web?
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Chris
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More blogs from CNET
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Bag dryer saves bucks on lunchtime disposables
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Battle of the suspiciously similar superhero games: Infamous vs. Prototype
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Buzz Out Loud 999: Gosh darnit to heck, AT&T!
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Intel spells out Core i3, i5, i7 branding
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XM Satellite Radio available as factory-equipped option on new Toyota and Lexus models
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CNET Review:
iPhone 3G SIt doesn't offer quite the same leap that the iPhone 3G offered over the first model, but the latest Apple handset still is a compelling upgrade for some users.
Read full story
• Full coverage: Apple iPhone
• iPhone OS 3.0 now available -
Do Netbooks play well with Web apps?
We give some favorite apps a go on a popular consumer Netbook from Dell to see if the devices live up to the "Net" part of their name.
Read full story
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Intel spells out Core i3, i5, i7 branding
The branding gets simplified into entry-level, midlevel, and high-level segments. Plus, how that fits in with the Lynnfield, Clarksfield, Arrandale, and Clarkdale processors.
(Posted in Nanotech - The Circuits Blog by Brooke Crothers) -
Microsoft posts teaser for Office 2010
The software maker posts a movie trailer-like video for the next version of Office as well as a "behind the scenes" interview that pokes fun at recent links.
(Posted in Beyond Binary by Ina Fried) -
IBM investing $100 million in mobile research
With high consumer and business use of mobile devices, Big Blue says it will spend the money over next five years to improve and advance on-the-go communications.
(Posted in Wireless by Lance Whitney) -
Change: Apple stores to open early Friday
Company stores will open at 7 a.m.--an hour earlier than previously announced--to accommodate the first day of iPhone 3G S sales.
(Posted in Apple by Erica Ogg) -
Microsoft's Bing has a second good week
ComScore reports that Bing continued to tick up in market share in the past week and is now up about 3 percentage points from where Microsoft was pre-Bing.
(Posted in Beyond Binary by Ina Fried) -
State Dept. comments on 'talks' with Twitter
A requested delay in the site's scheduled downtime was solely to keep an important communication channel alive for Iranian citizens, the State Department says.
(Posted in The Social by Caroline McCarthy) -
Data Domain sued over NetApp deal
Two law firms claim Data Domain board may not have followed proper procedure by accepting NetApp offer and rejecting competing EMC bid.
(Posted in Business Tech by Lance Whitney) -
Will new browsers really upgrade the Web?
The latest browsers sport many hot new features. But the avant-garde must reckon with inconsistent standards, lagging IE, and slow adoption.
(Posted in Webware by Stephen Shankland) -
Leap Wireless gets its day in the sun
q&a The wireless company is riding a new wave of interest in the prepaid cell phone market and banking on customers who don't like smartphone costs.
(Posted in Wireless by Marguerite Reardon) -
E-mail surveillance renews concerns in Congress
National Security Agency's intercepts of Americans' phone calls and e-mail messages are broader than previously acknowledged, officials say.
(From The New York Times) -
Date set for NASA hacker hearing in U.K.
Britain's high court will consider next month whether self-confessed hacker Gary McKinnon should be tried in the U.K., instead of the U.S., in a case that dates back to 2001.
(Posted in Security by Tom Espiner) -
Google considers request to boost privacy
After more than three dozen security experts ask Google to offer encryption by default for Gmail and other apps, Google says it is considering doing just that if the apps don't slow down too much as a result.
(Posted in Security by Elinor Mills) -
MySpace slashes head count by 30 percent
Once the leader in social networking, the News Corp. division has announced a "return to start-up culture" that involves cutting nearly a third of its U.S. staff.
(Posted in The Social by Caroline McCarthy) - All CNET News headlines