Hey, I love a blue screen of death as much as anyone, but I wouldn’t drive to the mall just to see one. Full story...
Good news for iPad peripheral peddlers: high demand for some Apple designed accessories for the device appears to have exhausted early supplies.
Xobni Mobile for BlackBerry app compiles contact information on the BlackBerry for anyone you've emailed--regardless of whether or not you saved their information in your address book.
Looks like the CPU refresh cycle is officially underway. This morning, Intel formally launched its new six-core "Westmere EP" Xeon processors, and according to Intel, vendors like Dell, IBM and Hewlett-Packard are already gobbling them up.
The Web video business is still trying to get its hands around the right way to use ads. But the easiest sell is the oldest one: Integrating the advertiser right into the clip, like this series of Starbucks-sponsored Onion videos.
A group of Google's partners in China have sent an impassioned plea to the Internet giant, saying their businesses are in jeopardy if Google closes its Chinese search engine and demanding to know how they will be compensated.
A start-up can be built anywhere--even at the back of a bus, near the bathroom.
A group of 25 entrepreneurs took a bus last week from San Francisco to Austin, Texas, with a zany plan--to break up into groups and build start-ups in 48 hours to pitch to investors at South By Southwest, the tech and music showcase.
Here’s something that might give a bit of juice to the evidently poor early sales of Google’s Nexus One smartphone: Availability on AT&T in the U.
If Google’s talks with the Chinese government end at an impasse and the company shutters Google.cn and ramps down its operations in the country, it best do so properly and according to law.
Michael Lewis on the Kindle, 2007: "The coolest thing, by far, is that you think of a book you'd like to read, someone tells you about a book you'd like to read, and in 30 seconds, it's on your screen, all of it.
A year from now, eBay shares could be worth as much as $35 a share, Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster asserts in a research note this morning.