- Dell 4Q profit dives, recession stunts tech spend (AP)
- Newsday to charge for website, online cable service (Reuters)
- Dell 4Q profit dives, recession stunts tech spend (AP)
- Yahoo CEO reorganizes company (Reuters)
- DoCoMo halts BlackBerry Bold sales due to overheating (Reuters)
- Facebook to let users give input on policies (AP)
- Microsoft Expands Work With Hospitals in Asia (PC World)
- Technology promises speedier San Diego crossing (AP)
- Sidekicks might top a dubious category: theft (AP)
- Will Sony's Next PSP Lose the UMD Drive? (PC World)
- Newsday might end free Web access for some (AP)
- Depeche Mode debuts season-pass model on iTunes (Reuters)
- Bolivia pins hopes on lithium, electric vehicles (AP)
- Welcome to LinuxLink (PC World)
- China's Wen makes Internet debut (AFP)
- iPhone Game Roundup: ExZeus, Shooter, Tamagotchi (Macworld.com)
- CBS Makes Television Shows Available on iPhone (NewsFactor)
- Telekom Austria CEO to step down to head VimpelCom (Reuters)
- Study: Poor drive growth in global cell phone use (AP)
- Court hears appeal in freelancers case (AP)
- Chief of key Internet oversight body is leaving (AP)
- Free but fickle, digital TV reception eludes some (AP)
- Intel outsourcing some Atom manufacturing to TSMC (AP)
- TiVo's fourth-quarter loss narrows on lower costs (AP)
- Flickr lets all users upload video snippets (AFP)
- Microsoft testing new search service internally (Reuters)
- Sony Unwraps New Connected HDTVs (PC World)
- First YouTube Symphony Orchestra picked (AP)
- Apple touts affordability with new desktop line (AP)
- Former HP leader diagnosed with cancer (AP)
- Google pays seven-figure bonuses to 4 top execs (AP)
- Oodle revamps Facebook Marketplace (AP)
- Stalkers turn to cell phones to 'textually harass' (AP)
- DirecTV open to subscriber-only online shows (AP)
- Linux Foundation moves on training (InfoWorld)
- Amazon unveils Kindle Application for iPhone (AP)
- Google CEO wishes Microsoft, Yahoo! luck on search (AFP)
- Chinese Job Sites Suffer as Global Crisis Slows Hiring (PC World)
- EU ends full-time monitoring of Microsoft (AP)
- Microsoft testing new Internet search engine Kumo (AFP)
- Catholics are urged to give up texting for Lent (AP)
- Afghan tech boom: Mullah embraces iPhone (AP)
- Spain PM an Internet star after F word slip-up (Reuters)
- Review: Kindle e-book reader comes to the iPhone (AP)
- Kindle for iPhone may benefit Amazon, analysts say (AP)
- Facebook: Taking a cue from Twitter in sharing? (AP)
- US Agencies Face Broadband Stimulus Challenges (PC World)
- YouTube topped 100 million US viewer mark in January: comScore (AFP)
- Google letting cash pile up: CEO (Reuters)
- Radio seeks to clear signal in trying times (Reuters)
- TV converter box coupons start flowing again (AP)
- Cook County sheriff sues Craigslist over sex ads (AP)
- Gore group backs creation of .eco domain (AFP)
- For laid off workers, so hard to e-mail goodbye (AP)
- YouTube, Universal mull video venture: reports (AFP)
- Mahalo vouches for criminal hacker in its midst (AFP)
- Seattle paper may shift to online-only: reports (Reuters)
- Live coverage boosts access to federal courtrooms (AP)
- Hearst makes offers to staff for online-only P-I (AP)
- Internet growing weapon in Asian radicalization (Reuters)
- HK starlet contemplated suicide over sex photos: report (AFP)
- Stock slump could end up enriching Google workers (AP)
- IT Professional Gets Four Years for Stealing with Botnets (NewsFactor)
- Microsoft to let PC users turn off IE Web browser (AP)
- Windows 7's IE 'Off' Switch: What Took So Long? (PC World)
- Microsoft's new system easier for browser switch (Reuters)
- Facebook courting Twitter lovers (AFP)
- Can Web site offer homeless man hope? (AP)
- Indian election goes online (AFP)
- Hitachi will plead guilty to conspiring to fix prices on LCD panels (AP)
- Grandpa is ... browsing your Facebook page (AP)
- YouTube blocks UK users from watching music videos (AP)
- IBM chief's 2008 pay valued at nearly $21M (AP)
- ADrive offers online backup client for Mac via Adobe AIR (Macworld.com)
- MIT professor wins $250,000 Turing Award (AP)
- Disney launches new fan website (AFP)
- Disney's new racing video game at core of big bet (AP)
- Google reprices 7.6 million employee stock options (AP)
- Pearson partners with language website Livemocha (Reuters)
- Apple launches smaller, 4-gigabyte iPod shuffle (AP)
- Microsoft vows openness for mobile app store (AP)
- Review: Bookmark for public radio saves your place (AP)
- ATT plans to add 30 new cell sites in Oklahoma (AP)
- Space Station video now live on Internet — mostly (AP)
- Google to target ads based on Web surfing habits (AP)
- Dell cuts workers in NC, worldwide, details scarce (AP)
- Google launches targeted advertising system (AFP)
- EBay's PayPal envisions doubling in size by 2011 (AP)
- Facebook begins rolling out revamped home page (AFP)
- Google preparing to steer more telephone traffic (AP)
- Online networking more popular than email (Reuters)
- Pa. settles with Miley Cyrus fan club Web site (AP)
- Obama's CIO: Gov't data can drive innovation (AP)
- Sirius XM Radio planning to stream to iPhone, iPod (AP)
- Google's openness intensifies focus on e-mail woes (AP)
- Fleeing customers haunt phone co. in New England (AP)
- New Google program turns voicemail into email (AFP)
- AOL taps Google executive Armstrong as CEO (AP)
- Time Warner names Google's Armstrong as AOL chief (Reuters)
- IBM launches water-management services operation (AP)
- Kremlin loyalist says launched Estonia cyber-attack (Reuters)
- World Wide Web feels its growing pains (AFP)
- ATT hopes to gain concessions from unions (AP)
- Online networking more popular than email (Reuters)
- Ticket's in the mail: Red-light cameras questioned (AP)
- Maine expanding school laptop program with Apple (AP)
- IAC says temporarily noncompliant with Nasdaq rule (AP)
- Second Life finding new life (AFP)
- Web founder warns against website snooping (Reuters)
- Deaths of gamers leave their online lives in limbo (AP)
- Vodafone Qatar to launch IPO (AFP)
- Stolen-data trove offers look inside a botnet (AP)
- How to tell, what to do if computer is infected (AP)
- Record cases of 'cybersquatting' in 2008: UN (AFP)
- Death leaves online lives in limbo (AP)
- Tapping a Muslim online community (Reuters)
- Egypt's OT says Canada unit gets wireless spectrum (Reuters)
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer newspaper goes Web-only (AP)
- Ex-Rocky Mountain News staffers plan news Web site (AP)
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer to go online only (AFP)
- Hearst hopes Web-only Seattle P-I will turn profit (AP)
- Cisco announces its first servers, riling rivals (AP)
- Bands often scalp tickets, says Nine Inch Nails' Reznor (Reuters)
- Survey: Families Wise up to Importance of Online Safety (PC World)
- Dell hopes PCs can't be too rich or too thin (AP)
- Hearst prints final Seattle PI (Reuters)
- Cybersquatting cases hit record in 2008 (Reuters)
- AP Source: IBM in talks to buy Sun Microsystems (AP)
- Online game gets real-world banking license (AP)
- Made-to-order magazine lets readers choose (AP)
- Another 158 TV stations to kill analog early (AP)
- Nokia to shutter its Mosh success story (Reuters)
- Review: How an iPod can be a poor man's iPhone (AP)
- Oracle profit tops views in tough tech environment (AP)
- Some cell phones to get live NCAA tournament games (AP)
- Research Projects Will Study Online Advertising (NewsFactor)
- Microsoft adds shortcuts, security to new browser (AP)
- Sony e-book reader gets 500,000 books from Google (AP)
- Oracle manages 3Q feat: healthy contract signings (AP)
- Microsoft releases Internet Explorer 8 (Reuters)
- Next NATO commander strives to break with past (AP)
- IBM could shake up Silicon Valley with Sun deal (AP)
- Despite economy, new startups retain optimism (AP)
- Cisco to buy maker of Flip Video for $590M (AP)
- Microsoft releases IE8, new Web browser (AFP)
- Video game industry bucks downturn with Feb. sales (AP)
- ATT to sell iPhone without contract for $599 (AP)
- PSA re-enacts details from alleged Rihanna beating (AP)
- Online travel agencies duke it out for bookings (Reuters)
- EU leaders set to back risk sharing in broadband (Reuters)
- Australian Internet `blacklist' prompts concern (AP)
- Connecticut Man Sentenced for E-card Scam (PC World)
- Qualcomm backs game console for `next billion' (AP)
- Union OKs strike at ATT; contracts end April 4 (AP)
- Social Web sites face transparency questions (AP)
- Ann Arbor News to publish its last edition in July (AP)
- Command Conquer: Red Alert 3 ships for Mac (Macworld.com)
- Qualcomm backs game console for `next billion' (AP)
- Unafraid of Internet, China appears to block YouTube (Reuters)
- Got an expired TV converter box coupon? Try again (AP)
- No disks needed for startup's streamed video games (AP)
- Union OKs strike at ATT; contracts end April 4 (AP)
- Google's top execs keep $1 salaries amid turmoil (AP)
- Google draws upon rival ideas with search changes (AP)
- Obama to hold online question session Thursday (Reuters)
- T-Mobile gets into the game of laptop connections (AP)
- Blockbuster to sell, rent movies through TiVo (AP)
- Blockbuster aims beyond stores with TiVo deal (Reuters)
- Nokia seeks gold in mobile payments startup Obopay (AP)
- Obama to answer questions on the Web tomorrow (AP)
- Netflix links online DVD service to Facebook (AFP)
- Review: Plug-in software that fine tunes iTunes (AP)
- AP Source: IBM to lay off 5,000 US-based workers (AP)
- EMI Music signs with Project Playlist (AFP)
- Last edition of Christian Science Monitor (AFP)
- Crystal Cathedral: OMG! Poser tweets as Schuller (AP)
- 'LittleBigPlanet' wins big at video game awards (AP)
- Obama turns to Web to bypass news media (AP)
- Firefox Fix Due Next Week After Attack Is Published (PC World)
- Obama turns to Web to take questions from public (AP)
- Google dumps 200 jobs in company's largest layoffs (AP)
- ATT to start sending copyright warnings (AP)
- Denmark, Sweden top US in new global IT report (AP)
- Review: Plug-in software that fine tunes iTunes (AP)
- Obama seizes bully pulpit online to pitch budget (AP)
- Giant Internet worm set to change tactics April 1 (AP)
- Consumers can be stuck when Web sites change terms (AP)
- ATT to start sending copyright warnings (AP)
- Ad watchdog: Cablevision Internet not 'fastest' (AP)
- Egypt releases detained blogger (Reuters)
- News Corp to hire AOL vet as digital chief: source (Reuters)
- Researchers: Cyber spies break into govt computers (AP)
- Police Chief Shows Why Texting, Driving Don't Mix (PC World)
- Obama racial stereotypes, falsehoods flourish (AP)
- Google, music labels launch China download service (AP)
- Google launches free, legal music downloads in China (Reuters)
- Court won't revive Va. anti-spam law (AP)
- Google launches music search service in China (AFP)
- Web ad revenue grew in 4Q but slower than in past (AP)
- Netflix ups fees for Blu-ray amid rising demand (AP)
- AP source: Ex-AOL boss to guide News Corp. digital (AP)
- AP sources: Sun deal cloudy after IBM pulls offer (AP)
- AT&T and union talks continue past deadline (AP)
- The Cisco bid: To branch out while others retrench (AP)
- On new cell phones, QWERTY eases out 1-2-3 (AP)
- Art museums hope technology will sustain interest (AP)
- New T-Mobile gadgets to sport Google software: report (Reuters)
- Appeals court to hear challenge to court Web cast (AP)
- Yahoo looks outside its walls with new music service (Reuters)
- English villagers send Google snapper packing (AP)
- Australia to build $31 billion broadband network (Reuters)
- Australia announces $30 bln broadband plan (AFP)
- DSi adds cameras, downloads to Nintendo's portable (AP)
- Sun unmoored as acquisition talks hit standstill (AP)
- MetroPCS mimics landline with family `groupline' (AP)
- GM and Segway unveil new two-wheeled urban vehicle (AP)
- Pentagon spends $100 million to fix cyber attacks (AP)
- Apple veers from 99-cent pricing at iTunes (AFP)
- Cable's answer to online's ad success: targeting (AP)
- Google CEO sees newspaper future in advertising (AP)
- Fox columnist axed after reviewing pirated flick (AFP)
- Jackman 'heartbroken' over leaked superhero film (AFP)
- Are you a twit if you don't want to Twitter? (AP)
- FCC gets going on national broadband plan (AP)
- Report says spies compromised US electric grid (AP)
- Fast-growing Facebook's user base hits 200 million (AP)
- FCC opens effort to boost broadband to nation (Reuters)
- AP source: Spies compromised US electric grid (AP)
- Will Wright to leave Electronic Arts (AP)
- Clinton promotes Roma rights in video blog (AFP)
- Nintendo not planning price cuts for hit machines (AP)
- Virgin Mobile joins prepaid price war (AP)
- Like Apple, Amazon, Wal-Mart change music prices (AP)
- On the Net: College too expensive? Try YouTube (AP)
- French lawmakers to vote on Internet piracy bill (AP)
- No bail for Australian accused of stalking singer (AP)
- US drawing up national broadband plan (AFP)
- YouTube, Universal Music Group announce 'Vevo' (AP)
- FCC opens effort to boost broadband to nation (Reuters)
- Space: The final frontier for cell phones? (AP)
- Huge computer worm Conficker stirring to life (AP)
- Cell, landline service out in parts of NorCal (AP)
- NYC church tweeting the Passion of Christ (AP)
- Phone, Internet service restored in Silicon Valley (AP)
- Google growth slows dramatically in 1Q (AP)
- US DOJ requests more time for Microsoft oversight (AP)
- Time Warner Cable shelves some Internet cap plans (AP)
- Verizon's touchscreen Hub to get its own app store (Yahoo! Tech)
- March video game sales slump more than expected (AP)
- Hollywood, RealNetworks square off on DVD copying (AP)