Just in
- Veoh releases new search plug-in, CEO says "Video should be everywhere"
- CES: Wireless USB 1.1 coming, devices appear
- Ballmer on Windows 7, economy, Google
- Green gadgets get middling report card at CES
- Four cents a song makes SlotRadio hard to ignore
- Week in review: Two tech shows, minus icons
- Apple at CES? Unlikely
- All CNET News headlines
Blogs and opinion
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Tom
Krazit: - Apple at CES? Unlikely
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Don
Reisinger: - Would video games get you to join the Army?
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Caroline
McCarthy: - In which Twitter tells me what my landlord can't
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Chris
Matyszczyk: - What Facebook should have learned from religion
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Obama's stimulus plan:
The energy debateThe goal is to double U.S. renewable energy in three years, but there's still much to be sorted out about clean-tech incentives from Washington.
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The White House reboots -
Gadget extravaganza
in Las Vegasroundup CES 2009 is in full swing. Highlights so far include Palm's WebOS and Pre device, Microsoft's Windows 7 beta, and much more.
Read full story
CNET's complete coverage
CES Day 1: Webware wrapup
AT&T CruiseCast for rental cars
Gracenote puts a star in your car
Touch-screen digital receiver
Wireless, ultra-slim speakers
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Apple at CES? Unlikely
A report that Apple wants to head down to CES just doesn't make any sense, given the company just backed out of one early January trade show.
(Posted in Apple by Tom Krazit) -
Green gadgets get middling report card at CES
Amid a green-themed Consumer Electronics Show, Greenpeace says electronics firms are getting more eco-conscious to meet consumer demand but fall short of what's possible.
(Posted in Green Tech by Martin LaMonica) -
Dell officially unveils Adamo, Mini 10
The PC maker continues expanding Netbook lineup, but goes high-end with luxury notebook lineup. Details on Adamo are thin, like the device itself.
(Posted in Crave by Erica Ogg) -
Web site problems as Windows 7 beta hits
Users are reporting getting a variety of issues while trying to get to Microsoft's Windows Web site. The beta of Windows 7 is due to hit Friday.
(Posted in Beyond Binary by Ina Fried) -
Week in review: Two tech shows, minus icons
Macworld and CES were most notable for who wasn't there, while the search market heated up. Also: Obama to postpone digital TV switchover?
(Posted in Business Tech by Steven Musil) -
Daily Tidbits: Hacker gets 30 years in Turkish jail
Maksym Yastremski, the alleged mastermind behind the T.J. Maxx credit card hack, gets 30 years in jail in connection with charges of his involvement in attacks on Turkish banks.
(Posted in Webware by Don Reisinger) -
Google tunes up Chrome development
Open-source browser gets some updates, including a new version of WebKit, and early adopters can now pick from three levels of stability.
(Posted in Webware by Jonathan Skillings) -
Dell acquires Allin for $12 million
Acquisition of the Microsoft IT consulting company is designed to bolster Dell's consulting work in such areas as collaboration and business applications.
(Posted in Business Tech by Dawn Kawamoto) -
Goldman Sachs: IT-spending growth to halt
Investment bank is projecting zero percent growth for the industry in 2009, which should portend more money for the dominant software vendors--and less for the smaller ones.
(Posted in The Open Road by Matt Asay) -
Would video games get you to join the Army?
The U.S. Army is using a video game center to inform people about Army life. But would video games be enough to get you to join the Armed Forces?
(Posted in The Digital Home by Don Reisinger) -
Red Hat: JBoss growing twice as fast as Linux
The company's JBoss business is booming, it says, paving the way for it to compete well beyond its roots in the operating system--perhaps tackling the application business in earnest.
(Posted in The Open Road by Matt Asay) -
Police Blotter: Judge rejects touch-tone snooping
The Justice Department says it doesn't need to a wiretap order to extract touch tones from telephone calls in progress. A federal judge says otherwise.
(Posted in Politics and Law by Declan McCullagh) -
Ballmer: Google, Google, the economy, Google
In an interview with CNET News, Microsoft CEO talks about Windows, taking software to the Web, and competing with the search king. But there's no escaping the bad economy.
(Posted in Beyond Binary by Ina Fried)
Q&A: Windows boss on version 7 - All CNET News headlines








