July 30, 2006 / Candace Lombardi
NEC, Matsushita and TI have launched a joint venture that aims to put competitive chips and platforms into 3G handsets
July 29, 2006 / Tom Espiner
The browser company has given a preview of its plans for the next incarnation of Opera, following the recent release of Opera 9
July 29, 2006 / John Blau
Users in Finland are testing technology that lets users switch between cell and wireless networks without interruption.
July 28, 2006 / David Meyer
Ofcom's proposal to raise Wi-Fi power limits has met with approval from a major hotzone operator, who says it could help the business case for rural broadband
July 28, 2006 / Nancy Gohring
In a dramatic close to the legal battle between file-sharing software developer Kazaa and the entertainment industry, Kazaa said today that it has agreed to pay at least $100 million to four record companies and an additional amount to motion picture companies to settle two lawsuits.
July 28, 2006 / Reuters
Time Warner, whose shares touched a two-year low in mid-July, is set to introduce on Aug. 2 its fourth plan in five years to save online unit AOL.
July 27, 2006 / Elizabeth Montalbano
Company will allow users to opt out of receiving the update.
July 26, 2006 / Elinor Mills
Advertisers will receive data showing the number of invalid clicks, plus the percentage of clicks that represents
July 26, 2006 / Juan Carlos Perez
Mobile application also allows users to save routes, company says.
July 25, 2006 / David Meyer
After users reported being locked out of Yahoo's mail, IM, search and content services over the weekend, the web giant blames a power outage
July 25, 2006 / David Meyer
The organisation responsible for administering the .eu domain extension is suing 400 US-based registrars, accusing them of stockpiling 74,000 domain names through three UK-registered 'front' companies
July 25, 2006 / Tom Spring
What do a former Playboy pinup, a small Michigan toy company, and a mild-mannered real estate agent have in common?
July 24, 2006 / Greg Sandoval
If Robert Tur has his way, YouTube will soon have its day of reckoning in court.
July 22, 2006 / Sumner Lemon
BEIJING -- Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo have undermined the rights of Chinese to freedom of expression through their actions in China, according to Amnesty International.
July 21, 2006 / Elinor Mills
With advertising revenue still growing, Google plans to hire more people and build new data centres
July 21, 2006 / Declan McCullagh and Anne Broache
A UK citizen faces extradition to America over charges that he ran Web sites promoting violence against the West
July 20, 2006 / Elinor Mills
Google was set to unveil a Web search site on Thursday designed to help blind people find results that will work best with their text-to-speech software.
July 20, 2006 / Graeme Wearden
Samsung has become the latest company to launch a dual-mode phone, which can connect over GSM or Wi-Fi
July 20, 2006 / David Meyer
The company claims success in testing HSUPA, which should provide an uplink speed to match HSDPA's downlink and may shut mobile WiMax out of the market
July 19, 2006 / Candace Lombardi
Sir Tim Berners-Lee has a vision of a Web where machines as well as people can read content, but Google sees plenty of hurdles
July 18, 2006 / Elizabeth Montalbano
New tool is designed to prevent spammers from using search engines to drive traffic to spam URLs.
July 18, 2006 / Tom Espiner
Advertisers have been warned of an increase in fraudulent scams on Google and Yahoo
July 17, 2006 / Tom Spring
AOL is set to become the latest company to enter the security software market, releasing a beta of its all-in-one PC health care suite.
July 16, 2006 / Elinor Mills
Claims that the search giant deliberately downgraded a rival's pages have been rejected, but could yet return to court
July 14, 2006 / Joris Evers
Researchers at Microsoft have developed a tool to scrub search engines of major Web sites that pollute search results and ultimately help clean the Web of spam.
July 12, 2006 / Graeme Wearden
Update: Software developers should test whether today's extensions will work with the Firefox of tomorrow, says Mozilla
July 11, 2006 / Joris Evers
There is growing evidence that Internet criminals are abusing Voice over IP services, rather than email
July 10, 2006 / David F. Carr
News Analysis: Even Google has to work through common business problems such as reporting revenue and tracking projects. But it sometimes addresses those needs in unconventional—yet highly efficient—ways, and others are starting to follow its lead. (Baselinemag.com)
July 5, 2006 / Elinor Mills
news analysis In 1999, Microsoft caused a tech industry ruckus when it introduced Passport, an online wallet and payment system that would allow shoppers to use one sign-in username and password to buy things from multiple retailers.
July 2, 2006 / Scott M. Fulton, III
Redmond (WA) - Demonstrating that the entire world doesn't have to be delayed on account of Microsoft Office 2007, the company's Internet Explorer 7 team triumphantly plowed ahead with its Beta 3 release this morning. If the troubles we had with installing IE7 Beta 3 - after repeated uninstallations and Registry tweaks - is indicative of the problems others are having across North America, then maybe the bad news doesn't stop here.
July 1, 2006 / Dawn Kawamoto
Newly discovered security flaws affect the two most popular Internet browsers
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