Technology news - CNNMoney.com
Pen 2.0: Your scribblings go digital
As founder and creative director of Art Street Design, a graphic-design studio, I'm pretty familiar with pens and computers. (We make all sorts of marketing materials for companies, from invitations to Web sites.) But in my 13 years of running the company, I hadn't seen anything like a smartpen until recently.The man behind the netbook craze
A few years ago rivals mocked Asus chairman Jonney Shih. Millions of netbooks later, Shih is having the last laugh.Dell misses forecasts, shares sink
Shares of Dell Inc. fell sharply following the stock market's close on Thursday, after the PC maker reported drastically lower quarterly profit and sales that badly missed Wall Street's forecasts.Control the cloud
For years the online-software company HotSchedules had its head in the clouds.AOL to cut one-third of workforce
AOL plans to cut one-third of its workforce after its spin-off from Time Warner is completed, the Internet media company announced Thursday in a government filing.Sweet! Is Sugar the future of publishing?
The women-centric collection of sites is shaking up the web - and traditional media.An animation studio bets on the iPhone
At first glance, Albie Hecht's office is cluttered with toys -- a plush gorilla from the Mario Bros. video game, vinyl figurines from the toy line Kidrobot, to name a few. But in fact, they're all relics of the animation industry, where Hecht, 56, made his name launching such mega-hit children's shows such as Nickelodeon's "SpongeBob SquarePants," "Dora the Explorer," and "Blue's Clues."Review: iPhone navigation apps
Apple tablet: One tech gadget for all
Apple's lips are sealed about its widely rumored tablet computer, but technology experts are giddy about the device, already exclaiming it will be the gadget to end all gadgets.Goodbye, grocery store price tags
In 2001, Sunit Saxena made a midnight run to the grocery store for wonton wrappers. When he couldn't find any, he went looking for a clerk. The aisles were empty. He discovered the workers holed up in a back room tearing price tags off merchandise to reprice it for the next day.Get ready for flatscreen price wars
If you're in the market for a new flatscreen TV this holiday season, you're in luck.Tech stocks off the beaten path
If you only look at its performance so far this year, Ivy Science & Technology, which has $1 billion in assets, doesn't look terribly impressive.The iPhone is headed to Seoul
Hey! You! Get off of my cloud!
Inside Beijing's iPhone black market
Where social media's 'It Boy' cut his teeth
Brainstorm Tech: Before getting into gaming, Farmville's father was a player in the glam world of online tech support.Schmoozers like to schmooze online, too
Survey finds young executives embrace online social networking tools to market their companies and themselves.Intel settles with AMD. What's next?
In yesterday's settlement of AMD's worldwide antitrust claims against Intel, Intel agreed to pay $1.25 billion to AMD. In addition, the two companies renewed a longstanding patent cross-licensing deal, but with Intel agreeing to delete language from it that -- as Intel interpreted it -- was restricting AMD's ability to outsource fabrication of its semiconductors to nonsubsidiaries.Intel and AMD reach $1.25B settlement
Intel Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices on Thursday announced an agreement to settle all legal disputes between the two chipmakers.Intel settlement: The power of emails
Nine days after New York State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo made public emails to, from, and about current and former Intel CEOs Paul S. Otellini and Craig Barrett, Intel settled a four-year-old antitrust case that semiconductor rival AMD had filed against it.Related Links
URL to this feed
Embed this feed
Link to this page
Link

