- David Bowie, eBay join winners of Webby awards (Reuters)
- Online TV company Joost expands content (AP)
- Dutch internet TV company to show CNN (AP)
- Startup enters I/O virtualization fray (InfoWorld)
- YouTube co-founders among Webby winners (AP)
- Video adds heft, hurdles to resumes (AP)
- Dell Hopes to Earn Good Will With Linux PCs (PC World)
- NewsGator revamps enterprise RSS tool (InfoWorld)
- Video adds heft, hurdles to resumes (AP)
- Dell hopes to earn goodwill with Linux PC (InfoWorld)
- NewsGator revamps enterprise RSS tool (InfoWorld)
- Joost strikes Turner, Sony program deal (Reuters)
- Disney unveils social networking for preteens (Reuters)
- Sorrell Seeks His MySpace Moment (AdWeek.com)
- Dell Picks Ubuntu Linux for Some Desktops, Notebooks (NewsFactor)
- Update: Vonage files to vacate patent ruling (InfoWorld)
- IBM to cut 1,315 jobs in U.S. (Reuters)
- Sarah's Ruhl's 'Dead Man's Cell Phone' to Premiere in D.C.; Cast Announced (Playbill)
- Disney unveils social networking for preteens (Reuters)
- WiMax Laptop Card Approved by FCC (PC World)
- Dell Picks Ubuntu Linux For Consumer PCs (TechWeb)
- Blockbuster sells UK chain for $150 mln (Reuters)
- Huddle: MySpace for the enterprise crowd (InfoWorld)
- Next target of cellphone industry: navigation (Reuters)
- Photobucket snaps a portrait of success (USATODAY.com)
- IBM lays off 1,315 workers, union says (InfoWorld)
- Sun's Rock rolls further along (InfoWorld)
- Sprint posts loss (Reuters)
- Aren't Phones for Talking? (PC Magazine)
- CEO: SMB to become IBM's 'largest industry' (InfoWorld)
- Next target of cell phone industry: navigation (Reuters)
- EU institutions fail to agree on roaming rules (Reuters)
- Digg bends to users' will on AACS encryption key (InfoWorld)
- IBM plans to create SMB blade bundles (InfoWorld)
- Sprint Nextel swings to 1st-quarter loss (AP)
- New Creative MP3 Players Due (PC World)
- First WiMax laptop card approved by FCC (InfoWorld)
- Blockbuster 1Q loss widens (AP)
- IBM plans to create SMB blade bundles (InfoWorld)
- Tibco to acquire Spotfire in BI move (InfoWorld)
- VeriSign to use one-time passwords for bank cards (InfoWorld)
- U.K. privacy watchdog seeks more powers (AP)
- Penn St. drops Napster for Ruckus music (AP)
- IBM Readies Blade Servers for Small Businesses (PC World)
- Sprint posts loss (Reuters)
- Google urges shareholders to permit censorship (InfoWorld)
- Next Target of Cell Phone Industry: Navigation (PC Magazine)
- Glu Mobile in deal with Warner Bros. (Reuters)
- Sprint Nextel swings to 1st-quarter loss (AP)
- Nokia to fight refiled patent infringement case (InfoWorld)
- Citysearch adds video in redesign (InfoWorld)
- Glu Mobile in deal with Warner Bros (Reuters)
- Transmitters from missing turtle sought (AP)
- Sprint posts quarterly loss (Reuters)
- Army clamping down on soldiers' blogs (Reuters)
- Users rebel at user-recommendation site (AP)
- `Rings' vid-game for multiplayer masses (AP)
- EU institutions closer on roaming compromise (Reuters)
- Blockbuster reports wider 1st-qtr loss, shares off (Reuters)
- Review: Gmail still tops Thunderbird (AP)
- IBM executive calls for 'virtual planet' (InfoWorld)
- Nokia Siemens tests fast 4G upload (InfoWorld)
- Survey Says 6 Percent Will Buy Apple's iPhone (NewsFactor)
- Document shell code attacks loom large (InfoWorld)
- Blogging economists draw cyber-crowds (Reuters)
- Sprint posts loss, lags in subscriber gains (InfoWorld)
- Report: Internet fosters extremism (AP)
- Online maps updated after disaster (AP)
- Soldiers face punishment over blogs (AP)
- Apple chief touts environmental record (AP)