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'Green' casinos conserve energy, profits

Step inside the newly rebuilt Turtle Creek Casino & Hotel and you'll find the typical blackjack tables, slot machines and loosen-your-belt buffet. But your eyes -- and nose -- may detect unusual features.

Chicago's back alleys filter rainwater for Lake Michigan

Environmentally friendly engineering is really right up Chicago's alley -- in a city project called Green Alleys.

YouTube, Viacom agree to mask viewer IDs

In a nod to privacy complaints, Viacom Inc. won't be told the identities of individuals who watch video clips on the popular video-sharing site YouTube.

Judge: eBay not liable for fakes

EBay Inc. scored an important victory in court Monday, as a federal judge said companies such as jeweler Tiffany & Co. are responsible for policing their trademarks online, not auction platforms like eBay.

Yahoo rejects joint proposal from Microsoft, Icahn

Yahoo Inc. has rejected Microsoft's latest attempt to buy its online search operations in a "take or leave it" proposal that Yahoo said would have dismantled its Internet franchise.

Sales of gas-saving gadgets rise with gas prices

With fuel prices soaring, sales of products designed to boost gas mileage are also rising -- even though the government says they're not worth the money.

Microsoft may refresh Yahoo bid

Unable to strike a deal on its own, Microsoft Corp. reportedly is hoping to snap up Yahoo's online search operations with the help of News Corp. and Time Warner Inc.

YouTube ordered to reveal its viewers

Dismissing privacy concerns, a federal judge overseeing a $1 billion copyright-infringement lawsuit against YouTube has ordered the popular online video-sharing service to disclose who watches which video clips and when.

Chrysler cars to become wireless hotspots

Chrysler LLC said Thursday that people who buy its vehicles next year will have the option of turning their cars and trucks into wireless Internet hotspots.

More car buyers weighing hybrids, survey shows

Inspired by spiking gas prices and growing concern for the environment, U.S. consumers are showing more interest in hybrid vehicles despite their higher price tag, according to a survey released Tuesday.

'Green' casinos conserve energy, profits

Step inside the newly rebuilt Turtle Creek Casino & Hotel and you'll find the typical blackjack tables, slot machines and loosen-your-belt buffet. But your eyes -- and nose -- may detect unusual features.

Chicago's back alleys filter rainwater for Lake Michigan

Environmentally friendly engineering is really right up Chicago's alley -- in a city project called Green Alleys.

YouTube, Viacom agree to mask viewer IDs

In a nod to privacy complaints, Viacom Inc. won't be told the identities of individuals who watch video clips on the popular video-sharing site YouTube.

Judge: eBay not liable for fakes

EBay Inc. scored an important victory in court Monday, as a federal judge said companies such as jeweler Tiffany & Co. are responsible for policing their trademarks online, not auction platforms like eBay.

Yahoo rejects joint proposal from Microsoft, Icahn

Yahoo Inc. has rejected Microsoft's latest attempt to buy its online search operations in a "take or leave it" proposal that Yahoo said would have dismantled its Internet franchise.

Sales of gas-saving gadgets rise with gas prices

With fuel prices soaring, sales of products designed to boost gas mileage are also rising -- even though the government says they're not worth the money.

Microsoft may refresh Yahoo bid

Unable to strike a deal on its own, Microsoft Corp. reportedly is hoping to snap up Yahoo's online search operations with the help of News Corp. and Time Warner Inc.

YouTube ordered to reveal its viewers

Dismissing privacy concerns, a federal judge overseeing a $1 billion copyright-infringement lawsuit against YouTube has ordered the popular online video-sharing service to disclose who watches which video clips and when.

Chrysler cars to become wireless hotspots

Chrysler LLC said Thursday that people who buy its vehicles next year will have the option of turning their cars and trucks into wireless Internet hotspots.

More car buyers weighing hybrids, survey shows

Inspired by spiking gas prices and growing concern for the environment, U.S. consumers are showing more interest in hybrid vehicles despite their higher price tag, according to a survey released Tuesday.

E-mail with your peanuts? Airline tests in-flight Web access

American Airlines says customers will be able to test in-flight Internet access on two flights beginning Wednesday, with broader service expected to begin in the following couple of weeks.

Japan debuts 3-D TV

Badminton matches look so real playing on Hyundai's new 3-D TV that you may reflexively dodge the virtual shuttlecock.

Gadget for online calls boosts company

What's the fastest-growing fixed-line phone company in the United States?

MySpace gets a facelift

The online hangout MySpace is revamping its site to draw more members and help them better engage with one another.

Casino debuts $10,000 touch-screen table

Microsoft Corp. and Harrah's Entertainment Inc. introduced a high-tech interactive bar table Wednesday that lets patrons order drinks, watch YouTube videos, play touch-screen games and even flirt with each other.

Google signs multi-decade lease as part of expansion

In the latest sign of its ambitious growth plans, Google Inc. has signed a 40-year lease to secure space for a huge office complex that will be built on a federal government research center near the Internet search leader's Silicon Valley headquarters.

U.S. files complaint over EU tech tariffs

The United States has filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization over European tariffs on three categories of high-tech goods, including flat-panel computer monitors and some printers.

Philips develops '3-D TV' without glasses

Philips Electronics NV says it has developed a three-dimensional television.

New BlackBerry ups resolution

Research In Motion Ltd. on Monday introduced its first major new BlackBerry model in more than a year: the Bold, a high-end model that further demonstrates the company's desire to make tools for both work and play.

Consumers likely winners in Sprint, Clearwire deal

Sprint Nextel Corp. has finally rounded up the financial backing it needs to build a faster wireless network. But for consumers and the electronics industry, speed may be the least important thing about the new network.

Google again golden after setbacks

It's hard to believe Google Inc. actually looked vulnerable just two months ago. The Internet search leader's stock had plummeted 45 percent from its peak. And its two biggest rivals, Microsoft Corp. and Yahoo Inc., appeared poised to combine forces and launch a double-barreled attack.

Mamma Mia! Papa John's raking in the dough online

Sometimes during peak hours, the phones are silent in Andy Freitas' pizza restaurants, yet the cooks are busy keeping pace with hungry customers.

Clearwire, Sprint Nextel forming new company

Clearwire and Sprint Nextel will combine their wireless broadband units to create a $14.55 billion communications company.

Microsoft going 'independent' after failed Yahoo bid

Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates said Wednesday the company isn't pursuing other deals following the withdrawal of its $47.5 billion takeover bid for Yahoo.

Scan, deposit checks from home

Online banking service provider CheckFree Corp. is rolling out technology that could mean consumers will no longer have to go to a bank branch to deposit checks.

Amazon.com adds web services to its offerings

Critics thought it was over the top when Amazon.com Inc. expanded from books into music in 1998. When the Web retailer let competitors start selling things alongside its own inventory in 2000, they said Amazon had gone nuts.

Is technology, once the music industry's enemy, now a lifeline?

When you're not inclined to give your product away for free, make your customers believe they're getting something for nothing.

Report: Movie rentals coming to iTunes

Apple Inc. is preparing to announce next month the long-rumored launch of a movie rental service through its online iTunes Store, as well as a groundbreaking licensing deal of its anti-piracy technology -- moves that could dramatically boost the appeal of digital movie distribution.

Airlines take another look at inflight Internet

Airlines and service providers seeking to deliver high-speed Internet services to passengers say they've learned from Boeing Co.'s 2006 decision to pull the plug on its ambitions to outfit its planes with a similar service.

Businesses have designs for the poor

As anyone who's fallen in love with an iPod or Wii game console can attest to, good product design matters. It can matter more, in fact, than how many (or what kind) of features are crammed into a device.

Latest 'Net gold may rest in Asia's domain

A land rush is happening in Hong Kong, but it doesn't involve the high-rise properties for which the city is famous. Instead, it's the epicenter of a brand new patch of cyber real estate soon to go on the global market.

Google pushes 'green' power initiative

Google Inc. is expanding into alternative energy in its most ambitious effort yet to ease the environmental strain caused by the company's voracious appetite for power to run its massive computing centers.

Technology key to stopping piracy

If the experience of the world's largest software vendor is any guide, the industry's best hope for reducing piracy rests with anti-copying technologies rather than in policing the legalistic user agreements that restrict how software can be used.

Shareholders OK Sirius, XM merger

Shareholders approved a deal Tuesday to allow Sirius Satellite Radio Inc. to acquire its rival XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc. for about $5 billion, but the largest hurdle has yet to come -- regulatory approval in Washington.

iPhone to launch outside U.S.

Apple Inc.'s iPhone will go on sale in Britain on November 9 exclusively through mobile operator O2, marking the first time the combination cell phone-iPod media player will be available outside the United States.

Yahoo to buy e-mail software maker Zimbra

Yahoo Inc. is buying e-mail service Zimbra Inc. for $350 million in an all-cash deal that may open a new revenue channel for the slumping Internet icon.

Apple posts iPhone credit instructions

Apple Inc. has begun allowing people who bought iPhones before the higher-end model's price was abruptly slashed to apply for a $100 store credit.

Robot maker with a penchant for realism builds artificial boy

David Hanson has two little Zenos to care for these days.

Apple sells 1 millionth iPhone

Apple Inc. sold its millionth iPhone over the weekend, days after it slashed the price by a third to spur sales.

Lenovo, PC makers jostle for top spot in green rankings

Mark Pierce of Lenovo was jolted in August last year when Greenpeace ranked the Chinese-American PC maker dead last for green credentials out of 14 global consumer electronics brands. Pierce, Lenovo's environmental chief, was duty-bound to fix the situation or risk the company's fledgling U.S. image. Lenovo had recently opened new world headquarters in Morrisville.

Tech companies are greener, but are they green enough?

The extremely air-conditioned computer farms known as data centers are the gas-guzzling jalopies of the technology world. Some require 40 or 50 times more power than comparably sized office space.

Norwegian prison gets eco treatment

The minimum-security Bastoey Prison, a lockup on a lush island that has often been compared to a summer camp, now has claimed a new distinction: the world's first ecological prison.

Apple CEO Steve Jobs apologizes for iPhone price cut

Apple CEO Steve Jobs apologized and offered $100 credits Thursday to people who shelled out up to $599 for an iPhone this summer and were burned when the company chopped $200 from the expensive model's price.

Faster wireless in works to transfer large files from gadget to gadget

With a wave of his hand over a homemade receiver, Georgia Tech professor Joy Laskar shows how easily -- and quickly -- large data files could someday be transferred from a portable media player to a TV.

YouTube videos to carry 'overlay' ads

Video advertising is coming to YouTube, but it won't be the type common at sites elsewhere.

Google buys stake in Chinese social Web site

Google Inc revealed on Monday that it had acquired a stake in Chinese community Web site Tianya.cn, indicating a foray by the global search leader into social networking in the world's second-largest Internet market.

Court acquits allofmp3.com site owner

A Russian court found the former boss of music download Web site www.allofmp3.com not guilty of breaching copyright on Wednesday in a case considered a crucial test of Russia's commitment to fighting piracy.

Microsoft presses FCC on vacant TV airwaves

Microsoft Corp. Monday will try to convince U.S. regulators that vacant television airwaves can be used for wireless services without interfering with broadcast signals, The Washington Post reported.

UK government stops Facebook ads

The British government has halted its advertising on the social networking Web site Facebook over concerns about how its ads are displayed, its communication arm said in a statement.

IT companies move in on Romania

In the mobile phone version of the "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" video game, the torches hanging along the dark walls of Hogwarts glow in an eerily realistic fashion.

Hot property -- Web domain names

Inside a midtown hotel, Larry Fischer is on his cell phone with a financial backer as his partner Ari Goldberger does quick research on a laptop computer.

HP buys Opsware for $1.6 billion

Computer and printer maker Hewlett-Packard said Monday that it would acquire Opsware Inc. for $1.6 billion to bolster its line-up of business software offerings.

Microsoft game chief to join EA

Microsoft Corp. said Tuesday the head of its gaming business, Peter Moore, will leave the company to join Electronic Arts Inc. , the world's biggest video game publisher.

Cisco, Microsoft, EMC form alliance

Cisco Systems Inc., Microsoft Corp., and EMC Corp. said on Tuesday they have formed an alliance to develop technology for protecting and sharing sensitive government information.

Google to buy Web security company

Google Inc. said on Monday it has agreed to buy Web-based security provider Postini for $625 million, expanding its package of online applications to compete with Microsoft Corp.'s Office.

European telecoms vie for iPhone deal

Spanish-owned mobile phone operator O2 has yet to sign any deal to bring iPhone mobile phones -- Apple Inc.'s latest "must-have" gadget -- to Britain.

Analyst: Next few months may determine Yahoo's fate

After exasperating investors for most of the past 18 months, Yahoo Inc. Chairman Terry Semel finally found a way to please Wall Street by stepping aside as chief executive.

Father of Sony PlayStation steps down

The chief architect of Sony's PlayStation game console stepped down on Tuesday as the Japanese company struggles to defend its dominance in the video game industry and revive its reputation as an electronics pioneer.

Blockbuster backs Blu-ray

Blockbuster Inc. will rent high-definition DVDs only in the Blu-ray format in 1,450 stores when it expands its high-def offerings next month, dealing a major blow to the rival HD DVD format.

MySpace-Photobucket now friends

A Web site that enables its users to store photos and video for inclusion in MySpace profiles will become a part of the popular online hangout.

Cell phone cameras help Japanese lose weight

Wondering how much of a diet-buster that banana cream pie on your plate is? Some Japanese have a novel way to find out: Photograph it with your cell phone and send the image to an expert.

Microsoft-Vietnam cement anti-piracy deal

Microsoft Corp. CEO Steve Ballmer witnessed the signing of an agreement Monday requiring all of Vietnam's government offices to use licensed computer software in a step to curb rampant piracy.

Apple seeking end to music copy restrictions

The last time Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs took on major recording companies, he refused to budge on his 99-cent price for a song on iTunes.

Jobs: Apple customers not into renting music

Apple Inc. Chief Executive Steve Jobs indicated Wednesday he is unlikely to give in to calls from the music industry to add a subscription-based model to Apple's wildly popular iTunes online music store.

Civil charges filed against 2 ex-Apple officers

The Securities and Exchange Commission filed civil charges Tuesday against two former Apple Inc. officers over their alleged roles in backdating stock options. The agency immediately announced a settlement with one of them.

Security crucial as intruders grow sophisticated

Heath Thompson is vice president, product development for IBM Internet Security Systems.

Workers of the world, unite!

Alexander Graham Bell had it right from the beginning. "Mr. Watson," he called to his assistant through the first working telephone, "come here?I want to see you." Fifty years later, the first television transmission made his words literal. And now, 130 years later, the pieces are falling into place to finally let us all be seen.

Tech companies blast 2008 H-1B visa cap

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services says it reached its limit for 2008 H-1B visa petitions in a single day and will not accept any more, to the dismay of technology companies that rely on the visas to hire skilled foreign workers.

EU probes Apple over iTunes prices

The European Commission confirmed Tuesday it had opened an antitrust probe into Apple's iTunes and the way it sells music online in coordination with major music companies.

TV Guide to launch Internet video search engine

TV Guide, which has helped viewers navigate through thousands of TV shows for 53 years, now wants to do the same for Internet video.

Viacom slaps Google with $1 billion lawsuit

MTV owner Viacom Inc. sued the popular video-sharing site YouTube and its corporate parent, Google Inc., on Tuesday, seeking more than $1 billion in damages on claims of widespread copyright infringement.

Viacom slaps Google with $1 billion lawsuit

Media conglomerate Viacom Inc. said Tuesday it filed a $1 billion lawsuit against Google Inc.and its Internet video sharing site YouTube over unauthorized use of its copyrighted entertainment.

Microsoft's Mundie: Consumers driving tech trends

Microsoft's Craig Mundie has some big shoes to fill when Bill Gates steps down next year -- or at least one shoe anyway.

Cisco-Apple tight-lipped over iPhone truce

The short-lived legal battle between Cisco Systems Inc. and Apple Inc. over the "iPhone" name was only on the surface a trademark-infringement dispute involving identically named multimedia telephones.

Cisco, Apple settle iPhone trademark lawsuit

Cisco Systems Inc. and Apple Inc. say they have settled the trademark-infringement lawsuit that threatened to derail Apple's use of the "iPhone" name for its much-hyped new iPod-cellular phone gadget.

Google co-founder: Science needs entrepreneurs

Scientists need more entrepreneurial drive and could benefit by doing more to promote solutions to big human problems, Google Inc. co-founder Larry Page told a meeting of academic researchers.

Samsung settles price-fixing lawsuit

Samsung Electronics Co., the world's largest memory chip maker, agreed to pay $90 million to settle a lawsuit charging the company and others with price-fixing, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said Tuesday.

iPhone demands challenge suppliers

Apple Inc.'s new iPhone is music to the ears of Asian handset-components makers, but analysts say a runaway success for the feature-jammed phone could create huge challenges for some of those parts suppliers.

Wii waves wand on Nintendo profits

Booming year-end sales of the wand-wielding Wii game console sent profit at Nintendo soaring 43 percent for the nine months ended December, the Japanese manufacturer of Pokemon and Super Mario games said Thursday.

Analyst: Apple at the top of its game

With iPod sales still soaring, Apple Inc. reaped record profit during the holiday quarter and stands to remain a Wall Street darling despite issuing a second-quarter forecast that fell below analyst expectations.

EBay on verge of buying StubHub

Internet auctioneer eBay Inc. is on the verge of buying the rapidly growing online ticket reseller StubHub Inc. for about $300 million in cash, according to a person close to the deal.

Cingular makes deal with MySpace

Cingular Wireless has made a deal with MySpace that will allow MySpace users to access their profiles through Cingular phones.

Amazon.com has 'best ever' sales

Amazon.com Inc.'s 2006 holiday season peaked with more than 4 million orders placed on December 11, the Web retailer said Tuesday.

Layoffs at AOL headquarters

About 450 workers at the Dulles headquarters of AOL were laid off Wednesday as the company continues restructuring away from its traditional roots as a subscription-based provider of dial-up Internet access.

Yahoo shakes-up executive ranks

Yahoo Inc. announced its biggest executive shake-up in more than five years, including placing Chief Financial Officer Susan Decker in charge of ad sales in a move that may signal her anointment as successor to the company's top job.

East pushes the way with Internet Protocol TV

For the future of the television industry, eyes worldwide are watching Asia. The computer and Internet businesses may have sprung from the West, but with Internet Protocol Television (IPTV) it's the East that's leading the way.

Plasma loses ground to LCD TVs

Plasma TV suppliers such as Panasonic maker Matsushita Electric, already outnumbered by the rival LCD camp, are expected to lose further ground as LCD TVs encroach on the 40-inch-class market, a plasma stronghold.

IBM PC turns 25

It was a match made in computer heaven.

Your e-mails: The future of work

Last week we asked for your thoughts on the future of work. This week we are publishing a selection of your e-mails, which forecast a range of changes, from an explosion in telecommuting to nearly fully automated fast food joints.

High-tech tool for clubber mobiles

In cities where there are lots of nightclubs to choose from it is hard to know what the music is going to be like until you have paid and gone inside, but not any more.

Profanity, partner's name hidden in leaked Microsoft code

Eager to get their hands on Microsoft's secrets, a frenzy of Internet file sharing followed the leak of source code for the popular Windows NT and Windows 2000 software.

Gates gets serious about spam, security

Spam, security, and getting high-tech devices to communicate with each other are among the major challenges for the technology world, Microsoft's Bill Gates said at the annual Comdex technology convention.

Microsoft offers virus bounty

Microsoft has offered a $500,000 reward for information that leads to the arrest of the writers of two computer viruses.

Have China's Net stocks hit a great wall?

China's Internet portals have enjoyed a dramatic run on Wall Street, with shares in companies like Sina and Sohu.com trading over 25 times their lows of last summer.

Thin is in as flat TV sales soar

Tech giants Sony, Sharp, and Samsung are posting flat screen TV sales that are outpacing forecasts.

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