A headline like that is bound to draw the ire of the Macintosh faithful. After all, since Microsoft, which can marshal its forces and target competitors at will with lethal precision, hasn't finished-off Apple after all these years (and I'm not saying that this was necessarily a Redmond goal), how on earth can an operating system like Linux spell trouble for Apple?
Every year at this time I make my pilgrimage to Macworld Expo in San Francisco.
Did a 1994 agreement with SCO hand Sun a smoking gun?
Apple Computer on Tuesday is expected to unveil a new portable product aimed at bolstering the company's strategy to make itself into a major player in home entertainment, sources and analysts said.
Quick--who's the fastest-growing major PC maker in the world? If you guessed Dell, you're wrong.
AOL Time Warner's Mozilla project is facing new questions about quality after Apple Computer's release of a browser based on rival open-source code.
A year after announcing Android, the open source phone operating system intended to jump-start the mobile Internet, Google has begun sharing the project's underlying source code.
In the last two months Microsoft has filed 500 patents with the US Patent and Trademark Office.
If you were to ask Bill Gates what life will be like when he stops working full time at Microsoft, he'd have to get back to you.
IBM has taken a page out of Apple Computer's game plan, announcing a store-within-a-store program with retailer CompUSA.
Security vendor Symantec has once again pointed the knife at Apple Macintosh users.
The company's processor releases, scheduled for next quarter, could make their way into a variety of embedded applications as well as the next wave of Apple PowerBooks.
Maybe the start of the baseball season occupied their attention, but eight months before a presidential election, the near-total silence of the technology industry's biggest luminaries about offshore outsourcing is quite remarkable.
NEC plans to release the MobilePro 900 later this month, a handheld device that resembles a mininotebook but contains the technological guts of a PDA.
Google is considering renewing support for the popular RSS Web publishing format in some of its services, CNET News.com has learned, marking the latest twist in a burgeoning standards war over technology that could change how people read the news.
Do you Google Wave?
If you want attention online, then mention that you have a couple of Google Wave invites to giveaway and watch… Watch it now
Thunderbird 3 takes flight
Thunderbird 3 is finally here, after a gestation period measured in
years. The latest version of Mozilla's fr… Watch it now
Google Chrome beta for Mac
It's not fully baked yet, but Google Chrome for Mac reaches a major milestone with the release of an official … Watch it now
Conroy explains his magic filter
Copenhagen lessons on green IT
Welcome to National Censorship Day
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