News (25)

  • Yahoo to kill paid video service

    Yahoo is expected to stop selling its streaming-video service as a standalone product within the next few weeks, according to sources familiar with the plan, raising new questions about the viability of charging for televisionlike content over the Net.

  • Porn studio wants Google, Yahoo to help protect kids

    The world's leading adult film studio is calling on internet giants Google and Yahoo to "erect stronger barriers" to keep children from viewing online pornography.

  • Windows chief jumps ship for Juniper

    Kevin Johnson, Microsoft's online and Windows chief and a key figure in the company's failed Yahoo takeover effort, is leaving the company to become chief executive at Juniper Networks, Microsoft confirmed on Wednesday in the US.

  • Gates looks back on 30 years at Microsoft

    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.

  • Google, Yahoo bury the legal hatchet

    Google has agreed to give Yahoo 2.7 million shares of its stock to settle patent infringement and other legal claims, the companies announced on Monday.

  • Redmond nabs ninemsn CIO

    Ninemsn chief information officer Richard Ang is set to move to the United States after accepting the role of director of operations for Mobile and MSN Spaces, Microsoft's blog hosting unit.

  • Senate deals blow to Net neutrality

    A U.S. Senate panel narrowly rejected strict Net neutrality rules on Wednesday, dealing a grave setback to companies like eBay, Google and Amazon.com that had made enacting them a top political priority this year.

  • Senate panel proposes Net user 'bill of rights'

    The latest Net neutrality provisions in a mammoth Senate communications bill stopped short of giving Internet companies and consumer advocacy groups all the assurances they've requested.

  • Roses Only: More room to bloom

    Flower retailer Roses Only may be in the business of beauty, but there's nothing extravagant about its move into e-commerce.

  • Holocaust site open to broadband users

    A Steven Spielberg-backed foundation launched a Web site Thursday designed as a high-speed gateway into its vast catalogue of testimonies from Holocaust survivors.

  • Instant messaging--better safe than sorry

    If your employees are using public instant messaging programs, it may be time to give IMing a long, hard look.

  • Gates loses billions in stock slide

    So the Dow's taken its second-biggest drop in history, and you're wondering what to do next.

  • Jobs touts iMac demand, new OS features

    Steven Jobs tried to dazzle the publishing crowd with news of strong iMac demand, notebook price cuts and new OS features that integrate the desktop more closely with the Web.

  • Are Web surfers fleeing portal sites?

    Traffic to the major sites on the Internet fell during the month of April, as folks in northern climates left their computers to emerge from hibernation and a more sophisticated Web audience visited more narrowly focused sites.

  • The broadband route

    Looking for an easy way to extend that broadband connection to more of your organisation's PCs? ZDNet Australia explores which broadband routers could be the solution.

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