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BetaNews.Com - Dec 31, 2007
Our countdown to next week's CES centers now on whether the CE industry will at last reach a solution to the DRM conundrum. The new trend toward DRM-free music doesn't appear to be shaking the Blu-ray and HD DVD folks …
BetaNews.Com - Dec 31, 2007
BetaNews begins its countdown to next week's Consumer Electronics Show: From dual-mode handsets to a new technology dubbed Femtocell, hardware vendors and service providers are doing their best to meet a strong desire …
BetaNews.Com - Dec 29, 2007
As we bid adieu to 2007 and prepare to enter the new year, AOL is also saying goodbye to memories: the company has finally killed off the Netscape Web browser - or what was left of it, anyway.
BetaNews.Com - Dec 28, 2007
Users of Adobe's programs are taking issue with an apparent feature within the company's products that is sending out some type of data to an outside service.
BetaNews.Com - Dec 28, 2007
A lost legal struggle with Linux distributor Novell, an apparently truncated fight with IBM, a bankruptcy filing in September...and now, a NASDAQ delisting. Is there any hope at all left for floundering PC Unix vendor …
BetaNews.Com - Dec 28, 2007
The retailer decided to silently walk away from its planned video download service after HP ended its participation.
BetaNews.Com - Dec 27, 2007
UPDATED - The assassination of Pakistan's leading challenger to the prime minister's post may be to blame for a late afternoon plummet in Apple's stock value, along with the rest of the tech sector.
BetaNews.Com - Dec 27, 2007
Major consumer electronics producer Samsung is expected to show off a prototype 31-inch active matrix OLED, and to begin producing 14-inch displays in 2008.
BetaNews.Com - Dec 27, 2007
With CES 2008 now just around the corner, Samsung today injected more fuel into a legal battle already revving up among some of the top global players in LCDs and other TV and computer display screens.
BetaNews.Com - Dec 27, 2007
A set of policy position documents reportedly authored by Microsoft made the case that Google could use DoubleClick's advertising network to peer into competitors' traffic -- a position the FTC apparently rejected last …