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CNET News.com - Newsmakers
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Snake-arm robot works in tight quarters
Featured links from the CNET Blog Network
Snake-arm robot works in tight quarters--Joystick guides robo-snake in orifice surgery.
Sci-fi pros focus on e-books at Denvention 3-- Peter Glaskowsky attends Denvention 3, the 66th World Science Fiction Convention, and hears a lot about electronic publishing from writers, agents, editors publishers, and fellow fans.
Calling Ralph Lauren--Luxury retailer becomes the first of its kind to try on mobile-shopping capabilities in its quest to satisfy the impulses of every Silicon Valley CEO.
Change the default folder view in Vista--With a few minutes of folder clicking, you can stop Vista's content sniffing and get the view you prefer in all your folders.
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Why HP is different from IBM
Ann Livermore weighs in on what separates her company from Big Blue, along with the shift to virtualization and what it means to be green.
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Turning over a new leaf at Quark
After having dropped off the radar, Quark is set to revolutionize publishing--again. CEO Ray Schiavone explains how.
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Benioff takes stock of software shifts
The Salesforce.com CEO weighs in on cloud computing, an uneasy economy, and why Microsoft is still a dinosaur.
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Feeling the heat at Microsoft
Antitrust woes, a protracted battle for Yahoo, and a shifting software market. Welcome to Steve Ballmer's world.
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A Qwest for survival
Phone company's CEO says new partnerships are intended to help it fill holes in its business, develop its wireless service.
Qwest in talks with Verizon about wireless deal
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Meet the king of coal
You may not love coal, but you use a lot of it. Peabody Energy's Greg Boyce says the company will even participate in cleaning the stuff up.
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Gates explains why Microsoft needs Yahoo
A main driver of the takeover bid is the desire for "great engineers," says Microsoft's chairman. Plus: Windows 7 and other future tech.
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Elon Musk on rockets, sports cars, and solar power
Yes, the entrepreneur and technologist admits, he does have a lot of balls in the air--and rockets too.
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LiMo chief talks rivals, Nokia, and mobile Linux
Morgan Gillis discusses the LiMo Foundation's first mobile Linux platform release and why it matters that Nokia bought Trolltech.
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