January 15, 2009, 5:56 PM
Has Sprint Started a New Wireless Price War?
Sprint Nextel is shaking up wireless phone pricing with a $50-a-month, unlimited voice-and-data plan from its Boost Mobile division.
The chief executive said Intel would continue to invest in manufacturing technology as it looks to outpace rivals.
Saying his health issues were “more complex” than he originally thought, Steven P. Jobs is taking a leave until the end of June.
Motorola says the move will save about $700 million a year starting in 2009, totaling $1.5 billion in annual savings.
Nortel has struggled to recover from the collapse of technology stocks early in the decade as well as an accounting scandal.
The recession has cast clouds over once fast-growing solar manufacturers.
Yahoo said that it had named Carol Bartz, the chairman and former chief executive of the software maker Autodesk, as its new leader, succeeding its co-founder Jerry Yang.
AT&T sent out text messages to 75 million customers -- urging subscribers to tune into the season premier of “American Idol.”
The alliance with CinemaNow, to be announced Wednesday, accelerates Blockbuster’s push to catch up with rival Netflix.
The investment arm of Intel said Wednesday that it will invest $23 million in three Indian companies in areas ranging from online marketing to education.
The number of Internet users in China has reached 298 million, nearly equal to the population of the United States, according to official figures.
A high-profile task force concluded that the sexual solicitation of children online is not a significant problem.
Intel is hiring Venables Bell & Partners in San Francisco as its lead global creative agency, replacing McCann Erickson Worldwide.
Julius Genachowski was a major fund-raiser for the Obama campaign and played a leading role in the campaign’s highly successful online strategy.
News reports projected that Japan’s leading electronics companies would see an operating loss in the current financial year as plummeting demand and a strong yen take their toll on sales.
A look at gadgets that were the stars of past shows, but flopped outside of the convention center.
A look at the future of storing digital media with William Watkins, chief executive of Seagate.
While the U.S. has the world's fastest supercomputers, it faces increased pressure from countries like India and China.
Saul Hansell on the Consumer Electronics Show gadgetfest; the tech term "OLED;" household harmony when two iPods share one computer, and technology news.
J.D. Biersdorfer, who writes the Q&A column in Circuits, now tackles more questions in our Gadgetwise blog.
The market for in-vehicle technology — those screens, navigation devices and audio systems inside cars — is tanking.
Sam Grobart, The Times’s assistant technology editor, in search of the best that the Consumer Electronics Show had to offer this year.
Market data provided by Reuters. Copyright 2008 Reuters.
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