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InternetNews February 7, 2006 Sean Michael Kerner |
BitTorrent Finds Way Into Opera BitTorrent, a tool used by both software pirates and software distributors, is gaining a measure of legitimacy thanks to browser maker Opera Software.  |
PC World March 2006 Scott Spanbauer |
Thirteen Simple Ways to Bring Order to Your Inbox Tips for organizing your e-mail in Outlook 2003, Outlook Express 6, and Mozilla Thunderbird 1.5.  |
PC World March 2006 Harry McCracken |
Up Front: The Next Internet Breakthrough(s) Think the Web has already changed everything? Just you wait.  |
InternetNews February 2, 2006 Sean Michael Kerner |
New Firefox Kills Bugs The first new Mozilla Firefox point release of the year is now out addressing a number of bug and security issues. Overall, Danish security firm Secunia rates the aggregate of all the security issues highly critical.  |
InternetNews February 1, 2006 Susan Kuchinskas |
Microsoft Spells Out Government Relations Microsoft laid out a policy for dealing with government orders relating to user-generated content published on MSN Spaces.  |
InternetNews February 1, 2006 Sean Michael Kerner |
Domain Prices Set to Rise ICANN comes to new terms with VeriSign on long-running disputes, including domain pricing.  |
IEEE Spectrum February 2006 Paul McFedries |
Folk Wisdom How can nonprofessional taggers hope to create a WEb taxonomy that's as sophisticated as one that professional specialists would make? The answer lies in something called the architecture of participation: services get better as the number of users increases.  |
InternetNews January 31, 2006 Sean Michael Kerner |
IE 7 in Public Beta A publicly available preview of Internet Explorer 7 for Windows XP is now available.  |
The Motley Fool January 31, 2006 Alyce Lomax |
IE Beta: Better, Not Best While IE 7 may more closely match Firefox, many users (and investors) may wonder whether Microsoft could have gone one step further and provided a few more innovations to stay ahead of its rivals.  |
InternetNews January 30, 2006 Ed Sutherland |
AOL Tempts Dial-Up Users American Online turns to cable modem and DSL carriers to help encourage dial-up subscribers to adopt its broadband service.  |
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