The Governator's muscle in Silicon Valley
The technology industry has traded on a combination of star power and apathy for the last half-decade of its political life--and needs to make an impression on the governor without a past.
The technology industry has traded on a combination of star power and apathy for the last half-decade of its political life--and needs to make an impression on the governor without a past.
John Doerr (left) and John Heilemann at Web 2.0At the Web 2.
Update: The draft IP enforcement directive, a measure that critics say would harm consumer choice and criminalise many innocuous activities, has moved one stage closer to final approval
Ireland is in the right place to generate electricity, and a lot of it, out of oceanic surges, but it won't be easy sailing.Video: Ocean-based renewable energy
Many vendors are still failing to take steps to clean up their act, and legislation such as the WEEE directive won’t do enough, says pressure group
It's the Democrats. What could possibly go wrong?
President expected to sign off on law that could draw attention to products that offer "clean tech" solutions.
In times of great stress, people need facts and information to calm them. In times of great technology, there is no excuse for leaving the public stranded in an information void. Guest columnist Joyce Bosc says this is why governments need local Web presence.
A huge exodus from the San Francisco Bay Area may be under way as high-tech companies pack their bags for cheaper North American cities, according to a study.
While President Obama can't get no "RSPECT," the retail world is scrambling in the wake of the Target breach (and yet, my wife shopped there for hours today), even Iran can't stop Facebook, and Brazil wants to build an undersea cable.