At 35, the web is broken, but its inventor hasn't given up hope of fixing it yet
Back to the future: Sir Tim Berners-Lee thinks the rise of AI has made things even worse, but he continues to find solutions in the internet's earliest days.
Back to the future: Sir Tim Berners-Lee thinks the rise of AI has made things even worse, but he continues to find solutions in the internet's earliest days.
A Big Science SOA -- with nary a Web service in sight
The NSA is looking for new ways to snoop, since advances in telecommunications have muffled its ears. Now it's splicing into undersea fiber-optic cables-a potentially illegal and not-yet-successful move.
Monday - The Trials Of eParenthood
And they know where your ISP lives
(Please note: for the first three days of this week I was laid low with a virulent and explosive form of what my mother would call a tummy upset' but what I habitually refer to using monosyllables that rhyme with fits' or fights'. Thus I didn't actually do anything computer-related until Thursday but for you, distant reader, I'll make something up to cover the missing days.
A federal judge yesterday ordered the US Navy to comply with his earlier ruling reinstating a sailor who successfully fought dismissal after an investigator suggested he was homosexual based on information from the sailor's America Online profile.According to the Associated Press, U.
To help you sleep better at night, a US regulatory body reveals that not all the US' nuke plants are year-2000 safe.
War experts find that a small electromagnetic pulse could bring advanced civilisations to their knees.
This week: VR that works, our alien nations, toying with activism, how to be Ford Prefect and what happens after ADSL