CNET Live: September 13, 2007 Video

To play this video, you need Javascript enabled and the latest version of Flash installed. Install Flash now
CNET Live: September 13, 2007
Created: 09/14/2007
Video description: Tom talks to a man suing Apple over his iPhone bill, and Brian explores the world of virtualization.

Related Videos

CNET Live: March 13, 2008

CNET Live: March 13, 2008 Molly and Brian talk DIY dentistry, Hulu haps, and explore the surprising 'Tech of the Irish.'

Smartphones poised to make greater leap in next five years

The iPhone 5 demonstrates the significant evolution of smartphones since Apple introduced the disruptive device in 2007. CNET's Sumi Das talks to Mike Liebhold at the Institute for the Future to find out how smartphones will change our lives yet again.

CNET Live GPS contest

During the September 27, 2007 CNET Live show, audience members competed in a GPS contest.

Gates on Apple's 'huge disadvantage'

From CES 2007: Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates speaks with CNET News.com's Ina Fried about why Microsoft's recent moves will trump Apple in the digital living room.

Out of the box: Apple iPhone

CNET's Brian Cooley pops the lid on the most anticipated tech gadget in years, the Apple iPhone.

Daily Debrief: iPhone 3G's rocky launch

Brian Cooley, CNET's editor at large, talks with CNET News reporter Tom Krazit about the long lines at the store, the activation issues, and the other problems that arose from the iPhone 3G launch.

CNET Live: February 28, 2008

In this week's CNET Live, Tom Merritt and guest host Brian Tong hold the first-ever iPhone nose-dial challenge; plus your calls and more!

Will.i.am talks tech

CNET's Brian Tong sits down with artist Will.i.am to talk about his involvement with the tech community, his new iPhone case, and the tech gadgets he uses.

The iPhone 3G bummer!

Did you go to an Apple Store and leave empty handed? Brian Tong talks to customers who were hoping to get their hands on the new iPhone 3G.

What's really wrong with the iPhone radio?

The iPhone 4's radio problems can't be solved with a software fix, no matter what Apple says. We talk with CNET's Maggie Reardon and AnandTech's Brian Klug about what's really wrong with the iPhone 4 and why it appears to be so much worse than other phones.