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Build 3D worlds easily through your browser
From DemoFall in San Diego: Webware's Rafe Needleman talks with SceneCaster, which recently launched its 3D social-media Web application.
Build 3D worlds easily through your browser
From DemoFall in San Diego: Webware's Rafe Needleman talks with SceneCaster, which recently launched its 3D social-media Web application.
Head-mounted display will play all media
From the floor of DemoFall 2006: CNET's Rafe Needleman talks with Headplay Co-CEO Glen Ward about his company's media center and head display combo.
Robotic rabbit will read you the morning paper
From the floor of DemoFall 2006: CNET's Rafe Needleman talks with Violet co-founder Rafi Haladjian, the brains behind Nabaztag, the new Wi-Fi-enabled bunny that seemingly does it all.
Launch Week's Top 5 products demos
CNET Webware Editor Rafe Needleman has chosen his favorite standout products from so-called "Launch Week," the combined presentations from both San Francisco's TechCrunch50 and San Diego's DemoFall. Needleman and CNET's Kara Tsuboi discuss the Top 5 and why they have the potential to be the next big things.
Print your photos without a computer
From DemoFall 2006: CNET's Rafe Needleman gets a demo of the HP Presto from Presto President and CEO Raymond Stern. See how to print a picture from a printer hooked up to a phone line.
Ever want rechargeable batteries without having to buy a separate charger? You just flip the top off the new USBCell and plug it straight into a USB port. CNET's Rafe Needleman speaks with Moixa Energy CEO Simon Daniel, inventor of the USBCell battery, at DemoFall 2006 in San Diego.
A cheaper alternative to Microsoft's Roundtable
At DemoFall 2006 in San Diego, CNET's Rafe Needleman spoke with Be Here CEO Stephen Von Rump about the company's upcoming video conference phone system TotalView. Touted as a cheaper, every \r\ncompany's alternative to Microsoft's upcoming Roundtable, it sports a full 360-degree view with only one lens.
Microsoft's four-year brainchild: Wallop
What happens when Microsoft brings in psychologists and Web developers to create a social-networking site? You get Wallop, which lets Flash developers build personalization widgets that could cost users a buck or two. CNET's Rafe Needleman speaks with Wallop CEO Karl Jacob at DemoFall 2006.
On Working Webware, Dan Farber and Rafe Needleman sit down with Jeff Bonforte of Xobni, which is a plug-in for Outlook that could change the way the popular e-mail program is used.