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Guy Kawasaki, a former Apple employee and current CEO of Garage Technology Ventures, further discusses Steve Jobs' role in putting the pieces back together, how Apple achieves its success, and what the future holds. CNET News.com's Amanda Termen reports.
Jobs: Make your own GarageBand music
At Macworld 2004 in San Francisco, Apple CEO Steve Jobs introduces GarageBand--a new software application for the Mac that allows you to compose music with more than 50 different software instruments.
Intel: Making virtual environments more realistic
At the Gartner Symposium/ITxpo in San Francisco, Jerry Bautista, Intel's director of technology management, demonstrates how, in the future, Intel will power virtual environments using its multicore chip\r\ntechnology.
Trying to change how people watch films
On August 23, Dolby Laboratories held an event at its headquarters in San Francisco, showcasing the differences between the look of a movie on film, as opposed to in a digital format. CNET News.com's Greg Sandoval takes a look at the technology movie theaters are using to project films digitally--and at what problems they face in making the conversion.
Jobs introduces the iPod Touch
At the Apple event in San Francisco on September 5, CEO Steve Jobs introduced the iPod Touch, an iPod with almost all the same features of an iPhone, but without the phone.
This film by Mark Decena shows the filmaker's puppy love for Chuck Taylors.
'300' uses simple technology for unearthly results
Zack Snyder, director of the film 300 set to release March 9, talks with CNET News.com's Neha Tiwari about the technology used to bring Frank Miller's graphic novel to life.
At the Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco, ZDNet Editor in Chief Dan Farber talks to Ross Mayfield, CEO of SocialText; Matthew Glotzbach, product management director of Google Enterprise; and Satish Dharmaraj, CEO of Zimbra, about why CIOs are starting to implement Web 2.0 technologies in the enterprise.
At a press event in San Francisco, Apple Computer CEO Steve Jobs introduces a small new iPod called the iPod Nano. The gadget can hold up to 1,000 songs and is about 80 percent smaller than the original iPod.
At an event in San Francisco, IBM introduces a powerful new mainframe code-named T-Rex. The z990 can process 11,000 transactions per second and packs four times the memory of its predecessor, the z900.
