JavaOne: Car talks to phone Video
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At the JavaOne conference in San Francisco, CNET's Brian Cooley observes how Java enables cell phones to offer improved productivity and entertainment applications.
Passwords with a 60-second shelf life
At the RSA Conference in San Francisco, CNET's Brian Cooley sees a new technology that changes passwords once a minute on devices including PDAs, cell phones and wristwatches.
DOJ says trust is key to fighting cybercrime
At the RSA Conference in San Francisco, CNET's Brian Cooley sees a new technology that changes passwords once a minute on devices including PDAs, cell phones and wristwatches.
Nextel offers mobile point-of-sale technology
At the JavaOne conference in San Francisco, CNET's Brian Cooley sees a new credit card reader and bar code scanning equipment from Nextel designed to serve businesses of any size.
Fingerprints--an open sesame for PDAs?
At the RSA security conference in San Francisco, CNET's Brian Cooley casts an eye over Hewlett-Packard's new built-in biometric scanning technology, designed to replace passwords in PDAs and tablet PCs.
Gosling touts Java renaissance on PCs
CNET News.com's Stephen Shankland found James Gosling at the JavaOne conference in San Francisco on May 8. Gosling is officially chief technology officer, vice president, and Sun fellow in the Client Software Group. But he's mostly known as a leading co-creator of Java.
CNET's Brian Cooley looks at the Nokia Communicator 9500, a cell phone with a full keyboard, Wi-Fi and EDGE connectivity, and a complete office software suite.
Java's rocky road to open source
At the JavaOne converence in San Francisco on Wednesday, CNET News.com's Stephen Shankland asks Java co-creator James Gosling how he views the software technology's current open-source status. Gosling, chief technology officer of Sun Microsystems, gives
At the JavaOne conference in San Francisco, Rich Green, Sun's executive vice president of software, demos JavaFX Script, a new scripting language for writing applications on Java-equipped desktop PCs and mobile devices.
Sun, NASA demo open-source 3D earth software
At the JavaOne conference in San Francisco, Robert Brewin, Sun's CTO of\r\nsoftware, and NASA's Patrick Hogan show off a new open-source\r\ngeospatial browser that implements Java and incorporates NASA's\r\nvisualization technology. The new software also allows developers to\r\ncreate mashups.