Loaded: The human radio antenna Video
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ACDC becomes an official "Rock Band," XM Satellite Radio subscribers get access to Howard Stern's show, and your new Dell PC could have superhuman powers.
Congress is focused on more than just the economy: an Internet-radio bill passes the House. Plus, iTunes becomes more accessible for the blind, and Wal-Mart ditches DRM music.
Loaded: Is Google Voice the lord of the rings?
Google Voice finally starts to let in new users, T-Mobile launches a G1 follow-up called the myTouch, and your favorite blogger may not get many more free lunches.
Loaded: Google sees the future
We have more iPhone rumors, Netflix is coming to Windows Media Center, and Google knows when you will quit your job.
Dell is ready for back-to-school with less expensive laptops and desktops. Verizon launches Fios to some very excited New Yorkers. Plus, Australia wants to check your iPod in the airport for pirated music.
Yahoo adds some shine, see how Yahoo! is looking to reach out to women. Plus, VoIP bills are on the rise in LA, find out how much the city is taxing users. And, see how Berkeley scientists are trying to make human wall-crawlers like Spiderman a reality, see if your spidey senses will be tingling in the near future.
Loaded: Buying Big Macs with RFID
The 'New York Times' is becoming an open platform. Can the nation's flagship paper become the next "it" thing in social media? Sony is going to beef up its OLED offerings so perhaps we'll see more than just an 11-inch TV for over $2,000. And you can now order a happy meal with your cell phone. If you live in Japan, that is.
We take a First Look at the new BlackBerry Tour, the Kindle may soon get in-books ads, and it could become illegal to plant a tracking chip in your girlfriend.
Loaded: Google Chrome OS. They went there.
Google announces a Web-based operating system for PCs, online radio stations reach a royalty agreement with the music industry, and that silly LG Watch Phone will actually hit the market after all.
Loaded: Google's power struggle
We were right about Amazon's new Kindle, Microsoft wants to start its own App Store, and Google hopes to monitor your house to find out how much energy you're wasting.
