Motorola CEO talks up the mobile revolution Video
Related Videos
SAP navigating through paradigm shifts
At Software 2007 in Santa Clara, Calif., SAP co-founder Hasso Plattner talks to program host M.R. Rangaswami about Wall Street's unfavorable reaction to the company's $300 million-plus investment in next-generation software. Plattner also discusses his "minimalist" approach to application design.
At the Gartner Symposium ITxpo 2006 in San Francisco on May 16, Motorola CEO Edward Zander talks with CNET editors about what it took to make a deal with Apple Computer and Steve Jobs.
Powell hits back at criticism over broadband penetration
At the Voice on the Net 2005 conference in San Jose, Calif., outgoing FCC chairman Michael Powell talks with CNET News.com's Charles Cooper in a Face to Face interview about the success of Internet telephony. He also candidly discusses telecommunications mergers and the collapse of long-distance services.
Motorola looking to mobilize your TV
Motorola CEO Ed Zander takes the stage on a bicycle and pulls out a "surprise" new product. He also speaks with Dan Moloney, president of Connected Home Solutions at Motorola, to discuss the company's new Follow Me TV. It will let consumers move media seamlessly from televisions to phones and vice versa.
Core 2 Duo Extreme aimed at gamers
CNET's Neha Tiwari talks to Ron Thornburg, the Frag Dolls women's gaming team and Intel Excutive Vice President Sean Maloney about the new Core 2 Duo Extreme at the Intel Launch conference at Intel's Santa Clara, Calif., campus. The Core 2 Duo Extreme promises faster a frame rate, as well as smoother game play.
Salesforce demos AppExchange platform
At Software 2007 in Santa Clara, Calif., Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff and vice president of developer marketing, Adam Gross, show off the company's AppExchange platform. The technology enables users to build, run and sell enterprise applications on-demand.
At the Gartner Symposium ITxpo in San Francisco on May 16, Motorola CEO Edward Zander talks to CNET about the many and varied digital rights management standards. How does he cope?
Will iPhone revolutionize the mobile market?
At Macworld 2007 in San Francisco, ZDNet Editor-in-Chief Dan Farber talks with Tim Bajarin, president of market analyst firm Creative Strategies, about Apple's iPhone. Will the mobile device take the market by storm in June when it goes on sale?
Ballmer talks up Office Business Applications solution
At Software 2007 in Santa Clara, Calif., Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer looks at an OBA prototype from Dassault Systemes. The lifecycle management software is built on Office 2007 and features a composite application that uses SharePoint Server 2007 and Communications Server 2007.\r\n
Motorola Debut i865 (Boost Mobile)
The Motorola Debut is the latest slim slider, push-to-talk phone from Boost Mobile.
