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An OS that lives in your browser
From the Always On Stanford Summit in Palo Alto, Calif., StartForce CEO Jin Koh gives a demo of his company's Web operating system, a Windows-like platform that encourages others to build on top of it.
YouTube's Hurley stands his ground
YouTube CEO Chad Hurley and MP3.com founder Michael Robertson, plus executives from Yahoo and Sony, gathered to speak about the limitations and future of consumer-generated media at the AlwaysOn Stanford Summit in Palo Alto, Calif. YouTube has recently come under fire for pirated and copyright content posted by consumers on the site. In May, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates said his company would never acquire YouTube because of its laissez-faire attitude toward content.
CEO of MP3tunes explains his business
MP3tunes will let you play your chosen tunes anywhere--car, PC, cell phone, or earphones. And, Robertson has another new business getting started, he tells CNET News.com's Greg Sandoval at Stanford's AlwaysOn Innovation Summit on July 26.
See cell phone technology in progress
From the launch of the Nokia Research Center in Palo Alto, Calif.: CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos speaks with research engineers about the technology they're developing in conjunction with Nokia and Stanford University.
CEO of MP3tunes has advice for YouTube
MP3tunes' CEO and Founder Michael Robertson appeared at Stanford University's AlwaysOn Innovation Summit on July 26. Talking with CNET News.com's Greg Sandoval, Robertson had some advice for his fellow entrepreneurs, including YouTube's Chad Hurley, on running video ads.
MP3.com founder takes on MySpace, YouTube
At the AlwaysOn Stanford Summit, MP3.com founder and MP3Tunes CEO Michael Robertson predicted the addition of ads to YouTube and referred to popular social-networking site MySpace as a "technological nightmare." YouTube CEO Chad Hurley says that although his site is going through revisions, it will remain a site for the people by the people.
CNET.com's Brian Tong heads to the Palo Alto, Calif., Apple store to check out the crowds and see what's involved in the activation process.
iPhone 3G says hello to Palo Alto
CNET.com's Kara Tsuboi and Brian Tong hang out at the Palo Alto, Calif., Apple store to see what happened as the doors opened, the line surged, and customers got their hands on the phone.
Berners-Lee ponders Net's future
Tim Berners-Lee, considered to be the father of the Web, speaks with scientists and Silicon Valley executives at HP Labs in Palo Alto, Calif., about where he sees the Internet going in the next five years.
In this week's Dan & David Show, ZDNet editors, Dan Farber and David Berlind discuss a range of tech topics, including Intel and AMD's opposing benchmark results, Adobe's Apollo platform and news from the Tech Policy Summit in San Jose, Calif.
