Turning up past video game tunes Video
Related Videos
CNET News.com's Neha Tiwari jumps into the McDonald's video game and discovers that tending the pasture, keeping the boardroom happy, and making sure customers have smiles on their faces is much harder than it looks.
In this episode, CNET News.com's Neha Tiwari and CNET Download.com's Jessica Dolcourt explore their options in online avatar creation.
CNET News.com's Neha Tiwari jumps into the McDonald's video game and discovers that tending the pasture, keeping the boardroom happy and making sure customers have smiles on their faces is much harder than it looks. To see our blog and the site where you'll find the game, click the first link below.
Play guitar to a virtual audience
From CES 2007: Marcus Henderson, guitarist for the band Drist and responsible for the majority of the guitar heard on the new Guitar Hero II, talks with CNET News.com's Neha Tiwari about the game's new release on Xbox 360. See a demo of the game and learn how it's played.
Can you remember life before the iPod? CNET News.com's Neha Tiwari hits the streets of San Francisco to hear what regular iPod users have to say about the tiny device that changed the way we listen to music, and what life was like in the era of the Walkman.
Coming: Sony PS3 and Nintendo Wii
CNET News.com's Neha Tiwari talked to gamers and industry insiders about the next-generation consoles coming from Nintendo and Sony.
EA takes hold of the handheld market
At Electronic Arts' headquarters in Redwood City, Calif., CNET News.com's Neha Tiwari talks to EA producers Kevin Chorney and Matt Tomporowski about the company's plans for the handheld market. And we take a special look at "Need for Speed: Carbon" for the PSP.
Neha Tiwari of CNET News.com visits CompUSA for the midnight release of Windows Vista.
Neha Tiwari of CNET News.com visits CompUSA for the midnight release of Windows Vista.
Start-ups aim to take on YouTube, iTunes
CNET News.com's Neha Tiwari talks to the folks at Melodis (Midomi.com) and Mywaves regarding their "offbeat" start-up ideas. Mywaves plans to bring entertainment video to your cell phone, while Midomi plans to sell you selected music clips and offer amateur versions of favorite songs to the brave. Both companies, hoping to grow exponentially in the coming years, are housed in Saeed Amidi's Plug and Play Tech Center in Sunnyvale, Calif.