This VW can access the Internet Video
Related Videos
Watch a movie, browse through your photos, even get an e-mail if your car is stolen. Take a look at both the hardware and software for the StreetDeck with Rafe Needleman, of CNET, and Robert Wray, co-founder and CEO of Mp3car.com.
Exercise equipment with Intel inside
CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos speaks with a representative from the company's digital home group about the Expresso Spark, an exercise bicycle equipped with Intel's Viiv platform. The interview took place at the Intel Developer Forum in San Francisco.
See the new Volkswagen Passat in action.
Not everything gets made overseas. CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos tours the Silicon Valley facilities of Applied Materials, where they make equipment for producing televisions and solar panels.
Watch a movie, browse through your photos, and even get e-mail if your car is stolen. Take a look at StreetDeck's hardware and software.
This car moves without a driver
On June 14, the Stanford Racing Team tests Junior, a Volkswagen Passat that has been programmed to drive on its own for the upcoming DARPA Urban Challenge. CNET News.com's Zamir Haider rides along as the vehicle goes through its motions.
Google campus turns on to solar
CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos takes a tour of Google's new solar-panel installation, now believed to be the largest for a company in North America. Kanellos toured the Mountain View, Calif., campus on June 18.
Intel: Tuning in to wireless notebooks
News.com's Michael Kanellos talks with Intel's Anand Chandrasekhar about the challenges in introducing wireless notebooks in the United States as compared with Europe and Asia.
Intel's Berkeley lab: Internet for remote locations
CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos reports from the Intel Berkeley Lab during its open house, March 22. He speaks with two researchers working on systems to provide Internet access to remote locations as efficiently as possible.
Tokyo's neighborhood for food lovers
If you\222re a chef, in the restaurant business or just love food, you'll want to see this. In western Tokyo, the Kappabashi-dori district hosts lines of stores that sell everything from the latest in cooking tools and utensils to plastic fish. CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos recently toured the shops to see all the bustling street has to offer.