Woman touching a phishing concept

Gen Z most likely to fall for phishing attacks

A new survey reveals that 44 percent of all participants admit to having interacted with a phishing message in the last year. Gen Z stands out as the…

By Ian Barker -

Latest Technology News

Macrovision's Neon IPG displaying TV Guide

Macrovision's appeal for CE makers to stop bypassing the IPG

The channel behind the TV channels you watch could be the most lucrative new advertising platform since the advent of the Web.

Last year, Macrovision acquired TV Guide magazine not so much for the magazine -- it ended up selling the publication arm for a single buck -- but for its interest in its interactive program guide partnerships with content providers like Comcast. With HDTV manufacturers at CES this year integrating their own program guides into their displays, Macrovision's investment is threatened with irrelevance in the coming years.

By Scott M. Fulton, III -
Toshiba

Toshiba starts integrating DVD into small-screen displays

Want to watch a movie in bed? Cooking programs in the kitchen? Pilates videos in the den? Toshiba America Consumer Products has announced a new line of LCD TV/DVD combination products, which are intended to be used in any room in the house.

Screen size include 19, 22, and 26 inches, all with a 16:9 aspect radio. All the TVs will meet Energy Star 3.0 certifications. The current 15-inch television will continue to be sold.

By slfisher -
Vizio logo

Vizio adds IPTV connectivity to its HDTV line

Continuing the move toward integrating the Internet with televisions, Vizio has announced Connected HDTV, a technology platform that it said will be integrated into its displays shipping this fall.

The technology, which has both wired and wireless connections built in, will use a customized remote control that will give viewers access to Internet content without interrupting the TV program they are viewing.

By slfisher -
Palm Pre

Palm to partner with Sprint for its new Pre

With perhaps the entire company on the line, Palm has one more shot at glory with the likely introduction of an entirely new smartphone line.

12:14pm PT: AG: Cynic one, converted. Hot damn.

By Jacqueline Emigh -
ViewSonic LinkPC

ViewSonic brand adorns a new netbook

Known for its crystal-sharp displays, ViewSonic will enter (or re-enter) the PC business with its Atom-based LinkPC.

New netbooks are struggling to find the right price point, and the sluggish economy may not be helping much. So $400 is going to be a gamble for ViewSonic, a company not known to current buyers as having ever made a PC.

By Scott M. Fulton, III -
Opera

Opera to launch new browser toolkit for game machines, TVs

At CES, Opera is launching a new edition of its toolkit for building browsers that run on gaming machines, set-top boxes, and other places beyond garden variety PC and cell phone environments.

The "Devices" toolkit -- already used for Nintendo's Wii -- now allows for development of mini-browsers with complete Internet capabilities.

By Jacqueline Emigh -
Sony CES Keynote

Live from Sony's Thursday keynote

There's so much going on with Sony this year that yesterday's massive press conference couldn't hold it all. This morning, CEO Sir Howard Stringer is scheduled to take Sony's rebound strategy one step further.

10:43am PT: Stringer concludes with a sad story re kids losing their sense of wonder and adventure as they get older.

By Angela Gunn -
Microsoft

'Microsoft Tags' set for rollout today

Steve Ballmer didn't mention Microsoft Tags in his keynote yesterday. But the new phone tool -- designed for Windows Mobile as well as Android and other environments -- is slated for announcement at CES today.

Microsoft will enter beta on Wednesday with Tags, a new phone tool developed internally by Microsoft's research division and then adopted by Microsoft's incubation arm.

By Jacqueline Emigh -
The mysterious 'Coming Soon' sign at the Sony booth Wednesday night

Sony hints of more details today on 3-D, portable PCs, OLED TVs

"Coming soon," read a mysterious sign in the portable PC section of Sony's CES booth last night. Sony showed 3-D technology to journalists, too, but that "wasn't an announcement" either? Is there more to come from Sir Howard?

In demos and displays for journalists last night, Sony officials gave stronger hints about what CEO Sir Howard Stringer might say about his company's portable PC, OLED TV, and 3-D activities in a CES keynote later today.

By Jacqueline Emigh -
CES 2009 Top Story

CES Countdown #2: Who will be spending money in 2009, and for what?

There is, or there was as of Wednesday night, a CES sign in the Las Vegas Convention Center that seems to sum up the current state of the technology marketplace. For everyone's sake, let's hope it's only a sign, not a Sign.

The small-s sign listed seminars slated for the rest of the week in LVCC North. Usual stuff, with SuperSessions and "thought leaders" and all, but there was one disturbing last-minute addition -- a big CANCELED sticker over the presentation on "International Success Stories from the Retail World."

By Angela Gunn -
Music GIants

iRiver unleashes a stream of products at CES

There are a dozen products on iRiver's CES announcement list -- devices for networking, devices for getting around town and enjoying one's music, including two that are pretty Mickey Mouse.

The world's most famous rodent graces two solid-state MP3 players, the Mplayer Eyes and the Mplayer Season II. The Eyes model is a 2 GB player, available in pink or blue, with white LED eyes that speak to you of...well, MP3s. The 1 GB Season II model comes in 10 colors and, like its sibling, connects via the USB port.

By Angela Gunn -
Microsoft

Microsoft Research discovers its inner Songsmith

Researchers at Microsoft have developed software that purports to do what many thousands of starving artists work at daily: write music. But Songsmith, according to its keepers, is all in good fun.

The program, announced Thursday at CES, generates musical accompaniment to a song sung into the computer microphone. Songsmith knows about several dozen musical styles, and adjusts its output accordingly -- selecting a reggae accompaniment will get you something different from the R&B results, for instance. The tempo can be tweaked to be peppier or slower, various instruments can be added or subtracted, and more knowledgeable users can make further adjustments.

By Angela Gunn -
Sony

Tiny netbooks, simple video set Sony sailing through CES

It's only the first set of Sony announcements, but the product assortment at Sony's booth preview Wednesday was enough to cap the evening with something approaching nerd-vana, if you like your gadgets colorful and slightly off-kilter.

After a day of mega-announcements that quickly became paint-by-numbers exercises (environmental awareness? check! tiny netbook-looking object? check? response to Flip videocam? check!) Sony was both right on target and curiously off-kilter. Some press folk groused about having to haul out of the Venetian's meeting rooms and over to the actual show floor, but it worked for Sony -- emphasizing that all the podium talk in Vegas isn't one-tenth as interesting as getting your hands on the gear.

By Angela Gunn -
AMD

Counter-'tock:' AMD fires back at Intel with everything it's got

This may be it. If AMD has one trump card left in its deck, it could be the ability to deliver a system that balances attractive performance with a measurably lower price. Today at CES, AMD is making its one shot to win back the enthusiast.

In recent months, the general perception among knowledgeable system builders has been that Intel has taken back the performance crown in nearly all market categories, and is threatening to lock in on the two market segments AMD has historically championed: 1) the budget-conscious buyer, and 2) the system builder and enthusiast.

By Scott M. Fulton, III -
CES Steve Ballmer

Ballmer: Windows Live to integrate with Facebook, new Win7 beta

Its enterprise brands have all been succeeding quite nicely -- Windows Server, SQL Server, Visual Studio, Office, SharePoint. But in the consumers' mind, Microsoft took a beating last year. How will Ballmer recover?

7:50pm PT: They have moved over to a surface controller that will integrate with the tablet as well as a smartphone. They're showing off an e-ink style mockup as well, this is followed by typical Ballmer comment about how excited he is about everything. Gary Shapiro: "Bill left you a big sweater to fill, Steve, but I think you've pulled it off!" And with that, Tripod comes back on, to play out the quickly vaporizing crowd.

By Tim Conneally -

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