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Publié: janvier 22, 2008, 6:27pm CET
Maybe you're related to John Lennon, Hillary Clinton, Genghis Khan, or the Iberians of ancient Spain? Beyond providing social networking, several Google-funded Web sites targeted at North Americans will test your DNA and may give you some genetic clues.
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Publié: janvier 22, 2008, 6:25pm CET
A rumor brought to light this morning by notorious financial insider and blogger Henry Blodget may this time be true, as Yahoo's response appears to warn of bad news ahead in its next restructuring move.
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Publié: janvier 22, 2008, 6:24pm CET
Sadly, the days of showing your love for someone with a mixtape are all but gone. However, device manufacturers look to be gearing up for similar Valentine's day gifting by offering appropriately-colored portable media players.
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Publié: janvier 22, 2008, 6:03pm CET
What Microsoft characterized this morning as a "new" virtualization strategy looks curiously like its existing one, only now it has a new partner and an acquired company to help bring it about.
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Publié: janvier 22, 2008, 6:02pm CET
After a nearly three-year delay, Comcast just today has begun to market the TiVo upgrade for its Motorola boxes to customers in Boston.
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Publié: janvier 22, 2008, 4:41pm CET
At long last, McAfee is catching up with its competitors in the security space in the field of data encryption, with the rollout yesterday of a new feature that the company appears to have acquired last November.
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Publié: janvier 22, 2008, 1:54am CET
You'll still be able to get a cell phone with Sanyo's name on it, if that's what you want. But now, the troubled Japanese electronics manufacturer will be selling its mobile phone business to Kyocera for around $374 million.
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Publié: janvier 22, 2008, 12:19am CET
The latest Ubuntu distribution of Linux will support an entire new Lotus office productivity suite from IBM. Red Hat said it will support part of the suite: Notes and Lotus' upcoming Symphony, which is still in beta.
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Publié: janvier 22, 2008, 12:11am CET
Making good on a campaign promise to overhaul Maryland's suspect electronic voting system, the governor there proposed an initial outlay in the state budget toward the purchase of scanners to replace its $65 million touch-screen voting systems.