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Japan's Nuke Plant Disaster
- At least two people are seriously injured in a critical nuclear accident at a Japanese uranium processing plant 90 miles outside Tokyo. By the Environment News Service. [Wired News]
Java Out, Linux In
- Wyse Technologies jumps on the Linux bandwagon with its diskless workstations. Also: Microsoft hires an advocate of open source to work on Perl.... Lucent tests a wireless voice-and-data network. [Wired News]
Java for the Cell Phone
- Symbian, the powerful wireless alliance formed to take on Microsoft, says a new generation of handheld devices will use the Sun language as part of its operating platform. [Wired News]
Jets Take Off with Technology
- Memorizing all those football plays is such a drag. But if a New York Jets executive has his way, his players will get schooled in multimedia style. By Jennifer Sullivan. [Wired News]
Jobs Hints at New Portables
- At the upbeat Apple shareholders meeting, iCEO Steve Jobs speculates about new portables and quashes rumors about PDAs. Leander Kahney reports from Cupertino, California. [Wired News]
Jobs: There Is No Free iMac
- Apple's CEO says the company isn't hopping on the free computer bandwagon yet. The top dog answers questions on all things Mac. Leander Kahney reports from New York. [Wired News]
John Madden on Gridiron Tech
- The renowned football analyst talks with Wired News about TV technology, its effect on covering the game, and about using his influence to make things happen. Interview by Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
John Madden on Gridiron Tech
- The renowned football analyst talks with Wired News about TV technology, its effect on covering the game, and about using his influence to make things happen. Interview by Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
Journey to the Interior, Exterior
- NASA has plans to get to know the Sun's closest neighbor and a certain comet headed our way. The missions will provide the closest look yet at the outside of fiery Mercury and the first-ever look inside a comet. By Lindsey Arent. [Wired News]
Keeping E. Coli in Check
- A new technology combines photonics and chemistry to stop E. Coli from reaching consumers. By Kristen Philipkoski. [Wired News]
Keeping Their Heads in the Game
- As technology has evolved, so has the equipment worn by football players. And nothing has changed more than the player's best friend: the helmet. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
Kids' Browser to Spot Dirty Pics
- An Oklahoma software firm is preparing to release a Web browser that the company claims will analyze images in search of all things fleshy -- and screen accordingly. By Leander Kahney. [Wired News]
Kiss Your VCR Goodbye
- Smart television devices promise to idiot-proof recording TV shows. But the price tags say early adopters only. By John Gartner. [Wired News]
Knee Deep in High-Tech Help
- Twenty years ago, a blown knee meant an almost certain end to a football player's career. Today, that same injury might not even end his season. By Craig Bicknell. [Wired News]
L0pht Releases AntiSniff
- The Boston-based security collective unveils its second commercial tool, which monitors your network for suspicious activity. By Polly Sprenger. [Wired News]
Lab-Grown Organs on Horizon?
- Livers and lungs growing in a petri dish might seem the stuff of science fiction. But the discovery of a gene that controls organ shape in roundworms could make human organ-growing a reality. [Wired News]
Lambs Get Human Genes
- Scientists have found a way to modify animals using human genes that could one day lead to transplants between species. By Lindsey Arent. [Wired News]
Larger Wafers May Cut Chip Costs
- Intel expects its future move from 8-inch to 12-inch wafers will increase the yield in processor chips and cut production costs by up to 30 percent. [Wired News]
Lasers Power Wireless Net
- Lucent Technologies debuts a wireless technology that uses lasers and amplifiers to transmit huge amounts of voice and data through the air. It will be handy in places where fiber-optics can't be installed. [Wired News]
Lavish Debut for Apple's G4
- If Steve Jobs appeared to be gloating a little, he has a right to. Apple's new G4 is, by all accounts, a huge leap in computer technology. Leander Kahney reports from San Francisco. [Wired News]
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