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Little Organizer Causes Big Stir - Phillipe Kahn's Starfish Software is powering the new credit-card-sized REX, a device that may give the PalmPilot some serious competition. [Wired News]
 
LittleBrother Puts Big Nose in Your Surfing - Electronic monitoring of employees is not new, but new software may turn out to be one snoopy sibling that most workers would rather do without. [Wired News]
 
Living Machines Tackle River Pollution - A project that uses biological organisms to clean wastewater hopes to clean up Philadelphia's famously dirty Schuylkill River. Then it wants to clean up the rest of the world's waterways. [Wired News]
 
Loaded for VR: Headset, Gun, Scalpel - Sandia Labs is putting virtual reality to work to train FBI agents in hostage crisis simulations, and send medics into virtual battlefields. [Wired News]
 
Look Before You Push - Push media's adoring press often fails to mention the technology's many pitfalls. [Wired News]
 
Lotus and Partners Spread Java Suite Gospel - The slimmed-down apps for desktop and network computer use challenge Microsoft Office. Also: LANs for the home. [Wired News]
 
Lucent Leaps to Rescue Net Telephony - Software glitches, network bottlenecks, crackly sound quality - these are the bugbears of Net telephony. But to Lucent, they are the sound of opportunity. [Wired News]
 
MCI Technology Could Vault Net Telephony - The long-distance carrier will soon mingle voice networks and packet-switched data networks. Industry watchers call it a step toward Net telephony. [Wired News]
 
MSIX Turns on the ISP Meter - Compaq's new metering protocol could give ISPs an easier way to offer premium services - and give customers cause to watch their use. [Wired News]
 
Mac OS 8 Arrives - Apple's new operating system is an improvement, but can it be the silver lining the company needs? [Wired News]
 
Macho Computing at Root of RSA Contest Flap - Malicious acts have turned the largest current effort to crack a 56-bit encryption key into an "organizational nightmare." [Wired News]
 
Macromedia Pushes Shockwave through Castanet - Macromedia hopes to get revenue out of Shockwave by enabling content developers to deliver through Marimba's tuner software. [Wired News]
 
Macromedia Rides the FutureWave - FutureWave's vector graphics plug-in wasn't exactly looking like the wave of the future. Until Macromedia bought in. [Wired News]
 
Magnetically Speaking, Frogs Float - A magnetic personality can cause animals to defy gravity, two European researchers say. [Wired News]
 
Making Cures, Not Bombs - A waste product of nuclear war is being used in the war on cancer. [Wired News]
 
Marimba Finds Itself on Another Frontier - The start-up that blazed trails in distributing software now has a greater challenge: Competition. [Wired News]
 
Mars Nukes Is Good Nukes - University of Florida researchers want to use a nuclear propulsion system to get humans on Mars faster. [Wired News]
 
Masking the Complexities of Chip Development - A new facility jointly founded by some of the world's biggest chipmakers is developing new materials and platforms for photomasks and reticles - the building blocks for smarter, faster chips. [Wired News]
 
Massaging Your Bandwidth - Several companies are finding ways to wring more - and better - bandwidth out of the wires. [Wired News]
 
Matra Marconi Awarded Celestri Contract - The French-British aerospace venture will supply power, propulsion, and avionics equipment for Motorola's Internet in the Sky. Also: Intel cuts chip prices dramatically. [Wired News]
 
 

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