Search
The Directory
The Web
for
Home
>
News
>
Online Archives
>
Wired
>
1998
>
Technology
New!
Submit a site
whatUseek Directory Site Listings:
Clearing the Digital ID
- ValiCert has built a mechanism for checking the status of digital certificates. Intel is licensing it for its cross-vendor security platform, which ValiCert says will make digital ID checks as common as validating a credit card. [Wired News]
Clinton Video to Flood Net
- A week ago, the Starr report shifted the Internet into high gear. But streaming President Clinton's videotaped testimony online could cause a serious traffic snarl. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
Closing the Geek Gap
- The Clinton administration, with a heavy assist from industry, talks about ways to train more workers for the information technology sector. [Wired News]
Comment Chattez-Vous?
- Uni-Verse breaks through the language barrier by translating, on the fly, chat-room conversations typed in six different languages. By Niall McKay. [Wired News]
Connecting the Dots on Net Calls
- Jeff Pulver has been helping Internet telephony providers hook up for years. Now, he's started the Minutes Exchange, a telephony brokerage where telcos and ISPs can negotiate inter-carrier services. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
Contrarian Browsers
- Everyone agrees that browsers should be standards compliant. But that's easier said than done, and it often comes at the price of innovation. From Webmonkey. [Wired News]
Cool Computing Comes to PCs
- KryoTech's new technology freezes chips to improve their processing speed. With its newest configuration, the company debuts its cooling system in the PC market. By Steven Brody. [Wired News]
Cooler Heads Prevail
- After a closer look at a judge's order on Java, Microsoft says it's not such a big deal. By Christopher Jones. [Wired News]
Cooling Down US Cities
- NASA has been helping US cities identify heat islands that lead to higher air temperatures and ground-level ozone concentrations. By Kristen Philipkoski. [Wired News]
Cracker Fights for Flat Rates
- A Swedish teenager says he went public with his ISP password theft to highlight the access fees charged by his country's largest telco and owner of a popular ISP. By James Glave. [Wired News]
Crackers Knock, Don't Get In
- The head of one of the US government's leading computer network security centers says cracker attacks are on the rise, but few intrusions succeed. A new incident response report is there to help when things go amiss. By James Glave. [Wired News]
Crackers Set Sights on Submarines
- The international group of crackers that claimed to have stolen military networking software are preparing to release another set of programs that they say can track and communicate with subs. [Wired News]
Crackers Snag Credit-Card Info
- Are your online credit-card transactions safe? After three teenagers broke into a retailer's network and stole a bunch of credit-card orders, don't be so sure. By James Glave. [Wired News]
Crackers: We Control Your TVs
- Time Warner Cable in Los Angeles is the apparent victim of a break-in giving the hackers the ability to move satellite downlink dishes -- and send text scrolling across TV screens. By James Glave. [Wired News]
Crackers: We Stole Nuke Data
- A trio of teenage crackers say they have stolen thousands of sensitive emails traded between Indian nuclear weapons researchers in the weeks prior to, and following, that country's recent nuclear tests. By James Glave. [Wired News]
Creating One Huge Computer
- In an interview with Wired magazine, Sun Microsystems visionary Bill Joy gives the first in-depth glimpse of Jini, the Java-based distributed-computing technology that aims to give all computers everywhere the ability to interact. By Kevin Kelly and Spencer Reiss. [Wired News]
Critics Bash Reno's Cyberwar Plan
- The US Attorney General's US$64 million proposal would coordinate existing efforts to fend off threats to the nation's networks. But critics called the plan short-sighted and misguided. [Wired News]
Crucial Tech: Foreskin Farming
- Vat-grown human organs sound like something from TNT's MonsterVision, but they're now a commercial reality. [Wired News]
Crucial Tech: Thin Client? Fat Chance
- Network computers may be cheap to manage, but they have a darkside: increased corporate surveillance, the demise of Dilbert screensavers and dubiously legal JPEG collections. [Wired News]
Crucial Tech: VCSELs
- Tiny lasers are going to make wires the buggy whips of the next millennium. [Wired News]
[
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
]
Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site
-
Open Directory Project
-
Become an Editor
About
Help
Content Filter
Terms
Privacy Policy
© 2026
whatUseek