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Icon for Sale: The First Apple I
- It's got no case and no hard drive. Still, a computer handmade by Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs could fetch the most money ever paid for a personal computer. By Leander Kahney. [Wired News]
Imploding Messages: You Had Mail
- Say hello to the newest in ber-encrypted email. It's so secure it self-destructs after you read it. Oh, and there's a US$50k reward for anyone who can decipher the key. By Lindsey Arent. [Wired News]
In Search of Floating Fossils
- NASA launches a Delta 2 rocket carrying a telescope designed to look for "fossils" of the Big Bang. Scientists hope the telescope will provide clues as to how elements are dispersed through the universe. [Wired News]
In Search of Little Green Men
- A new Mars space mission will mine the Red Planet's South Pole for water and signs of life. Finally, we'll learn what's out there. [Wired News]
Intel Aims for Low End
- Struggling in the under-US$1,000 home PC market, the chip giant rushes out 366MHz and 400MHz Celerons. [Wired News]
Intel CEO: PCs Still Unfriendly
- Craig Barrett says that while computers are getting much faster, they are still way too complicated -- and too ugly -- for most people. Andy Patrizio reports from Palm Springs. [Wired News]
Intel Gets Net-Centric
- The networking future is now for chip leader Intel. At its Developer Forum in Palm Springs, the company unveils Internet Exchange Architecture, including a processor it hopes will become the brains for moving traffic. [Wired News]
Intel Goes Broadband
- Chipmaker Intel this fall will go after the consumer modem market, releasing a line of fast, always-on broadband products. By Leander Kahney. [Wired News]
Intel Retools for E-Commerce
- The company built on silicon tells a conference the Net will define its future. It also unveils its fastest microprocessor ever: a one-gig Pentium III. It's so hot, it's cooled. [Wired News]
Intel Talks 600MHz Mobile Chips
- The chipmaker says it will introduce 600MHz Pentium III microprocessors for portables that can operate at multiple clock rates to save power. [Wired News]
Intel Thinks Different, Too
- Swiping a page from Apple's primer on flogging new products, the chipmaker unveils its new Pentium III in an orgy of sights, sounds, and hype. Alas, Craig Barrett is no Steve Jobs. Leander Kahney reports from San Jose, California. [Wired News]
Iridium Upstages the Stars
- That brilliant flash in the night sky was the sunlight hitting a satellite at just the right angle. Thrilled backyard space jockeys are comparing notes online. By Joanna Glasner. [Wired News]
Is Light-Speed in Your Future?
- Hurtling through space at faster than the speed of light is no longer just a Trekkie fantasy. New physics research suggests that warp speed could be in our future. By Lindsey Arent. [Wired News]
Is Microsoft Tracking Visitors?
- When you visit Microsoft.com, you might be revealing more information than you think. The software company is making critical user data available to its Web sites. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
Is Palm Losing Its Grip?
- Handspring licenses the Palm OS for its handheld, then releases a more flexible organizer. Is the Palm dynasty on shaky ground? By Leander Kahney. [Wired News]
It Might As Well Be Winter
- The Hubble Space Telescope beams back the first pictures ever of springtime on Uranus. The weather is stormy and very, very cold. [Wired News]
It's Now or Never for Bettors
- You can go online to bet on Super Bowl XXXIII, but don't count on doing it for XXXIV. New regulations will probably derail Internet gambling by this time next year. By Vince Beiser. [Wired News]
It's a LinuxWorld After All
- This week's conference is turning a tightknit community into an international phenomenon. Not all of the new industry stars are ready for the spotlight. Polly Sprenger reports from San Jose, California. [Wired News]
Itanium, Merced: What's the Dif?
- Intel's newest, super-charged chip will be called the Itanium. Why? Because it sounds like titanium and it's similar to Pentium. It's a marketing thing, after all. [Wired News]
Japan Joins Space Station Test
- Gearing up for life aboard the International Space Station, the island nation signs on with Russia to conduct a 110-day simulated cohabitation living experience. [Wired News]
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