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Palm VII's Little Wireless Secret - 3Com will only sell its new PDA in the New York area, claiming that the wireless service is available nowhere else. But the Palm VII will play anywhere in the United States, and can be had by the sly. By Declan McCullagh. [Wired News]
 
Palm VII: 'A Definite Lemon' - To make wireless data work on the PalmPilot, 3Com offers a new Internet service it calls "Web clippings." Critics say it's too little for too much. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
 
PalmPilot Earns Its Wings - Sounds logical: An online aviators' catalog offers the handheld device to its namesakes. By Chris Oakes. [Wired News]
 
Palming Prescriptions - Palm-size computers are finding their way into thousands of doctors' lab coats. Physicians may soon be throwing away their paper prescription pads. By Kristen Philipkoski. [Wired News]
 
Parallel Parking Under the Radar - Motion sensors on cars could be key safety devices for future drivers and pedestrians. Right now, they're still just a luxury. By Kristen Philipkoski. [Wired News]
 
Part Machine, Part Pig Liver - A bioartificial medical device helps to prevent organ failure for patients awaiting liver transplants. By Kristen Philipkoski. [Wired News]
 
Patching Up the Player - Advances in sports medicine have dramatically cut recovery and rehabilitation time for football players. Injuries that once ended careers today merely sideline a player for the season, or even a few games. By Kristen Philipkoski. [Wired News]
 
Patients, Heal Thyselves - New personal medical gadgets will let patients monitor their own health and run simple tests at home. But will they make your doctor hang up his stethoscope? By Lindsey Arent. [Wired News]
 
PayPal Puts Dough in Your Palm - In a few months, a new PalmPilot application will invite consumers to transfer money back and forth between one another through thin air. By Karlin Lillington. [Wired News]
 
Pentium III Draws More Fire - A privacy group readies a federal complaint against Intel and its Pentium III security features. Meanwhile, experts discover another breach. By Leander Kahney. [Wired News]
 
Pharmacy on a Chip - Microchips packed with chemicals instead of data may be just what the doctor ordered. [Wired News]
 
Phone Fight on the Last Frontier - Two months after Alaska's largest long-distance phone company announced free Internet service, Alaskan ISPs have a plan for long-distance service. By Polly Sprenger. [Wired News]
 
Pine Starts D'Music - Forget having to carry all those CDs around with you, a new portable MP3/audio CD player can play more than 100 tracks stored on a single MP3 CD. By Louise Knapp. [Wired News]
 
Pinning Down Acupuncture - Acupuncture gets a boost in its struggle to be recognized as a legitimate medical treatment for disease. A new report shows the treatment clearly has positive effects. [Wired News]
 
Pirates Sneer at Intel Chip - The new Intel chip has an electronic identifier which might do everything from making e-commerce safer to threatening the thriving pirated software market. The pirates aren't worried. But privacy advocates are. By Polly Sprenger. [Wired News]
 
Plasma-Powered Trip to the Stars - Voyager I left Earth 22 years ago. Today, researchers are developing a plasma-powered craft so fast it could overtake Voyager and escape the solar system first. By Leander Kahney. [Wired News]
 
PlayStation Clone Irks Sony - Connectix raises eyebrows at Sony by reverse-engineering the entertainment giant's PlayStation game console for the Mac platform. Rumors fly, but not lawsuits. Not yet, anyway. By Polly Sprenger. [Wired News]
 
PlayStation Clone OK'd by Judge - A Federal judge denies Sony's request for a temporary restraining order that would keep a PlayStation software clone out of the hands of consumers. By Polly Sprenger. [Wired News]
 
PlayStation II: A New Beginning - Engineers are blown away by a preview of Sony's retooled gaming platform. Sony says the system is not only about fast graphics, it's about becoming the hub of digital entertainment. Leander Kahney reports from Palo Alto, California. [Wired News]
 
Plenty of Y2K Misery to Share - Microsoft clears its name in Illinois Y2K suit over its FoxPro software. Also: New Jersey food-stamp system messed up during Y2K testing. [Wired News]
 
 

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