A Clicker To Watch TV Online
Katherine Boehret looks at Clicker.com, which helps viewers find their favorite shows online faster.
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Katherine Boehret looks at Clicker.com, which helps viewers find their favorite shows online faster.
Palm offers the Pre’s webOS operating system in a tinier package: the Pixi.
The Mossberg Solution compares the new BlackBerry Bold 9700 with two of its siblings.
The new Zune HD offers a rich screen and a wealth of artist information, but it can’t compete with iPod Touch’s app offerings.
Postbox, a program that sorts through your email and detects its contents, is a good option for someone who wants a fast search option built into email, writes Katherine Boehret.
Rosetta Stone Totale may be the next best thing to living in a country.
Katherine Boehret reviews Yahoo’s made-over home page, which features less clutter and new “apps.”
A review of T-Mobile myTouch 3G with Google, the second “Google phone” to be released.
Twitter messaging can be improved by employing software programs that customize it and require little work on the part of the user, Katherine Boehret writes in The Mossberg Solution.
RealPlayer SP grabs videos from the Web and converts and transfers them to over a dozen portable devices. While other software programs perform two or just one of these tasks, RealPlayer’s trio of talent make it like a digital Swiss army knife.
ThisMoment — a free software program that artistically assembles digital content — will give your moments a polished look that makes you proud to share, writes Katherine Boehret.
Snipi organizes online-shopping results by gathering, or “snipping,” product information from Web pages and saving the information to lists.
Gone are the days when giving away your old stuff involved getting in the car and hauling bags to the local Salvation Army. Now, with a little Web know-how, you can find a number of ways to turn your trash into someone else’s treasure.
Katie reviews Latitude, a new feature of Google Maps that uses location-based technology to track its users’ movements. Latitude displays the user’s location on a map for friends to see, so they can know where the person is at all times.
In two weeks, the latest version of the BlackBerry, the Curve 8900, arrives. This device doesn’t have a sleek touch screen or completely overhauled operating system, nor is it meant to compete with the likes of Apple’s iPhone. But it has a physical keyboard and still manages to look stylish — and that’s no small feat.
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