ASRock and Gigabyte are the first to announce Ivy Bridge-ready products based on Intel's Z77 and H77 chipsets.
Microsoft Research has offered a glimpse of its successor to Bob: HomeOS.
Apple's OS X machines have been recruited into a half-million strong botnet through a drive-by downloader.
Notch has revealed his next game: a CPU-simulating Elite-alike dubbed 0x10c.
SanDisk has dropped first quarter projections due to overproduction of NAND flash components.
Chip maker Qualcomm claims that Snapdragon-powered laptops will beat Intel's Ultrabooks hands-down.
Razer has bowed to Facebook pressure, and is to launch a sinister version of its Naga gaming mouse.
A deal valued at just £1 has saved GAME Group from the financial wrecker's yard.
The government has revealed plans to monitor all electronic communications in the UK.
Sega has confirmed it's cancelling games and laying off staff due to poor financial performance.
Peter Jansen has developed a working Tricorder, in the hopes of making science education more accessible.
THQ's upcoming Warhammer 40K MMO has been cancelled as the company lays off 118 employees.
Programmer Dmitry Grinberg has achieved the seemingly impossible: Linux on an eight-bit microcontroller.
Deliveries of the $35 ARM-based microcomputer are delayed until CE certification is obtained.
EVGA has announced new warranty terms which include transferability and cross-shipping.
OCZ has released the Arowana 3.55 update for its Vertex, Agility and Solid2 SSDs.
Intel's revised Ivy Bridge launch schedule has leaked, suggesting a tiered roll-out.
AMD has signed a deal with Green Hills to add G-Series support to the Integrity RTOS platform.
A selenium-copper compound which exhibits liquid-like properties could hold the key to boosted battery life.
GAME Group has announced the closure of 277 stores, chiefly among its Gamestation brand.
Hynix has announced a deal with SK Group and a new name: SK Hynix.
Investment led by RBS may save GAME Group, but time is running out.
Korean cable company WireDream claims its £190 SATA cables boost digital audio quality.
October 14 2021 | 15:04