Showing 1 - 10 of 8,815
AFP, Published on 16/12/2010
» China's Internet censors may have kept most of the nation's 420 million web users from accessing Facebook, but they have not stopped social game developers like Ellison Gao.
AFP, Published on 17/12/2010
» Bullying is a big problem in the digital playgrounds of the world's social networks. But South Korea's top social networking site Cyworld is touting several distinctive features -- including making people prove who they are in the real world before they can join their virtual one.
AFP, Published on 20/12/2010
» Taiwan's government on Friday gave the green light for a plan by the island's leading flat panel maker AU Optronics Corp. to invest three billion US dollars in China.
AFP, Published on 21/12/2010
» Google has asked several television makers to delay their launch of sets featuring Google TV, which merges online content with traditional TV programming, newspapers reported on Monday.
AFP, Published on 22/12/2010
» Microsoft released its first sales figures on Tuesday for new Windows Phone 7 smartphones, saying more than 1.5 million of the handsets were sold by manufacturers in the first six weeks.
AFP, Published on 22/12/2010
» South Koreans trying to tweet with North Korea will be punished, Seoul officials have warned, as the communist state ratchets up an online propaganda drive via popular websites such as Twitter and YouTube.
AFP, Published on 26/12/2010
» Apple dethroned Microsoft as the world's most valuable technology company in 2010 as its co-founder Steve Jobs soared to new heights with the touchscreen iPad tablet computer and the latest iPhone.
AFP, Published on 29/12/2010
» South Korea's Constitutional Court ruled Tuesday that a clause in a telecommunications law that was used to crack down on Internet rumourmongers is unconstitutional.
AFP, Published on 02/01/2011
» Japan's top carrier NTT DoCoMo is to launch a tablet computer running Google software to challenge Apple's hot-selling iPad, a report said Saturday.
AFP, Published on 04/01/2011
» White House spokesman Robert Gibbs Monday signaled there would be no let up in US pressure on Beijing for a rise of the yuan currency, as he previewed President Hu Jintao's upcoming visit on Twitter.