"David After Dentist," the viral video of a woozy boy after dental surgery, has been viewed almost 54 million times on YouTube. It's also been an unexpected bonanza for the boy's Orlando, Florida-area family.
Although the dream of the "paperless office" has been around for decades, businesses continue to print, copy and fax more than a trillion pages of office paper each year. Can new technology change that?
The good news about the 3D TVs coming out this spring and summer is that they'll come packed with two pairs of 3D lenses. The bad news? Those plastic glasses work only with the brand of TV with which they're shipped.
When some people find out that Lauren Leto quit law school at Wayne State University after her first year to focus on her Web site, they lecture her about responsibility and planning for her future.
It was billed as the "location wars" -- two mobile networking services battling for the affections of the smartphone-wielding techie elite at the South by Southwest Interactive festival. So who won?
The U.S. Federal Communications Commission released a national "broadband plan" Tuesday that aims to give 90 percent of Americans access to affordable, high-speed Internet by 2020.
Social voting site Digg this week unveiled plans to become a hub for sharing links on the Web. If your friends are sharing media on Facebook, Twitter and other sites, Digg wants to provide a personalized home page that filters the Web based on your friends' activities. These new features will be previewed in the coming weeks.
In rural Oklahoma, Kelli Fields struggles with a dial-up Internet connection so slow she does chores to pass the time while Web sites load. Today, the FCC unveils a plan to get 9 out of 10 Americans on broadband by 2020.