The cheapest jewellery on the net.
Sony has won a permanent ban in Australia of a hack for its PS3, but the code behind it has been released for free on the web.
Ian Hardy discovers how top researchers and companies are using today's devices and data to make the world a more interesting place
How the tech savvy help victims cope in a crisis via the web
Samsung's Galaxy Tab and Toshiba's Folio 100 are amongst the gadgets showcased at the world's largest consumer electronics fair in Berlin.
Samsung's Galaxy Tab and Toshiba's Folio 100 are among rivals unveiled at the Berlin gadget exhibition.
The Royal Mail launches the world's first "intelligent" stamp, the first to work with image recognition technology.
Tablet computers to rival Apple's iPad are creating a stir as one of Europe's largest technology shows, the IFA, gets under way in Berlin.
A potentially revolutionary circuit component, once a laboratory curiosity, is to be mass-produced for the first time.
Dell withdraws its bid for 3Par after rival Hewlett-Packard raises its offer for the data storage company to $2.1bn.
The global disparity in access to broadband around the world and the cost of a connection is revealed by UN figures.
Samsung has become the latest manufacturer to enter into the tablet computer market with its Galaxy Tab.
US net users are being asked for their opinions about what ISPs should be allowed to do with web traffic flowing through their networks.
Apple launches a music-based social network called Ping as part of its latest upgrade to the iTunes music software.
Sony has unveiled its own music and video download service in an announcement timed to coincide with an Apple media event.
Mobile operator O2 and Apple are still resolving a months-old data roaming issue, with customers complaining of charges they didn't incur.
A revamp of the social-news site Digg has unexpectedly backfired on its owners after members redirected traffic to a rival site.
The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) is extending its remit to cover the online realm.
Sweden's director of public prosecutions orders the reopening of a rape investigation into Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.
Bill Thompson on Microsoft's game-changing browser
The PlayStation Move controller put on test
Mobile firm Orange becomes the first UK network to use a new technology that claims to offer higher quality voice calls.
The Advertising Standards Authority is given the power to regulate ads and marketing claims on websites and services like Facebook.
More than three million doctors have downloaded a phone application to monitor heartbeats through a phone.
Following tough action against Blackberry, security forces in India turn their attention to Google and Skype.
The internet pranksters who helped expose cat bin lady
Google launches priority inbox to help conquer e-mail overload and rank messages in the order that they matter most.
Can technology and music happily coexist?
Meet Google's first ever employee
US chipmaker Intel agrees to buy the wireless unit of German counterpart Infineon for $1.4bn, disappointing markets.
Relocating a tech firm from Switzerland to the US
The Canadian owners of Blackberry, Research in Motion, have offered an olive branch to the Indian government in the bitter battle over e-mail secrecy.
Musicians Finn Peters and Matthew Yee-King attempt to convert John Humphrys and Justin Webb's thoughts into music
Swarms of marine turbines could 'tap the Gulf Stream'
The system of digitising actors to create characters in films like Avatar is being used to measure human behaviour in real life.
Groups who work with the victims of cyber-stalking say efforts to tackle the problem are being delayed because Internet Service Providers will not take action.
Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen is suing several high-tech giants for infringing patents held by a Silicon Valley lab he founded in the 1990s.
Sony has won a temporary ban to prevent Australian distributors selling a hardware hack for the PlayStation 3 (PS3).
Computer chipmaker Intel cut its profit forecast after warning that sales of computers were weaker than expected.
How technology allows digital nomads to leave the office behind to work around the world
The Creators Project is a new network celebrating technology and creativity in the clubbing scene, across media and around the world. Click paid it a visit.
How 165 University Ave produced firms like Google
Demand for spy technology is soaring in India.
A US trade body rules against a marketing firm whose employees posted favourable reviews of its clients' apps on iTunes.
Kate Russell rearranges her furniture with the help of the web and goes in search of a number one song.
Kate Russell rearranges her furniture with the help of the web and goes in search of a number one song.
Stephen Smith considers what made Fritz Lang's film, Metropolis, so hugely influential, as a newly restored version of the sci-fi epic is premiered in London.
A pilotless helicopter that could be used to resupply troops in Afghanistan is being developed for the US military.
An open alternative to Facebook will be launched on the 15 September, the developers of the Diaspora project say.
Russian republic goes electronic to deal with red tape
Scientists are planning to use the International Space Station to grow a new kind of crystal for use in solar cells by 2013.
