Childhood home of Steve Jobs gets 'historic' label
The Silicon Valley home where Apple co-founder Steve Jobs grew up and built some of his first computers is now on the Los Altos, Calif., list of historic properties.
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The New York Times endorsed a secretive trade agreement that the public can’t read.
Whose down with TPP? The New York Times.
Will prescription lenses change how society reacts to Google Glass?
Adding in a necessary component could change the legal and social implications of this wearable computing technology.
The Bitcoin ‘bubble’ in one FAQ
Is today’s Bitcoin price of more than $300 a bubble? This FAQ considers the arguments on both sides
The Internet has killed (satirical) print journalism
The Onion goes all digital. Washington Post continues to distribute news printed on dead trees.
Air bags for cyclists, the outspoken alarm clock and more
FREAK-FILLED FRIDAY | The latest new and odd news including air bags for bikes and a bus you control.
Patent trolls get the spotlight
With tablet and smartphone sales slowing down in the United States, tech companies see a chance to make money off patents.
Best comments of the past 24 hours
Friday’s edition includes Ken Cuccinelli, Rachel Maddow and what it’s like to renew a friendship after terminal cancer arrives.
The Switchboard: Twitter stock price up over 70% on first day of trading
Twitter’s IPO, the legality of CIA payments to AT&T, and Tesla on fire -- not in a good way.
Twitter ends trading debut at $44.90 per share
All eyes are on the New York Stock Exchange after the social media firm debuts as a public company.
No, Bitcoin isn’t broken
Two Cornell researchers say Bitcoin is fundamentally broken. Here’s why they’re wrong.
Amazon to bookstores: Help us make you irrelevant
Amazon wants to get independent bookstores to stock their e-readers and tablets. That seems like a hard sell.
The Army’s cyber command facility with a Star Trek-inspired showroom may be falling apart
Army Cyber Command’s Star Trek-based “Information Dominance Center” is at Fort Belvoir -- a report says current facilities are in “poor condition.“
Report: CIA paid AT&T $10 million a year for metadata
The CIA doesn’t appear to have broken any surveillance rules. But the deal certainly falls into a legal gray area.
Twitter will need to be insanely profitable just to hit its valuation
Twitter will need double-digit growth rates for a decade to meet investors’ expectations.
Boiling down Twitter’s brilliance
Twitter has never turned a profit, but is worth billions. Here’s why not to scoff at the company’s value.
Dark matter: Why you should care
The next frontier in science is finding something that we know exists, but can’t see, smell or touch. That’s dark matter.
How we protect ourselves from the NSA
Users say they spend less time on Gmail, use more encryption software, and much more.
Best comments of the past 24 hours
Thursday’s edition includes includes Ken Cuccinelli, drama after a parent’s death, and commentary on the hair of New York’s first family.
Switchboard: Silk Road is back
The CIA pays AT&T for phone records, a patent troll is dealt another blow, and other top tech stories of the last 24 hours.
New FCC chief gets to work in a familiar place
Tom Wheeler, well known at the agency because of years as a lobbyist, is weathering criticism.
Twitter sets initial stock price at $26
The offering values the social-networking company, which has yet to turn a profit, at $18 billion.
Did we just witness our first firing over Healthcare.gov?
Tony Trenkle, the geek who oversaw the Obamacare Web site, is stepping down. Nobody’s saying why.
Netflix has won: Blockbuster is closing its last retail stores
Dish is closing Blockbuster’s remaining 300 retail locations by the end of the year.
Clean/Exhaust
Diesel technology and fuel have gone through transformations that make them cleaner than gas.
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