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Microsoft Blog
Extending and enhancing our regular coverage.
· Project lets users edit search results
· Fund urges Yahoo to sell itself to Microsoft
· College papers on Craig Mundie's tour
James Wallace on Aerospace
All about companies aiming for the sky.
· UPDATED: Analyst: 787 won't deliver until 2010
· UPDATE: No quick deal expected in strike talks
· UPDATED: Boeing strike - Talks to resume
Reader blog: Science from the Bottom of the Food Chain
· Scary Baby Milk
· Creating Life... and not in the traditional way
· Geniuses are Nuts!
· IMF calls for vigilance in fighting credit crisis
· Bush, allies seek to calm jittery investors
· Analysts: GM would need cash to acquire Chrysler
· Key dates in Chrysler's recent history
· Acquisition talks: About the automakers
· All that money you've lost _ where did it go?
More headlines
· Flexible OLEDs could be part of lighting's future
· Sony seeks to harmonize music, electronics
· Sinking shares could make Yahoo a target again
· Top record labels: artists, market share
· IBM sells $3.9 billion in corporate bonds
· Micron Tech cuts global work force by 15 percent
More headlines
· Flexible OLEDs could be part of lighting's future
· Sony seeks to harmonize music, electronics
· Sinking shares could make Yahoo a target again
· Top record labels: artists, market share
· IBM sells $3.9 billion in corporate bonds
· Micron Tech cuts global work force by 15 percent
More headlines
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2008
From lowly jellyfish to the Nobel Prize
STOCKHOLM, Sweden -- Two Americans and a U.S.-based Japanese scientist won the Nobel Prize in chemistry on Wednesday for research on a glowing jellyfish protein discovered in waters off the San Juan Islands, some 70 miles north of Seattle, which revolutionized the ability to study disease and development in living organisms.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2008
3 share Nobel Prize for physics
Two Japanese scientists and an American won the 2008 Nobel Prize in physics on Tuesday for theoretical advances that help explain the behavior of the smallest particles of matter.
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2008
Demonstration homes to use zero net energy
A new demonstration project aims to show that building homes that produce at least as much energy as they use makes sense now.
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