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BBCTech:

  • UK mobile firms to merge networks

  • Customers of Orange and T-Mobile will soon be able to hop between the two mobile networks as the firms merge their networks.
  • Buzz lawsuit to cost Google $8.5m

  • Google proposes settling a lawsuit over its Buzz social network, whilst regulators launch a review of the firm's US search practices.
  • Tiny solar cells fix themselves

  • A mix of chemicals borrowed from plants with tiny tubes of carbon can spontaneously create tiny, self-repairing solar cells.
  • PS3 hack escapes court challenge

  • 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.
  • Craigslist ends adult service ads

  • Online marketplace Craigslist closes its US adult services listing following pressure from attorneys general and advocacy groups.
  • Memristor revolution backed by HP

  • A potentially revolutionary circuit component, once a laboratory curiosity, is to be mass-produced for the first time.
  • Global broadband divide revealed

  • The global disparity in access to broadband around the world and the cost of a connection is revealed by UN figures.
  • Samsung releases iPad competitor

  • Samsung has become the latest manufacturer to enter into the tablet computer market with its Galaxy Tab.
  • Apple creates a social network

  • Apple launches a music-based social network called Ping as part of its latest upgrade to the iTunes music software.
  • First 'intelligent' stamp on sale

  • The Royal Mail launches the world's first "intelligent" stamp, the first to work with image recognition technology.
  • US seeks input on net data rules

  • US net users are being asked for their opinions about what ISPs should be allowed to do with web traffic flowing through their networks.
  • Gamers' 13-year wait nearly over as Duke Nukem Forever gets a release date

  • Almost 13 years after it was first announced, video game Duke Nukem Forever has finally been given a release date by its new owners.
  • New gadgets unveiled at IFA fair

  • Samsung's Galaxy Tab and Toshiba's Folio 100 are amongst the gadgets showcased at the world's largest consumer electronics fair in Berlin.
  • Clicking the blue 'e'

  • Bill Thompson on Microsoft's game-changing browser
  • Paint prose

  • The source code MacPaint is released but who can read it?
  • Nothing said online is really private

  • Nothing said online is really private, says Bill Thompson
  • How to work anywhere in the world

  • How technology allows digital nomads to leave the office behind to work around the world
  • Virtual reality asks tough questions

  • Virtual reality is allowing scientists to ask difficult questions about human behaviour.
  • Online gaming takes it to the next level

  • Faster broadband networks could spell the end of the games console, experts say.
  • The rise of the 'mummy bloggers'

  • Parents blogging about their children have become a global force in marketing.
  • Girl gamers still being left out

  • The portrayal of women in the game's industry is still lacklustre according to experts and insiders
  • Hi-tech help for disaster zones

  • How technology has ushered in a new era for aid work in disaster zones
  • Hacker spaces gather pace globally

  • Community labs are springing up for people who want to hack and test new ideas.
  • View from the end of the world

  • Photographers and film-makers capture their 3-D views of the corners of virtual worlds
  • Girl Geeks: Women in tech on top

  • Are women happy being known as geeks?
  • BBC Micro gets a new lease of life

  • How the classic PC is helping train a new generation of students in the art of programming.
  • On a mission with the rocket men

  • In our series about makers and hackers, we look at the world of amateur rocket-makers.
  • Resurrecting Victorian technology

  • The release of an album on wax cylinder inspired us to try to make a phonograph to play it.
  • Making music from children's old toys

  • The Modified Toy Orchestra is a band made up of five musicians - and 48 tweaked toy instruments.
  • What does the future hold for television?

  • Rory Cellan-Jones tries out 3D video equipment and looks at the latest ultra thin and bright OLED TVs.
  • Tackling technical troubles

  • Reporting on technology while battling with technology
  • Data dilema: Privacy or personalisation?

  • Ian Hardy discovers how top researchers and companies are using today's devices and data to make the world a more interesting place
  • Tablet PCs take on the iPad

  • Samsung's Galaxy Tab and Toshiba's Folio 100 are among rivals unveiled at the Berlin gadget exhibition.
  • Phone app to monitor heartbeat

  • More than three million doctors have downloaded a phone application to monitor heartbeats through a phone.
  • Portable video 'is the future'

  • Toshiba’s UK business manager says its Foilo 100 tablet PC complements trends in media usage.
  • Advertising watchdog moves online

  • The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) is extending its remit to cover the online realm.
  • Brilliant ideas

  • The secrets behind some of the UK’s newest inventions
  • Power play

  • Turning 16 games consoles into a number-crunching supercomputer
  • Remote control

  • How the tech savvy help victims cope in a crisis via the web