Google
 
Technology - Newsweek

Telecom Dividends a Nice Buying Opportunity

After years of mounting customer outrage over its clogged network, AT&T has finally scrapped its unlimited-data plan and raised the price on heavy data users. It's a wonder it took so long. Since the iPhone debuted exclusively on AT&T in June 2007, Apple stock has risen 110 percent, while AT&T is down 38 percent. The $30-a-month unlimited plan was designed to attract customers, and with 50 million iPhones sold, it did. But AT&T's network was crippled as a few users hogged bandwidth: 3 percent of AT&T's smart-phone customers use 40 percent of its data. AT&T now offers a two-tiered system: 200 megabytes for $15 a month; two gigs for $25. Use more than that, and you'll pay extra. Network strain is likely to ease as a result, and analysts believe others will follow AT&T and that the switch will usher in a new era of (more profitable) metered data-pricing.


Published on: Friday, June 18, 2010 | link

The Environmental Legacy of the Gulf Oil Spill

What's in store for the gulf? Lessons from previous disasters.


Published on: Thursday, June 17, 2010 | link

The Case Against Sand Berms in the Gulf: Begley

We must put science first in the gulf.


Published on: Friday, June 11, 2010 | link

It's Apple vs. Google in the New Phone Fight

It's Apple vs. Google in the battle over the future of computing.


Published on: Friday, June 11, 2010 | link

Study: Americans Want to Know Their Genetic Codes

New research has found that a majority of Americans want to know the details of their genetic codes.


Published on: Wednesday, June 09, 2010 | link

Why Freedom Should Trump Privacy Online

Freedom should trump privacy.


Published on: Friday, June 04, 2010 | link

Would Regulation Kill Consumer Genetic Testing?

It could—but the FDA and Congress also could make the burgeoning biotech industry stronger.


Published on: Friday, June 04, 2010 | link

What We Can Learn From the Jewish Genome

Analysis of Jewish genomes refutes the Khazar claim.


Published on: Thursday, June 03, 2010 | link

The Backlash Against Clmate Scientists

Bickering and defensive, climate researchers have lost the public's trust.


Published on: Friday, May 28, 2010 | link

Biomimicry Turns Nature Into A Factory

The emerging field of biomimicry taps the manufacturing secrets of spiders, abalone shells, and lotus plants.


Published on: Friday, May 28, 2010 | link