October 4, 2001 - Killing Napster isn't enough for the recording industry. The are asking to shut down file-sharing services that replaced Napster.
October 3, 2001 - The FBI, along with the nonprofit Sands Institute, is trying to persuade people to take computer privacy more seriously.
October 2, 2001 - Technology business led the way in the long boom of the 1990s. But the long boom is now looking like a big bust. The dotcom collapse and the broader economic slowdown have taken their toll on the tech economy, and the September 11th terrorist attacks seems likely to make a bad situation worse. Economists say even though some Twin Cities firms might benefit from a war on terrorism, the area's tech sector will suffer if consumer and business confidence falls. Minnesota Public Radio's Jon Gordon has the second report in our series, "Economy on the Edge."
October 2, 2001 - State governments and federal agencies are getting better at providing information and delivering services electronically.
September 27, 2001 - Under the new Anti-Terrorism bill proposed by John Ashcroft would put hackers in prison for life.
September 6, 2001 - Will writes about his daily life on his web log and wants everybody to read it.
September 4, 2001 - Teenagers are using the internet as their library.
September 3, 2001 - Apple is opening its seventh retail store to boost its share in the consumer computer choices.
August 29, 2001 - Intel launched a 2ghz computer chip, but does it matter?
August 28, 2001 - Bill Pollack thinks you can buy books and read them on any machine in the future. He is also a book publisher.