|
|
Tag: InternetBy Duncan Graham-Rowe | 11/06/2009 | 1 Comment Distributing a search engine's index around the world could make it faster and more efficient, researchers say. China Cracks Down on Tor Anonymity Network By David Talbot | 10/15/2009 | 29 Comments A leading anonymity technology is targeted by the Chinese government for the first time. Peer-to-Peer File Sharing Usurped by Streaming Video By Erica Naone | 10/14/2009 | 0 Comments The growth of file-sharing traffic has tailed off, but streaming video continues to expand. By Andrew Schrock | 07/17/2009 | 4 Comments The information overload caused by too much choice could have lessons for other websites. The Web vs. the Republic of Iran By Anne-Marie Corley | 06/18/2009 | 0 Comments Twitter gives Iranians a voice, but the government still controls the Internet. Website Maps Global Web Blocks By David Talbot | 02/25/2009 | 1 Comment Herdict uses volunteers to monitor Internet censorship, filtering, and outages. TR10: Software-Defined Networking By Kate Greene | 02/24/2009 | 2 Comments Nick McKeown believes that remotely controlling network hardware with software can bring the Internet up to speed. By David Talbot | 01/28/2009 | 0 Comments A new effort seeks a database on all U.S. elected officials. By Rachel Kremen | 12/30/2008 | 1 Comment A compact lens could make high-speed Internet access commonplace on trains. By Kurt Kleiner | 12/15/2008 | 1 Comment Cooperating with file-sharing networks could avert congestion. By Erica Naone | 12/09/2008 | 5 Comments How a 1960s sociology experiment could hold the key to better Internet routing. By Erica Naone | 12/05/2008 | 5 Comments A new tool makes it easier to see the Web changing over time. A Better Network for Outer Space By Brittany Sauser | 10/27/2008 | 3 Comments Why Vint Cerf wants to put Internet-style networking in space. By Erica Naone | 10/06/2008 | 6 Comments Poorly protected files reveal a massive surveillance scheme. "It's Not a Revolution if Nobody Loses" By Emily Gould | 08/19/2008 | 2 Comments A new age of "technological reproducibility" is here. Ugh. |
|
|
| © 2009 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved. |