Televisions
NEW YORK - Apple is a pioneer in many fields, but in the race to connect our TV sets to the Internet, it's been lagging badly.
SAN FRANCISCO - Cisco Systems Inc., seeking to become a bigger name in consumer electronics, said Wednesday that it's going to start selling a $599 box that turns living-room TV sets into big videophones.
TOKYO - Toshiba Corp. believes it has a solution for television viewers who like 3-D but hate the glasses.
CHIBA, Japan - The Tokyo Game Show has a lot of people wearing dark glasses this year, with the buzz turning 3-D at the annual event that brings together the latest offerings from game-machine and software makers.
LOS ANGELES - If you're thinking of buying a 3-D television set this year based on the belief that you'll be able to purchase a lot of the 3-D movies that have hit theaters in the past few years, think again.
More News
- Sony working on 3-D TVs that don't need glasses
- Toshiba developing no-glasses 3-D televisions
- Review: Hulu Plus takes television to your pocket
- Review: New laptops beam your PC screen to the TV
- Google, partners hoping consumers their Web TV
- Google teams with Sony, Intel on 'smart' Web TV
- Sharp to sell 3-D TVs in Japan, US, Europe, China
- Samsung, Panasonic start selling 3-D TVs this week
- Cablevision service lets customers see PCs on TV
- Wal-Mart to buy digital movie provider Vudu
- TV makers ready to test depths of market for 3-D
- LG introducing 3-D TVs in May; no exact price yet
- Free local TV soon to be available on cell phones
- First consumer devices for Mobile DTV debut
- Skype to offer HD video calling on some new TVs
- Gadget makers focus on cost-effective temptations