(AP) -- It is almost unthinkable that any one human could pick up where Bill Gates leaves off when he ends his full-time tenure Friday as Microsoft's leader.
Related stories:
A tech giant wants you to know who it is
Cisco. Cisco. Cisco. Cisco.
Cisco.
Microsoft to open research centre in SKorea: institute
Microsoft will set up a research and development centre in South Korea in cooperation with the country's leading scientific research institute, officials said Monday.
A robot in every home? (Robot Special part 3)
(PhysOrg.com) -- Observers like Bill Gates believe that by 2025 we could have robots in every home. In labs across Europe, researchers are creating designs that could become the robo-butler of the future.
Cause of conduct problems among girls appears to be different than in boys
The first study to include a significant number of aggressive girls with conduct problems indicates that psychological conditions including conduct disorder may have separate causes in the two sexes.
Techno wizard also pens best-selling science fiction
If you saw Neal Stephenson on the street, you might think he's just another geeky Seattle guy with a particularly impressive goatee.
WinHEC: Day One Recap
Windows Home Server, PnP-X, UMPCs, and Hybrid hard drives are just some of the technology we checked out during day one of the show.
Will Windows Home Server Be the Next 'Me Too' Market?
Windows Home Server is Microsoft's bridge between the home PC and the server market. Maybe it's not surprising, then, that its partners and customers may see it as a way to extend into new markets, too.
Microsoft: Hardware Trends Create 'Perfect Storm'
Microsoft is moving to 64-bit server operating systems after Windows Server 2008, company execs say at WinHEC, praising the increased performance and security of the new hardware.