A curated selection of the day's most newsworthy tech stories from all over the Web.
partnership on February 11, when Nokia CEO Stephen Elop talks to investors. Such an alliance could mean Nokia retires its Symbian OS in favor of Windows Phone 7. (New York Times)
Every day, the Fortune staff spends hours poring over tech stories, posts, and reviews from all over the Web to keep tabs on the companies that matter. We've assembled the day's most newsworthy bits below.
Those of you jonesing to get the latest tech news as it happens can sign up for the "Today in Tech" newsletter. So get to it!Playing catch up with Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft's leading web-based email clients, Aol MORE
JP Mangalindan, Writer - Nov 15, 2010 6:00 AM ET
Having lost the email crown long ago to Microsoft, Google, and Yahoo, Aol wants to jump back into the fray with 'Project Phoenix,' a web-based client built from scratch.
Since Google (GOOG) first introduced Gmail back in 2004, it's regularly updated the web-based email service with new features: increased storage space, a web-based mobile app, Google Chat and numerous interface tweaks among them. To catch up, Microsoft (MSFT) introduced the MORE
JP Mangalindan, Writer - Nov 14, 2010 12:00 PM ET
A round-up of the companies, deals, and trends that made headlines.
Every day, the Fortune staff spends hours poring over tech stories, posts, and reviews from all over the Web to keep tabs on the companies that matter. While that's our job -- awesome, right? -- we realize our readers may not have the same luxury. To save you the trouble, we've assembled the weekend's most newsworthy bits below.
With a traffic increase MORE
JP Mangalindan, Writer - Sep 13, 2010 8:05 AM ET