Time Warner is testing out offering movies to viewers at home on demand right when they hit theaters. It's a test, one that may lead to more such releases if it's a success.
Entertainment Weekly is adding full-motion video with audio next month to its printed page. Sound crazy? The cellphone-sized, wafer-thin screens activate when the reader gets to that page, and will feature characters from prime time television and ads for soft...
Show of hands: How many of you saw Miss California, Carrie Prejean, answer Perez Hilton's question about gay marriage at the Miss USA pageant? For those who answered yes, how many of you saw the video of her on a...
When word spread last week of Time Warner Cable's broadband caps, consumers exploded in anger. Trying to calm down the mob, the company clarified its Road Runner pricing plan that will roll out in Greensboro, N.C. and Rochester, N.Y. in...
Time Warner's broadband usage caps are coming soon to a city near you. Soon after the company decided to spread its limited 40GB-a-month (enough for two HD movies a week) service beyond its test market in Beaumont, Texas, angry customers...
You know how we warned you about Time Warner's plans to limit broadband usage in more cities? Now the nearly-bankrupt Charter Communications has decided to set limits, too, but they are significantly more lenient than Time Warner's stingy 40GB/month cap....
There's a broadband battle brewing, and Time Warner just fired the first major shot. The company announced it's going to start limiting data usage for its Road Runner broadband customers in more cities than its single test market in Beaumont,...
Whatever happened to the Information Superhighway? It was the big talk of the 90s, but now the United States has fallen to 16th place in the world for broadband deployment and availability, according to a survey by the Communication...