Tech News

Surfing The Wine List
Choosing the right wine may be the hardest task a diner faces — except paying the bill. So some restaurants, including Las Vegas' Aureole and D.C.'s Charlie Palmer Steak, are providing smart wine lists: plug in a dish, and a computer suggests a wine. The cybersteward at New York City's Blue Fin offers a "Wine Geek" search that lets you specify color, body, vintage, region or price. If you pair burgers with a lemon-flavored wine, the program spits out "Gimme a break." -- By Sharon Kapnick

Byte-Size USB Fun
Here's some news for those who don't spend all their free time in CompUSA: USB gadgets (known as key rings) are hot. These miniature devices — typically digital cameras or MP3 players — plug directly into your USB port for easy up-and downloading. They're cute and trendy and getting more useful all the time. This summer Philips is introducing two models for Mac or PC priced from $99 to $149.

The company's MP3 Key Ring comes in 64-MB and 128-MB sizes — just right for a short music playlist. Some versions even sport an innovative lanyard with volume and track-skip controls woven right into the fabric.

Philips' 1.3-megapixel camera (64 MB or 128 MB) weighs in at 1.2 oz. It may be light on options, but it's every bit the James Bond spy cam your camera phone wishes it could be. -- By Wilson Rothman

Quotes of the Day »

RAY KELLY, New York City Police Commissioner, on the arrest of a New Jersey man in one of the nation's most baffling missing-children cases, the disappearance more than three decades ago of 6-year-old Etan Patz.
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