The print edition is here! Well, it's somewhere. And you can read it on your screen too (though it'll probably take you longer..):
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Show and tell online
Social networking sites are everything to today's teens - but can it last, asks Sean Dodson -
'Press 2 if you're loaded...'
Companies can now rate your importance, based on your spending potential. Nick Booth reports. -
Time to hop ahead
Crowded radio spectrum might be solved by hopping. By Karlin Lillington. -
Don't shoot me, I'm only the computer salesman
Dave Lee explains what life's like as a computer salesman in one of those big chain stores -
Technobile
Charles Arthur: It would all be so simple if we had just two USB cables to connect our gadgets. So why are there so many? -
Ultimately, there's a version of Vista that fits the bill
Jack Schofield: Windows Vista is due later this year, and on Monday, Microsoft UK announced which SKUs - stock-keeping units - it will be offering. -
Protection racket
US music lovers are fuming about copy-protected CDs but in the UK they are rare. Is it because the record labels trust us - or fear us, asks Adam Webb? -
Just Ask: the search market has far to go
Victor Keegan: Search is still in its infancy and the 'hidden web', the iceberg of buried data, is only now being mined seriously. -
Could the Revolution be a winner in this cycle?
Keith Stuart: As we stand at the dawn of the super-console era, the games business has loaded up the self-destruct disc and hit start. -
Gadgets
Sony Ericsson W900i; Garmin Nuvi 350; Philips's MCP9350i Media Center PC -
Read this week's letters
Send your letters, comments, questions and rants to tech@guardian.co.uk, and please include your post town and if possible a telephone number. - Ask Jack: silent mice, tough laptops, moving iTunes, uninstalling ntuninstall and Backchat.
- Newly asked questions
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What is Microsoft's Origami project?
Apparently, a handheld 'Ultramobile' PC that's also a media player - so, a sort of iPod, PlayStation Portable and Tablet PC rolled into (a not very comfortable) one. -
Can I break an uncracked Enigma code message?
Now, advances in computing power mean that we can apply what the geniuses at Bletchley Park could not: an optimised brute-force solution. -
What has Google been up to lately?
Busy launching products, as usual.
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What is Microsoft's Origami project?