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Show topics include Star Wars coming to Blu-ray, Google Voice Search for Android, better movies than Star Wars, Angry Birds, iPhone, Green Day, AFI, and more!

Nissan says it can make the Prius look like a pig, BMW jumps on the best-kept secret of iPhone 4, the new traffic tool coming soon to your Blackberry, a new world's fastest car, and we drive the goldilocks BMW: The 335is.

Yeah, God probably carries one, but you can skip the iPhone 4.

We offer five powerful techniques to help you explain your obsession with Apple's iPhone 4.

Finally, we get a bit of relief from this busy summer of cell phone madness, but even though it's a short week, there's still some news to discuss. Motorola and T-Mobile have teamed up on another Android phone, and Samsung and Sprint have done the same. Also, problems continue to plague the iPhone 4, but there are also a number of bright spots. Plus, we take a look at T-Mobile's first LG handset and Pantech's phone for seniors. All this and more on this week's Dialed In podcast.

There are more rumors for iPods, and new info about the iTV and that Verizon phone. Plus, iPhone users hook up more than other phone owners.

This week on Buzz, the Droid X tries to steal the iPhone 4's thunder, but the iPhone lines still stretch around the block. Also, a billion future Facebook users and unicorn meat causes a stir.

Show topics include the much-anticipated BioShock Infinite, Street Fighter lessons for $50 an hour, the addictive Angry Birds and Rage iPhone games

This week on the CNET Tech Review, Gateway and Logitech earn Editors' Choice Awards; Frash puts Flash on your iPad; Prizmo scans text into your iPhone; and don't bother learning how to pronounce Eton Soulra.

As part of the annual Food & Wine Classic in Aspen this year, Food & Wine magazine released an iPhone app that lets users keep track of where their events are and classic recipes from world-renowned chefs.

This week on the CNET Tech review, Safari 5 does Bing; the Porsche Panamera gets panned; and a new phone came out...or some junk.

Fresh off her appearance on MSNBC, Caroline McCarthy replaces Justin today to talk Net neutrality and iPhone users getting laid more than Android owners.

Users of the iPhone and iPad get a software update, Google has an Android announcement later today, and Sony Ericsson is rumored to be readying an Android gaming phone similar to the PSP.

Even more iPhone Verizon rumors, the upcoming Droid 2, and the BlackBerry Torch. Catch the cell phone stories, launches, and reviews in this week's episode.

Google and Verizon get in bed together and talk dirty about Net neutrality, while HP's CEO is ousted with shame on his face. Plus: Verizon iPhone returns.

The Eton Soulra is a durable and compact portable iPod/iPhone audio system that offers a built-in rechargeable battery and solar charging.

CNET's Maggie Reardon talks to the thousand-plus crowd that has gathered to buy the iPhone 4 at Apple's flagship, glass-cube store in Manhattan.

Turns out, covering an antenna on your iPhone 4 could slowly strangle your signal.

This week we freak out about Slingbox outages that have hit users around the country (fortunately, the problem seems mostly solved at this point). Then, we check out the two big tech firm ousters of the past week: HP's CEO and Apple's head iPhone guy. Dan goes over some recent NYC subway nightmares, and how the MTA's high-tech makeover isn't moving very quickly. And finally, we check out candid shots of a gorilla that got his paws on some poor zoo visitor's Nintendo DSi XL.

Viacom loses its lawsuit against Google's YouTube, eBay buys RedLaser bar code scanning app for mobile shopping, and Verizon releases the Droid X just as the iPhone 4 launches with limited availability.

On today's episode of The 404 Podcast, hosts Jeff Bakalar, Wilson G. Tang, and Justin Yu discover how to run Flash on an iPhone using Frash, reminisce about Tetris and congratulate the first ever Tetris World Champion, and examine a VW beetle that runs solely on methane gas, aka farts!

The movie service announces a free iPhone app for subscribers to search and watch selections from their video library while on the go.

We shall call the iPhone 4 "little smudgy" (because Rafe calls his iPad "big smudgy"). Kent German drops by the show to let us get a look at the shiny new toy that comprises, basically, the first half of our broadcast. Then, though, tune in for an update on the Droid X announcement that happened today, Android app privacy concerns, and Facebook's inexorable cruising toward 1 billion users.

This week on the CNET Tech Review, we get touchy-feely with the iPhone 4; Samsung floods the smartphone market; and OnLive brings PC gaming to the Mac.

Hulu launches a paid subscription service, Sony laptops are overheating, and new rumors surface about the iPhone coming to Verizon. Strangely familiar, we know.

On today's episode of The 404 Podcast, hosts Jeff Bakalar, Wilson G. Tang, and Justin Yu investigate how to jailbreak an iPhone using ultrasn0w, the best way to block a number from your phone, reminisce about using dial-up modems and landline telephones, and yet another appearance from MC TerrorByte!

Google is shutting down its real-time messaging system known as Google Wave, the iPhone dev team releases a carrier unlock for jailbroken iPhones, and Google and Verizon are apparently near a deal to pay for tiered Web traffic in a blow to Net neutrality.

This week on Dialed In we talk about the latest Android phone news, Bonnie and Kent speculate on what iOS 4 will mean for Google's little green guy, and we discuss our latest reviews.

On today's episode of The 404 Podcast, hosts Jeff Bakalar, Wilson G. Tang, and Justin Yu look over the new Froyo update for the HTC Evo 4G and Google's Android operating system, discover Android sales outpacing iPhones, and compare Wilson's iPhone 4 to Jeff's HTC Evo.

Turns out the newborn iPhones 4 might have a touch of the old jaundice -- it's ok, it's pretty common, just try to lay them in direct sunlight for a few hours. (No, don't try that. Just call Apple.) Top story today, though: a victory for the Internet! That victory? YouTube wins against Viacom! (Viacom plans to appeal.) Also, Rafe was totally right about that antenna thing, he would like to you to know, and when it comes to Twitter and Facebook, well: it's war.