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On today's episode of The 404 Podcast, hosts Jeff Bakalar, Wilson G. Tang, and Justin Yu take a look at the weekend box office, discuss Friday's iPhone 4 announcement from Apple and Steve Jobs, and celebrate New Jersey's purchase of Ilya Kovalchuk!

Here is your iPhone 4 update! Apple addresses antenna issues in the iPhone 4 by giving away free bumper cases and allowing the penalty-free returns for 30 days after purchase.

This week on the CNET Tech Review: Testing the iPhone 4 antenna flaw; rating cell carriers' data speeds; iPhone 4 versus Evo 4G; and old-school .com domain names.

This week, we consider Steve Jobs' WWDC keynote announcements, Joey makes the case for the Evo vs. the iPhone 4, and we take a look back on at the last ten years of the E3 video game trade show, while previewing what we'll see next week.

After months of speculation, Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference is finally here, and everyone except Jeff is eager to see what Steve Jobs will unveil at the show. You can follow all the coverage on our CNET live blog, and don't forget about CNET's WWDC 2010 Bingo Card!

Some companies get social media, and some don't. What kind do you work for? Today, we're discussing the incredible success of the Old Spice YouTube campaign compared to Apple's top-down over-control of communication around the iPhone 4 antenna problems. Guests are authors Brian Solis of FutureWorks, and Rick Bakas of the St. Supery winery.

Though the controversy continues to rage about the iPhone 4's antenna, we make room this week for other topics like Android news and absurd cell phone names.

Preordering for the Apple iPhone 4 started this morning, and users are already reporting serious issues with AT&T's servers. The speed bump appears to happen when account is verified through AT&T, although we've also heard of bottlenecks popping up intermittently throughout the process.

Apple refreshes its MacBook line; Twitter for the iPhone is here; and we show you how to return apps from the iTunes App Store.

Problems are still affecting the iPhone 4, but is it affecting Apple's brand and Mac sales? Also, iTunes gets hacked, and we share a clever solution for the iPhone 4.

On today's show, Buzz Out Loud gets you a tiny bit high ... using a sine wave. Could it be!? Also, we continue our long slog through the Story that Wouldn't End: the iPhone 4 antenna issue. Press conference tomorrow! Also, will the Droid X self-destruct if you try to mod it? Maybe, maybe not. But it seems like the phone world is all about picking your poison these days.

Josh reviews iMovie for the iPhone and YouTube's new video editor. They actually work! Also, your questions answered, like, How does my WiFi-only iPad know where I am? And, How can I rescue music tracks I only have on my iPhone? Plus one question we couldn't answer: What's the best way to ditch cable and get current shows over the Web -- without a PC?

BMW is meshing your iPhone with its in-dash software, Facebook gets Outlook integration, and an experimental 3D display is created with water.

Consumer Reports says it can't recommend the iPhone 4 because the antenna issue can be replicated and is, in fact, serious. Fanboy response: suck it up and buy a case. Molly response: epic rant. Also, the RIAA's wildly inflated file-sharing damages are smacked down once again, and Reddit begs for money.

This week on the CNET Tech Review, movie-making apps for your iPhone; Hulu's movie-watching app for your iPhone; and how to connect your laptop to a TV, with or without an iPhone.

We'll showcase Reel Director on the iPhone platform and why it's better than iMovie for iPhone 4.

Don't call it the 4G or the 4HD. The Apple iPhone 4 is here and Gizmodo ruined the surprise. As predicted, the new handset has *almost* all of the rumored features, including a 960X640 resolution display, a bigger battery, HD video recording and editing, a three-axis gyroscope, an upgraded 5MP rear camera, and a front-facing camera for use with Apple's new video chat program FaceTime.

This week in top tech news, Prince says the Internet is dead, Apple says your iPhone signal bars are fiction, and an octopus that predicts the future. Yes, an octopus.

On today's show, the NSA announces a new security program that's terrifyingly called "Perfect Citizen" but (at least on the surface) appears to be little more than a series of Star Trek red alert alarms. We're rightfully suspicious. Also, Flash is getting 3D, Pirate Bay is under attack, and the iPhone 4 antenna problem is a hardware issue. We knew that.

Netflix inks a new movie studio deal, Apple waives the restocking fee on iPhone 4, and Puma launches a phone to make you look super cool.

The iPhone on Verizon rears its ugly head again, Microsoft kills the Kin (again), and Cisco builds an almost iPad-killer.

There's a fix coming for the iPhone 4's antenna problems: Apple will make the signal strength meter go higher, no matter what. Seriously? Yes. Also, Steve Jobs did not say, "It's just a phone," Microsoft doesn't care which way you insert your batteries, and there is no space dust on Hayabusa.

Breaking news! Microsoft announced it will be killing the Kin! Also, Apple unleashed the juggernaut that was the iPhone 4 last week only to suffer tales of antenna woes soon after. We also talk about the latest Android news -- the Droid X, Evo 4G problems, and the Samsung Galaxy S devices, just to name a few -- plus the sillest phone name of all time.

I think we can all agree on one thing: flying cars may be cool, but it's going to be a slaughter in the skies--at least at first. Also, the Verizon iPhone is here again! Yay! We'll believe it when we see it, just like we'll believe that Google Me is real and a real competitor to Facebook when we see it and when Google manages to understand actual humans and what they want in a social network. But hey, fingers crossed!

The Altec Lansing Octiv Mini is an ideal option for anyone seeking an affordable, minimalist iPhone speaker for the bedroom, bathroom, or kitchen.

On today's episode of The 404 Podcast, hosts Jeff Bakalar, Wilson G. Tang, and Justin Yu wrap up iPhone 4 news from the weekend, including 1.7 million units sold, backlash from the left-handed community, and a new phone sex service that uses FaceTime to connect users to a live chat.

On today's episode of The 404 Podcast, hosts Jeff Bakalar, Wilson G. Tang, and Justin Yu look into the latest Apple iPhone 4 reception and display issues, debunk a new iPhone app that supposedly fixes erectile dysfunction, and look into the .xxx suffix that might soon identify NSFW pornographic Web sites.

Turns out the iPhone grip of death is simply a "fact of life" with all wireless phones. If holding your phone makes your iPhone 4 signal drop dramatically, Apple would like you to know you should either hold it a different way or buy a case. From them. That sounds logical, right? Right. No, thanks. Also, introducing Rafe's new side project, oneleggedgoat.xxx. Enjoy.

It's official: WWDC 2010 kicks off in June, but we might not send Brian this time; Apple acquires a voice search company to rival Google's service; and we have an iPad goodie giveaway!

This week on the CNET Tech review, we take a look back at E3 2010; hands-on with the Nintendo 3DS; how to sell stuff on eBay; and SoundHound for iPhone and Android.