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On today's show, Podfather Adam Curry joins us for gloves-off battles about everything from whether Apple should put out the iPhone for Verizon (Adam says no) to what Nokia used to produce (boots, turns out), and just what exactly is wrong with Nokia.

A police raid of a Gizmodo editor's home as part of an investigation into Apple's missing prototype 4G iPhone raises questions about trade secrets, journalism, and the First Amendment. CNET correspondent Declan McCullagh, center, moderates panel at Stanford University's Innovation Journalism conference on June 7 asking whether Gizmodo, Apple, or law enforcement crossed the line. Panelists from left to right: Paul Saffo, technology forecaster; Roger Myers, media attorney who represented CBS Interactive in effort to unseal Gizmodo documents; Jennifer Granick, Electronic Frontier Foundation attorney; William Coats, litigator who has represented clients including Lucasfilm and DVDCCA on intellectual property cases.

Senior Editor Kent German is back from his monthlong sabbatical, just in time for the next iPhone. On this week's episode, we make some predictions about what we might see at WWDC and discuss AT&T's new data plans. Come on and dial in.

Jasmine's (mostly) back from vacation, and already hates the iPhone 4. To balance out her blind rage for the as-yet released device, Eric and Donald tackle Crave stories ranging from monkey-controlled robots, laser drug injection, and a Lego printer that drives ladies wild (or not). Stick around for the end, and you may just see Darth Vader's cleavage.

The ZonePlayer S5 shrinks the Sonos streaming music experience down to a compact single-speaker system with great sound, which you can control from any iPhone or iPod Touch.

You're going to have to listen to the show to understand the evolution of our favorite new phrase, "mucho bogo." Speaking of evolution, the HTC EVO 4G is officially available, just in time to be stomped into dust by the forthcoming iPhone. Maybe. Also, Google's going to hand over its intercepted WiFi data, to make a bad problem worse, and we're giving a big (BIG) no to the Kno.

Jobs talks candidly about Apple's situation with Gizmodo, the site that bought an iPhone prototype found in a bar.

Flash is coming to Android, Seagate media player offers Watch Instantly with Netflix, and we have more details on the mystery of the apparent iPhone 4G prototype.

The Big A overtakes Microsoft; all signs point to June for the next iPhone, but will Apple release multiple versions? And a giveaway that will score big points with the ladies.

AT&T makes major changes to its data plan--as in, it's not unlimited anymore. Sorry, iPad people. But hey, at least it means the new iPhone is coming!

In buzz this week, there's a possible corroboration of a Verizon iPhone; Twitter wants to make money for real this time; and a Molly Rant in video form.

We'll show off five of our favorite 99-cent games that are worth every penny.

Hitachi-LG is working on a Blu-ray drive combined with a solid-state drive, Slacker Radio 2.0 is out for the iPhone and iPod Touch, and Jetstar Airways is the first to offer an in-flight iPad rental service.

We're all wondering what's going on with the story of the Apple iPhone 4G prototype found in a Redwood City, Calif., bar and its subsequent sale to Gizmodo. CNET News Senior Writer Greg Sandoval drops by the studio to fill us in on all the latest developments, including who exactly found the phone, how it eventually got into the hands of Gizmodo editor Jason Chen, and why it's never a good idea to purchase anything you know for a fact is stolen! Unfortunately, "finders keepers, losers weepers" only holds water on the playground.

A new Kindle may arrive this summer, Skype for the iPhone with 3G calling launched, and Google Maps allegedly tells you to walk along freeways.

Get free turn-by-turn navigation on your iPhone, a USB stick self-destructs if tampered with, and rumors of the iPhone for Verizon are storming the Web.

Combined with the iPhone app, the Sound ID 510 is a truly excellent Bluetooth headset for iPhone owners.

Which mobile browser fulfills your need for speed? We throw Safari and Opera Mini into the Prizefight ring to find out.

Palm is apparently searching for a buyer, why 26 million cell phones in Mexico may be turned off this week, and we have your iPhone 4.0 roundup.

The HTC Droid Incredible is available for pre-order, and no lie, we drooled a little bit over it. We also uncover the Google conspiracy to rid the world of http://. But the weirdest of all was our discussion of the dramatic weekend rumor mill involving the purported iPhone 4G found on a bar in either San Jose or Redwood City. Or maybe it's a fake.

Bonnie is out sick, so Jessica Dolcourt from Download.com is here to discuss Android 2.2 FroYo and what it means for future Android smartphones. We also discuss the latest iPhone news, the LG Fathom, and more.

Barnes & Noble launches an iPad e-reader app, the iPhone 4G may come to Sprint, and Google Latitude now offers a history of where you've been--handy if you need an alibi!

We'll recap Apple's latest announcements; MacBook rumors heat up; and if you buy a car, you'll get an iPad for free!

If you don't like broad patents on potentially world-changing scientific developments like scientific genomes, well, then, build your own! Also, does the $97 iPhone 3GS mean the 4G model will be on sale at launch? And we find out why five inches just isn't enough. Sorry.

Apple announces multitasking, Game Center, iAds, and more. We recap all of Apple's iPhone OS 4.0 announcements from Apple headquarters.


We dish heavily about the HTC Evo 4G, especially about Sprint's unusual choice to charge a mandatory $10 fee even if you don't get 4G in your area. We also talk a little about the iPhone possibly getting tethering, and more.

At CTIA 2010, Jessica Dolcourt takes a look at Opera Mini 5 running on iPhone--but whether it makes it into the App Store is up in the air.

The same thing always happens to the Internet in the months building up to a new Apple product: a random Twitter users and/or one of the big tech blogs gets their hands on a one-off photo and the entire industry blows it up speculating whether or not the image is an authentic leak. Today is one of those days.

Kensington applies a bit of old tech to make one of the best high tech phones more useful from behind the wheel.