Your guide to a better future
For some, it was a banner year marked by accomplishment and new vistas. For others, 2011 turned into annus horribilis.
Beleaguered Internet pioneer will combine dial-up services with Web services, CEO Tim Armstrong tells Bloomberg.
Company's results were better than Wall Street expectations. Meanwhile, AOL continues to invest in its Patch local-news effort.
Jared Grusd, AOL senior vice president and strategy chief, is moving on to the music service in an unspecified role, according to a new report.
New Facebook interaction added to eBay, Siri has some quirky answers and BlackBerry service is restored, but will there be compensation for down time?
AOL's chief executive sees a merger between the two once-prominent companies yielding a savings of up to $1.5 billion, sources tell Reuters.
Too busy to keep up with the tech news? Here are some of the more interesting stories from CNET for Friday, September 9.
The chief executive of AOL has reportedly approached Yahoo to consider merging the two struggling Internet companies.
The company says it has retained an investment bank and a law firm--both of which have extensive experience in mergers and acquisitions.
In yet another shakeup, sales chief and two recent hires are out at the former Internet giant.
First-quarter earnings dive 86 percent, largely due to the costs of integrating the Huffington Post news site. Display ad revenue is up, a first since 2007.
Among the ongoing changes at AOL, the company announces today that it's brought on Biz Stone, who serve as an adviser on "social impact and cause-based initiatives."