For more sports videos, go to www.wsj.com/video. Ariel Investments CEO and Chairman John Rogers takes on basketball legend Michael Jordan in a game of one-on-one. From August 2003. Video courtesy of John Rogers. Edited by Lauren Goode.
WSJ's Walt Mossberg says Hewlett-Packard's new generation of touchscreen computers, the HP TouchSmart PC, is powerful and well-equipped, but doesn't realize the full potential of touchscreen computing.
For more Mossberg reviews, check out www.wsj.com/video. WSJ's Walt Mossberg reviews the BlackBerry Storm, the first BlackBerry device without a physical keyboard. (Nov. 19)
Former Talking Heads frontman and bicycling enthusiast, David Byrne, takes a ride out to Brooklyn to show off his latest project, designer bike racks. WSJ's Reed Albergotti reports. (July 18)
Google and T-Mobile joined forces to build a new phone unveiled on Tuesday. The G1 phone stands alone as it features Google's Android mobile platform. Dave Winkler, product developer for T-Mobile gives us a tour. (Sept. 23)
WSJ's Nicholas Casey reports that in a lawsuit, Mattel Inc. has accused Bratz makers MGA Entertainment Inc. of essentially stealing the idea for the pouty-lipped dolls. The legal showdown has major ramifications for both companies.
For more Walt Mossberg videos, visit www.wsj.com/video.
Walt Mossberg weighs in on the new Apple MacBook, saying, "I like it a lot." Among the latest features: an innovative track pad. (Oct. 23)
WSJ's Walt Mossberg looks at a new service called Aircell that will provide wireless internet access to airplane passengers flying across the U.S. (June 19)
James Taylor, one of America's greatest singer-songwriters, discusses his latest album, "Covers." He tells WSJ's Chris Farley what prompted him to cover songs by other people and what he thinks of today's music. (Sept. 26)
For more Walt Mossberg videos, go to www.wsj.com/video or www.allthingsd.com.
Recently, if you wanted to get a new generation handheld computer, you had one choice -- the Apple iPhone. That all changes next week with what WSJ's Walt Mossberg calls a 'worthy, worthy competitor,' the T-Mobile G-1 phone, designed by Google. (Oct. 16)