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Grammys to Honor Late Steve Jobs for Contribution to Music

The Grammys will pay special tribute to late Apple founder Steve Jobs, Brazil's Tom Jobim -- of "Girl from Ipanema" fame -- and U.S. singer Diana Ross at the upcoming awards show, the organization announced Wednesday.

The Apple co-founder and mind behind the wildly popular iPod, iPad and iPhone died in October after battling pancreatic cancer.

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Yahoo! Synchs More Websites with Facebook

Yahoo! announced that it has ramped up the number of its websites around the world that let visitors automatically share what stories they read with Facebook friends.

A feature added in September to Yahoo! News in the United States has been extended to 26 more of the California Internet pioneers websites around the world.

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Google Remains Default Search Engine at Firefox

Mozilla on Tuesday said that it has renewed a deal making Google the default search engine in the nonprofit organization's open-source Firefox Web browsing software.

"We're pleased to announce that we have negotiated a significant and mutually beneficial revenue agreement with Google," Mozilla chief executive Gary Kovacs said in a release.

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Pets, Songs and Babies Top YouTube Videos in 2011

Online singing sensation Rebecca Black topped a 2011 most-viewed YouTube videos list Tuesday that included spoofs starring pets, talking babies and pop music star Michael Bolton.

The collection of the year's most popular YouTube snippets was based on an analysis of the more than one trillion video views logged at the Google-owned website.

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Google Turns up Investment in Solar Power

Google on Tuesday ramped up its investment in clean energy by backing the construction of solar panels that will feed electricity to California's power grid.

The Internet giant announced that it is pumping $94 million into Recurrent Energy projects near the state's capitol of Sacramento, raising its investments in Earth-friendly power generation to $915 million.

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German Charged Over Islamist Internet Propaganda

A German man has been charged with allegedly spreading Islamist propaganda on the Internet glorifying suicide attacks and seeking support for militants abroad, the federal prosecutor's office said Monday.

The 19-year-old German convert to Islam is suspected of running an Internet site for several months which showed videos, pictures and text containing jihadi and radical Islamist content, it said.

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Kim's Death Most Popular Topic on China Blogs

The death of Kim Jong-Il was the most talked-about topic on China's popular micro blogs on Tuesday, with more than 10 million posts, most of them critical of the former North Korean leader.

Many were in stark contrast to the stance taken by China's official media, which has hailed the former dictator as a close friend who dedicated his life to his country.

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IBM Says Mind Reading Machines on Their Way

Century-old technology colossus IBM depicted a near future in which machines read minds and recognize who they are dealing with.

The "IBM 5 in 5" predictions were based on societal trends and research which the New York State-based company expected to begin bearing fruit by the year 2017.

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AT&T Drops Plan to Buy T-Mobile

AT&T threw in the towel Monday on its $39 billion deal to buy T-Mobile USA and grab the lead in the U.S. wireless business after running into stiff opposition from U.S. regulators.

AT&T said it would have to take a $4 billion charge for dropping the offer, first made in March, to buy T-Mobile from its parent Deutsche Telekom.

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Next Wave of GPS Promises Stronger Signals

The future of the U.S. Global Positioning System is taking shape in a vast white room south of Denver, where workers are piecing together the first of more than 30 satellites touted as the most powerful, reliable and versatile yet.

The new generation of satellites, known as Block III, will improve the accuracy of military and civilian GPS receivers to within three feet (about one meter), compared with 10 feet (about three meters) now, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

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