A weekly look at developments in the world of technology
World Service,Β·224 episodes
Plans to monitor the users of Mumbai's cyber cafes has put their existence under threat
A report on unsafe working conditions in computer factories around the world
A report on the dangers of child internet chat rooms
First broadcast in 2004. The ASIMO humanoid housework robot is unveiled by Honda
The battle to stop a digital crime wave born in Nigeria
The cost of digital technology to the planet
How internet criminals are using fake job adverts to move stolen goods around the world
A report on Project Inkwell, which aims to make all students computer literate
A look a how we will be using computers in the year 2010
The Solomon Islands and a unique radio-enabled internet service
India's communications revolution - the growing use of mobile phones
Websites are failing disabled users, so what needs to be done to help them get online?
Translating the internet into other languages
An electron beam that can direct images straight into our eyes - tomorrow's tech now
Why technology is on the agenda in the US presidential elections
How technology is changing the way we choose our governments
The uses of 'smart dust' - which is no longer science fiction but science fact
The cyber crime phishing and how the police are poorly prepared to deal with it.
An internet database is hoping to help trace missing people from South America
A London hospital has started barcoding patients to keep tracks on them
Can video games provide a serious forum for news and current events?
How the internet is helping the divided people of Kashmir to communicate
We catch up with the Bangladeshi village women involved in a mobile phone scheme
Fraud fears over Venezuela's new electronic voting system
How wireless devices are creeping into our lives in a new technological wave
Who is censoring what and how?
In Denmark virtual reality technology is helping surgeons treat sick babies
Beating the fraudsters,;abusing the internet in the South Pacific. Presenter: Gareth Mitchell.
Computers that can spot a face in a crowd
How satellite technology is being used to help cares for Sudan's refugees