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  • Airs Saturday, April 20, 2013 at 5 p.m. on KPBS TV
  • The wildly popular digital game Angry Birds has been downloaded more than 50 million times in the past year. In May, Mattel plans to release a board game that aims to capture the same spirit of revenge and the joy of knocking things over.
  • Small business owners no longer have to purchase scanning devices or pay processing fees to be able to accept credit cards. Square, a device and phone application developed by Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, lets them collect on-the-spot payments with a cell phone.
  • Long before the MacBook and the iPad, the Apple co-founder and former CEO dreamed that computers could be used to help unleash human creativity. He spent much of his life bringing that dream to fruition.
  • Both Nokia and Microsoft have been left behind in the race to capture a piece of the fast-growing smartphone pie. Now Nokia, with Microsoft's help, is trying to force its way back into the North American smartphone market, announcing a new 4G phone for AT&T.
  • It's not an iPhone, but Apple's new ultra-portable computer may spark a flurry of purchases by people ready to update their laptops. The company also announced a new plan to allow movie rentals through its iTunes program.
  • The iPhone you bought last month may be obsolete by next year. KPBS reporter Alan Ray talks to the CNet.com Editor-At-Large, Brian Cooley.
  • You can't say they didn't warn you. On Monday, Google Reader will no longer be available. The search behemoth is putting its RSS reader to rest, leaving millions of dedicated users scrambling to find other platforms for organization of their news feeds and content exploration.
  • While superPACs are turning out to be some of the biggest moneymakers this election season, President Obama, so far, has stayed old school. He is raising funds for his traditional campaign committee, Obama for America, and a party fund that he can use.
  • There's more than just talk when it comes to voice-controlled devices. These days, it's OK to talk to your car, your phone and even your alarm clock. Here, a look at some products that listen and talk back.
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