
6:12am: Apple's iPhone almost singlehandedly saved AT&T and Sprint. But it come at a steep price, one that the mobile carriers will be paying for years. More
CEO Andrew Fisher talks about the company's plan to enter the television ad market and potential IPO plans. Play

Is the retail giant's rewards program profitable? Probably not. Is it a vital part of the company's future? Almost certainly.
Alibaba Group owns about 73.5% of e-commerce giant Alibaba.com, which is its only publicly traded subsidiary. It wants to buy the remaining shares.
The "Pokemon Yellow" scam calls into question both Apple's approval process and Nintendo's anti-mobile approach.

America is facing a spectrum crunch. That means cell phone bills will go up, service will get spotty -- and there's no quick or cheap fix.

RIM's release of PlayBook 2.0 finally gives the device features that are standard on other tablets. But the damage may already be done.

Microsoft says Google is ducking Internet Explorer's privacy controls, but the standard Google dodged is outdated and widely ignored.

Barnes & Noble will sell a new 8 GB version of its Nook Tablet for $199, the same price as the Amazon Kindle Fire tablet.
Accuses a Chinese company of lying and threatens to sue its chairman for defamation
Fortune's curated selection of tech stories from the long weekend.
China Telecom, the country's No. 3 carrier and No.1 Wi-Fi provider, gets the iPhone.