An 18-year-old man and 35-year-old woman, both of San Jose, were killed in separate incidents over the weekend.
An 18-year-old man and 35-year-old woman, both of San Jose, were killed in separate incidents over the weekend.
A blaze at a mobile home in San Jose on Tuesday morning left 10 people displaced and a firefighter with second-degree burns to his face.
On Saturday, defense contractor Lockheed Martin admitted that it had come under a ““significant and tenacious” cyber attack. Nevertheless, the nation’s largest defense conrtractor added that, “Our systems remain secure; no customer, program, or employee personal data has been compromised.” Considering the scope of Lockheed Martin’s contracts, this is especially good news. The company provides the Department of Defense with everything from F-22 fighter jets and Trident missiles to wartime communications satellites.
Microsoft is expanding its presence in Silicon Valley. The company has just signed a lease on a 237,000 sq.-foot space in Moffet Towers, Sunnyvale, at the intersection of Highways 101 and 237.
CollegeHumor.com has just released a video roast of Facebook. It even contains some professional roasters, including Penn Jillette as Google, Gilbert Gottfried as Twitter, and Lisa Lampanelli as FourSquare.
Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck believes that he has a solid case against Giovanni Ramirez, the suspect arrested in the beating of Bryan Stow at Dodger Stadium this April. Nevertheless, he admits that he is not yet ready to bring the high profile case to the DA.
A San Jose man was shot to death late Wednesday night, and police are searching for suspects in the city’s 20th homicide of the year.
Manal al-Sharif is a hero to many women in Saudi Arabia, but she is also the scourge of many men there. She is pushing for the unthinkable—no, not granting women the vote. That would be ridiculous. She wants Saudi women to be allowed to drive cars.
The San Jose Sharks, a team that propelled the 10th biggest city in the nation through the spring yet left a legion of teal trembling in heartbreak, died on Tuesday in Vancouver. They were in the Western Conference finals.
The narrative of freedom is being told at Stanford University this week, in the same way that it’s been told across the world for months, as journalists from countries crumbling and developing have come to Palo Alto to stay a step head of the social-media curve.