In Pictures: 10 best alternatives to the iPhone 5S
Just in case you were underwhelmed by the new Apple smartphones.
Just in case you were underwhelmed by the new Apple smartphones.
Our list of power players in enterprise networking, and beyond
Google will lend its expertise and powerful infrastructure to an effort aimed at creating an open platform for online education called MOOC.org, according to an official blog post published yesterday.
The latest iPhone brings fingerprint recognition technology, a 64-bit processor and a sidekick.
Our look at the lineup of Samsung hardware – including the industry's first smartwatch.
IP theft continues to be a threat to businesses’ bottom lines – and a major issue for Sino-American relations.
A Canadian IT consultancy has announced that it will soon begin selling an Ubuntu laptop that "never needs to be plugged in," thanks to solar power. The SOL, as WeWi Telecommunications dubs the device, is designed to be used in developing nations, which may have limited infrastructure available.
Motorola goes a different way with it's new flagship offering.
Google’s update to last year’s well-received Nexus 7 a step forward, though asking price slightly higher.
A look at the slowing, fattening, system-gunkifying software that gives us all indigestion.
A new rich notification feature, a different kind of WebKit and a raft of security fixes made it into the latest stable version of Google's Chrome browser.
The megapixel race has been going on for a long time, at least by the standards of mobile technology. It's gotten to the point that even the act of pointing out its ridiculousness is so old-hat as to seem archaeological.
A previously misunderstood magnetic phenomenon has been apparently explained by a paper published on Sunday in Nature Materials – and the explanation could lead to wholesale transformation in magnetic storage.
Canonical announced Tuesday that it has formed an advisory group of international wireless carriers – including big names like Deutsche Telekom and Korea Telecom, but excluding all of the big four U.S. networks.
Google engineers are planning to test a system aimed at providing accessible Internet service to parts of the world with insufficient communications infrastructure – a collection of high-flying balloons equipped with specialized radios, dubbed Project Loon.