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Sprint's Clearwire acquisition could signal move towards data
by
Dec 17, 2012
To compete with AT&T and Verizon, which have about 70 percent of the market, Sprint needs more spectrum and Clearwire has it.
Shutting off the Internet in Syria, resisting the smartphone craze, and celebrating Pong at 40
by
Nov 30, 2012
An Internet and telecom blackout hits Syria, Pew research numbers get to the bottom of why some avoid buying smartphones, and the video game Pong turns 40-years-old.
Another big customer gives up Blackberry
by
Nov 21, 2012
The National Transportation Safety Board is following the lead of other agencies in replacing Blackberries with iPhones. Its original advantage -- security -- isn't as valued as smartphones' features.
BlackBerry hangs on by a keyboard
by
Oct 23, 2012
Google's Android and Apple's iPhone are vying for number one and two in the smart phone market. BlackBerry comes in third with 11% of the market and 90 million users around the world, but just who are these users?
What the Apple-Samsung ruling means for you
by
Aug 27, 2012
Apple's win over Samsung could mean big changes for the smartphone and tablet markets.
When will all the really, really cool technology actually get here?
by
Aug 20, 2012
And, a tech reporter gets off the Internet. And becomes way happier.
Watches thrive even in the smartphone age
by
Jul 21, 2012
Even as more people use their smartphones as to check the time, watch sales are rising at a healthy clip -- especially on the luxury end
Whither the BlackBerry: What now for yesterday's smartphone?
by
Jul 11, 2012
Research In Motion holds an annual shareholder meeting among much nail-biting.
Blackberry meets its shareholders
by
Jul 10, 2012
At Research in Motion's annual meeting, it was a mix of bad news and turnaround talk.
RIM struggles to keep BlackBerry afloat, heads to annual meeting
Interview by
Jul 10, 2012
One of Canada's best-known companies also looks more and more like one of the world's shakiest. Today in Waterloo, Ontario, RIM puts on a brave face for shareholders at its annual meeting -- maybe a little tricky when its share price is down 95 percent from its peak.











