Smartphones and tablets are selling like crazy and are poised to be even more popular in months and years to come. But how would you use one if you couldn't see? University researchers may be able to help.
A new hybrid approach to movie-watching debuts this week. Owners of what are called UltraViolet DVDs can watch a movie on a disc and then use a code to access the same movie through streaming on multiple devices.
It could happen. A new report says there are now more wireless customers in the United States than there are people in the United States. This at a time when wireless use is booming and the number of carriers may shrink.
The U.S. military relies on a large fleet of unmanned drone aircraft for surveillance and attacks. Now the computer networks that control some of those drones have been infected with a keystroke-logging virus.
Samsung is suing to block the new iPhone 4S from being sold in France and Italy. It's the latest salvo in an increasingly hostile technological war which could effect you.
The Federal Communications Commission wants to use a fund long earmarked for rural phone service and turn it toward rural broadband. This comes at a time when the FCC is also dealing with controversial net neutrality rules.
Steve Jobs, co-founder and former CEO of Apple Computer, has died at age 56. In talking about Jobs, there's a tendency people have to talk about their own lives through the technologies that Jobs developed. That's what we'll explore today.
Apple's latest iPhone announcement didn't have any one huge feature to draw all the attention. But two new features caught our eye: promises of seven times faster speeds and a new artificial intelligence program.
The FCC has issued rules on net neutrality, the idea that all content must be carried at the same speed over the internet. But the rules are already the subject of several lawsuits.