Though consumers aren’t necessarily begging for head-worn computers yet, tech firms big and small see the technology as the next frontier of…
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On Friday, Beijing announced that a trade-in program that previously applied to big appliances and cars will now be widened to smartphones.
Apple — admitting no wrongdoing — has agreed to settle a class-action lawsuit that alleged Siri recorded users’ private conversations.
For years, traditional cable had one trump card against the upstart streamers devouring their business: live programming. Not anymore.
To give some perspective on Spotify’s long road to steady profitability, the company was founded all the way back in 2006.
This month marks the end of what Goldman Sachs estimates will be a record year for stock buybacks, with a volume of roughly $930 billion.
One ring to rule them all… at least, Oura hopes so. On Thursday, it announced a new $200 million funding round.
On Tuesday, two separate antitrust class lawsuits were filed against Microsoft and Apple in the United Kingdom.
The trio will allow any T-Mobile iPhone user running iOS 18.3 (and presumably future versions) to tap the Starlink network.
Semiconductor company Nvidia has managed to once again top Apple and become the world’s most valuable company.
Epic Games filed a lawsuit against Google and Samsung, pulling the South Korean electronics giant into its long-running beef with Google.
Though artificial reality took center stage at Meta Connect, the company faces headwinds in making AR glasses an everyday reality.
Yesterday saw a huge selloff in US tech stocks after a Chinese AI chatbot app DeepSeek shot to the top of the Apple App Store. Why the fuss?
Last week, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced the government plans to introduce a law banning children from social media.