All Technology
- A look inside Google's 3-D mapping Tango phone and tablet
Google's Tango phone and tablet can sense the world around them. This new hardware sparks the imagination, and hits some real-world barriers.
- Amazon teases an upcoming mystery device
Buzz is building around an undisclosed product Amazon is set to release later this month. Could it be the highly-anticipated 3-D smart phone?
- Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 Nook will hit bookshelves in August
Following dismal Nook sales, Barnes and Noble is heaving its hardware side over to Samsung with a co-branded tablet/e-reader: the Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 Nook.
- Reset the Net: What is it and what does it mean?
Reset the Net rallies against online government surveillance.
- Attention young animators: Pixar to give away its 3-D software, RenderMan
Love Pixar? RenderMan created those iconic Toy Story scenes. Now, Pixar plans to give away RenderMan to aspiring animators.
- What Google's 'End-to-End' encryption means for you
With its new End-to-End encryption service, Google wants to make e-mail safe from prying eyes.
- Instagram expands beyond simple filters with new slate of photography tools
Instagram will introduce 10 new tools so phone photographers can adjust the brightness, contrast, warmth, and other aspects of each image.
- What is iOS 8's new Health app?
Apple revealed a new all-in-one workout and diet app for iOS 8 called Health that can collect data from various iPhone and iPad apps.
- Will Google Glass's alliance with DVF help its innovate image or hurt it?
At first blush, DVF seems like a perfect fit to design Google Glass frames. But does the name carry the right blend of fashion and innovation?
- At WWDC, Apple blurs the lines between phones and desktops
With its annual WWDC event, Apple unveils a better digital life for customers (assuming they own many Apple devices all at once).
- Music, fitness, and 'Internet of Things' likely at Apple's WWDC
A week ahead of Apple’s highly anticipated WWDC, the tech world predicts Apple will make major moves in music apps, fitness services, and the Internet of Things.
- Want to be 'forgotten' on Google? Here's how.
Friday is the first day Google is complying with EU rules that require the search engine to consider burying certain search results if a user requests it. Here’s a look at what it takes to be forgotten online.
- Google's diversity problem: 70 percent male, 2 percent black
Though Silicon Valley is notorious for being mostly populated by young, white men, Google has officially released numbers that show the company's employees are overwhelmingly white and male. Though Google cites a pipeline problem, recent incidents indicate tech culture is the bigger issue.
- Beats Solo²: Pared down design in time for Apple deal
Beats was recently scooped up by Apple, but that isn't the only bit of news the headphone maker is announcing. Beats announced it is releasing a new headphone, the Solo², that offers better quality for a wider variety of music plus a sleeker aesthetic. But is it worth Beats' inflated price tag?
- New Google car has no steering wheel, brake pedal
Thought Google's self-driving car was impressive? The tech company has one-upped itself, debuting a prototype fully autonomous vehicle with no steering wheel, gear, or brake pedal.
- LG G3 updates the luxury smart phone
LG has revamped its flagship smart phone and debuted the G3, a handset that features a simple aesthetic with a powerful interior. Will it catch on in a competitive mobile market dominated by Samsung and Apple?
- Google car: Look Ma, no steering wheel!
Google plans to build 100 prototypes of a self-driving car. The Google cars will have no steering wheel, no brake and gas pedals. Instead, buttons for go and stop.The top speed will be 25 m.p.h.
- Why are Netflix streaming video speeds slowing down?
Online tolls threaten Netflix's streaming speeds. Will cutting deals with Internet providers make things better or worse?
- iPhone kidnapping? What to do if your device gets hijacked.
Dozens of iPhone and iPad users have received strange messages on their Apple devices, digital ransom notes that demand payment in order for the device to be unlocked. Who is behind it and what should you do if your device gets kidnapped?
- Rachel Louise Carson: The one who shouted 'Silent Spring'
Nearly a half-century since Rachel Louise Carson published 'Silent Spring,' her impact can be seen in the Environmental Protection Agency (which she partly instigated) the lack of DDT use (which she helped stop), and the modern environmentalist movement (which she inspired). On Tuesday, Google honored her accomplishments with a Google Doodle.