You can now buy genuine Apple parts, so long as they are paired to your phone.
Over $2.1 trillion was spent globally on military expenditures last year, a .7% increase driven partly by liberal U.S. R&D spending on tech contracts.
TikTok was fined for the same reason, the latest the fallout from the country's punitive anti-LGBT laws.
Get your Pixel smartphone charged and backed up. Android faithfuls can download the in-progress OS to try it out.
Google Play's Data Safety section has officially started rolling out.
Here's how to say goodbye—properly—to your old hardware.
No, sorry, the notch isn't going anywhere. But your next iPhone might be a little bigger.
Gaps in data for specific locations makes determining air quality pointless for most people outside of cities.
Chad needs a budget-to-midrange smartphone that operates on Verizon's 5G network. Here's what he should buy.
Twitter is the worst of the bunch, followed by TikTok. YouTube and Pinterest are a bit better.
If there's a beloved app you're using now, say goodbye before May 11.
Despite efforts by social media companies to combat large, efficient Russian disinformation networks, bad info spread by diplomats continues.
The company claims its satellites will track a single location 12 times per day and at resolutions sharp enough to spot a toaster.
The NPR member station has partnered with the oil giant for a series riddled with industry talking points.
This mid-range smartphone is as good as Samsung gets for under $500.
The two privacy-focused companies announced separate initiatives meant to undercut AMP, the tech giant's mobile page protocol.
Workers in an Atlanta store are the first in the country to officially petition for a union election. How will the world's most valuable company respond?
More actively exploited zero-day vulnerabilities were disclosed last year than any other year on record, according to analysis from the tech giant.
John Lee must have had trouble logging into his account this morning.
This simple plug-and-play adapter will help you cut the cord—in your car.