Current president of the Amazon-owned company, Dan Clancy, will be taking over as chief executive.
The company formerly known as Facebook is shifting its focus once again, this time to enter the artificial intelligence arms race.
Plus, Jack Black's next project is a Satanic take on Christmas in Dear Santa .
In an excerpt from his book "Meganets," technologist David Auerbach parses how our "part-machine, part-human leviathans" make us feel the world has gone insane.
We've got another sneak peek at Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse , Sweet Tooth season 2, and more.
Brazilian criminals are using Starlink terminals to conduct illegal activities in mining areas in dense regions of the Amazon.
We finally know the answer to the question, "where does he get those wonderful toys?"
As storms get warmer and wetter, the state's flood control system is struggling to keep up.
Amazon unveiled three different sizes for its Project Kupier customer terminals, covering everyone from single users to massive enterprises.
A user survey hints at a new project that aligns with Amazon's lucrative push into advertising as a complement to Prime.
From tiny portable launch vehicles to gigantic reusable megarockets, the future of rocketry looks exceptionally bright.
Plus a lot of sneaky peeks at Lady Gaga on the Joker set, some potential Blade Runner TV news, and a Daredevil casting switch-up.
If your OLED TV is going to be the center of your living room, it might as well look the part.
A class action lawsuit claims Joshua Browder's start-up misled consumers by peddling "substandard legal documents" and providing "unauthorized legal services."
Wonder Woman, Flash, and others heroes get new solo books as part of the new Dawn of DC comics line.
Enjoy a wealth of content without spending any money.
This is the fourth name for the streaming service. Maybe they should just try releasing Batgirl.
J.J. Abrams, Matt Reeves, and Bruce Timm's new animated series has already been commissioned for two seasons, after HBO Max scrapped plans for it.
Adobe, Inc. has pledged no companywide lay offs this year, as it opens its fourth office in Silicon Valley.
Amazon Web Services HR Vice President Ian Wilson reportedly voiced the idea of inviting laid off workers back to the company at a company town hall.