The holidays have a lot stacked against them this year. Let's review.
And Colin Trevorrow teases the big bad of Jurassic World: Dominion .
Consumers can receive a free repair kit in the mail.
The Black Widow lawsuit, Star Wars: The Bad Batch whitewashing, that Ghostbusters ghost, and more pop culture letdowns.
Don't Look Up shows you can make a compelling climate change movie. Here's some more fodder for Hollywood to keep the ball rolling.
The Internet Association, once the "unified voice of the internet economy," failed to stay relevant and manage its members' competing interests.
This weekend's destruction shows how American businesses aren't set up to keep employees safe.
The next internet revolution is upon us—here's why it matters.
An effort to modernize service delivery for federal agencies will (hopefully) make it easier to do your taxes, deal with student loans, and more.
A report states that Amazon is slowly imposing its no cell phone policy in its facilities again. The company said employees are allowed to have their phones.
So many heroes who deserve the gaming spotlight, and not just Batman.
Mercedes can sell its autonomous drive package, called Drive Pilot, to be used on parts of Germany’s Autobahn network at a max speed of 37 miles per hour.
Around 70% of warehouses are in neighborhoods with a greater share of non-white people than that of the median neighborhoods in the metro area.
An upcoming Google Play Games app will let you resume games on a PC after playing them on another device.
The forthcoming smart home standard could soon replace the need for proprietary casting systems like Google's Cast or Apple’s AirPlay.
The voice assistant isn't shutting down but the similarly named web-ranking service is.
A new complaint to the FTC complaint claims Amazon's 'search results' are so packed with ads, we shouldn't even call them 'search results.'
Writers Ty Franck and Daniel Abraham and showrunner Naren Shankar give us the scoop on final season of the Amazon Prime Video series.
Amazon claims to know the cause of the problem and is working on a solution.
The company will wait until 2022 to determine when its U.S. workers can safely return to the office in the long-term.