The company's CEO says it will need to take "significant corrective actions" to stave off financial disaster.
Some were ugly, some were flawed, and some were flat-out awful. These are the products that disappointed us this year.
CES kicks off Jan. 5, despite everything. Here are the major product launches in store.
Two women have accused actor Chris Noth, who plays the popular character Mr. Big, of rape.
Peloton's shares dropped 11% after the first two episodes of HBO Max's sequel, And Just Like That, premiered.
The connected fitness company's first sub-$500 device is an AI-powered camera that tracks your strength-training workouts.
The company said Apple's new privacy changes were to blame for some of its woes this past financial quarter.
Peloton's cheaper treadmill is back on the market, and it's so fun to run on—but we haven't forgotten the recalls.
The Tempo Move is a clever solution for some of the biggest problems we have with connected home fitness machines.
Peloton hopes that having access to its instructors on a Delta flight will convince you to pay for its app.
After recalling its Tread and Tread+ treadmills in May, Peloton now faces the piercing eyes of the U.S. federal government.
The original Bike is getting its second price cut in a year.
The cheaper treadmill's original launch was postponed following voluntary recalls.
The company's mandatory Tread Lock update now works regardless of membership status.
Bike and Bike+ owners will be able to work out while playing a video game.
Fitness instructor Sam Yo uses his nostalgic love of pop culture like Karate Kid, Star Wars, and Transformers to pump you up.
When you buy a device that requires proprietary software to run, the money you hand over is an entry fee, nothing more.
The Pelican Explore & Fit Cycle brings the at-home fitness craze to the youth.
A new report claims the company is working on a digital heart rate armband.
If your hardware doesn't work without proprietary software, it's not really yours.