feed2list lesezeichen · · · · · ·
 
PCMag.com Breaking News
website PCMag.com Breaking News
Breaking technology news and in-depth analysis from PCMag.com
A jubilant SpaceX this afternoon championed its historic flight to the International Space Station (ISS), which a NASA official said signaled "a new era in commercial space flight."

Cisco said late Thursday that it will discontinue its Cius tablet, doubling down on software instead.

Apple this week launched new "Editors' Choice" picks, as well as a promotion offering a free "App of the Week."

The death of New Orleans' daily newspaper makes it more urgent than ever that everyone have a cheap way to get online.

HP will reportedly hand over a portion of the team behind its Enyo HTML5-based webOS framework to Google.

Sony confirmed today that it will not upgrade the Xperia Play, also known as the "PlayStation phone," to Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich.

New Rumors have surface that Google and Asus are getting ready to jointly release a 7-inch tablet this summer.

The Chronic Dev Team this week released a new untethered jailbreak for devices running iOS 5.1.1.

The SpaceX Dragon capsule was successfully captured by the International Space Station Expedition 31 crew this morning, making SpaceX the firm commercial company to send a spacecraft to the ISS.

Verizon this week revealed that it has had at least 36 entities inquire about purchasing the spectrum it owns in the 700-MHz band. One senator, however, has some concerns.

Topping tech headlines on Thursday: Facebook released a new camera app, the SpaceX Dragon capsule is expected to dock with the ISS today, and Google revealed video shot with its Project Glass device.

Google's Project Glass team unveils the first video footage shot with the cutting-edge device.

Samsung announced today that it will launch several pop-up stores in London in order to showcase its new flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S III.

The pitching hero's video game house released its first and only title Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning earlier this year but financial troubles proved insurmountable.

On Thursday, President Obama ordered each branch of the federal government to develop at least two apps, providing access to essential services on mobile phones.

Fox filed suit against DISH Network on Thursday, alleging that DISH's latest DVR commercial-skipping feature was a violation of copyright law.

Apple stands strong amid antitrust allegations.

The chip maker's multi-mode data modem is just the second to make it through AT&T certification process, positions Nvidia for a broad push in tablets and laptops.

Google today announced plans to disclose the number of copyright-related takedown requests it receives on a daily basis.

Travel site TripAdvisor on Thursday announced that it has expanded its free City Guides mobile app, adding 30 additional destinations around the world, and new features for Android users.

Google on Thursday announced plans for in-app subscriptions within Google Play.

A new report indicates that Microsoft is prepping a version of its Office suite for Apple's iPad and Android tablets.

KlearGear.com sold out the first run of Geek Sneaks in mere hours, but never fear, another batch of sneakers festooned in circuit boards and computer code arrives in August.

PayPal moved aggressively to place its technology at point-of-sale terminals at major U.S. retailers, signing deals with Verifone and Equinox Payments, and announcing 15 new retail partners.

Facebook today released a standalone iOS "Camera" app that allows users to add Instagram-esque filters and post multiple pics from a phone at one time, among other things.

ST-Ericsson showed off a dual-core, 1.85Ghz tablet and gave some insight into the current bottleneck of LTE chips.

New forum posts suggest Microsoft will integrate Flash directly into IE10 on Windows 8.

More and more consumers snapped up non-phone devices like tablets, MP3 players, and ereaders during the first quarter, capturing 20 percent of the handheld device market.

Google on Thursday released a new version of its Google+ for Android app with a new user interface, and changes for its Hangout video chat feature.

It's been tried with movies, wine, beer, and magazines. Now a new startup, Artify It, has applied the subscription model to art.