Yahoo and Google Working Together on Unified Encrypted Email For 2015
Google is teaming up with Yahoo to make both firm's webmail services encrypted in such a way that they work in harmony with one another.
Google is teaming up with Yahoo to make both firm's webmail services encrypted in such a way that they work in harmony with one another.
Edward Snowden has been granted three years of residency in Russia. What happens to the whistleblower after that is anyone's guess.
Reports suggest that Windows 9 will see Microsoft distance itself yet more from the bold Metro styling of the current OS.
While Pinterest has always told you when people like your pins, it never allowed you to communicate properly with them.
From today, the duo will be offering a same-day book shipping service in select areas of the US, as a trial for possible wider roll out.
Part of a collaboration between Sharp and Kyoto University, the new material is used at the cathode to increase the longevity of batteries.
A Microsoft blog post appears to suggest that the second update to 8.1 is going to be rather trivial.
The Chinese government has removed ten Apple products from its procurement list, meaning employees will no longer be able to order the products.
Sony has announced that it will no longer support PlayStation Mobile on Android. The service will continue to operate, but from Android 4.4.3 and up, Sony won't guarantee that games will work properly.
The European Space Agency's satellite Rosetta has finally rendezvoused with Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko—making it the first satellite to ever begin orbiting a comet.
In the great professional fanboy fight that is Apple vs. Samsung, things might be about to grow up.
Facing stiff competition from the likes of Amazon, Sony has decided to bow out of the world of eReaders for good.
Forget what you may have been told, it turns out they can touch each other.
Elon Musk has announced that Space X is to build the world's first commercial space launchpad near Brownsville in south Texas, reportedly America's most impoverished region.
This is why Facebook bought WhatsApp for £9.5 billion: because its throughput of shared photographs is astronomical, and rising at an insane rate. (See also, the purchase of Instagram and the crazy offer for Snapchat.) [KPCB]
We've all handed our camera over to a stranger for them to take our picture, only to be severely disappointed by the result. Here's a solution.