The Best Free Android Apps in Amazon's New Two-Day Giveaway
Today Amazon has decided to give away 30 apps, for free to anyone with an Android phone.
Today Amazon has decided to give away 30 apps, for free to anyone with an Android phone.
Samsung plans to launch two new high-end smartphones within the next six months: one with a "large screen," the other built using "new materials." How... cryptic.
There's a fundamental security flaw in the very way that the humble Universal Serial Bus functions, and it could be exploited to wreak havoc on any computer.
Professor Mike Merrifield from the University of Nottingham, along with Albert Einstein and Isaac Newton, explains the equivalence principle.
In a blog post published yesterday, the Amazon Books Team explained that Hachette's demands are currently "unjustifiably high for an eBook."
This security flaw leaves a potential 82 per cent of Android users at risk.
NASA reports that its Opportunity Rover clocked up 25.01 miles of driving on the Red Planet—setting a record for the longest distance a vehicle has driven outside Earth.
Krebs on Security reveals that hackers have stolen sensitive documents from three Israeli defence contractors.
Allegedly headed to the US network Verizon, could the UK get a Windows variant of the HTC flagship too?
LG's 105-inch 4K TV has gone on sale in Korea, where it's being sold for the equivalent of £69,000. Ouch.
This new Windows board fails to compete with the Raspberry Pi on one of the most important features: price.
This could make Oculus Rift—and more importantly, its cheaper DIY competitors—way more immersive.
Ever wondered how the Wi-Fi signal varies around your house or workplace? These light paintings show you how they swirl and shift.
Amazon.com has just opened a new 3D Printing Store, which allows customers to customise and then purchase "more than 200 unique print-on-demand products."
Nope, this isn't how NASA gets ready to roast a chicken. In fact, this image shows its engineers testing the sunshield for the NASA's James Webb Space Telescope. The size of a tennis court, it folds up like an umbrella, thus has to be tested extensively to make sure the five layers of thin membrane can unfurl reliably in space. [NASA]