The Moto 360 Goes on Sale in the UK Today
The impressive Moto 360 smartwatch goes on sale at 12pm in the UK today. Stock is expected to be limited, so hover your finger over that F5 key for when the buying page goes live. [Motorola]
The impressive Moto 360 smartwatch goes on sale at 12pm in the UK today. Stock is expected to be limited, so hover your finger over that F5 key for when the buying page goes live. [Motorola]
ARM announces new silicon thats produces the pixels and plays nicely with your battery, too.
The iPod Touch is the heir apparent of course, but with smaller storage capacities than the iPod Classic and a battery-draining touchscreen, it's not an ideal alternative.
Is the Alienware 13 the first futureproof gaming laptop? Well, it's certainly the first one that lets you connect an external desktop graphics card for truly unheard-of speeds.
If you use Samsung's Find My Mobile service , maybe stop: security researchers have found an exploit that means it can be used to remotely wipe your phone.
Fans of improved productivity and enhanced workflow, your hour is nigh.
How about Knightsbridge? Wind the toffs up a bit.
A few choice cuts from a rare interview by head of Apple.
Teflon has been a lifesaver (or at least a hand-saver) for home cooks for the last 50 years. But how do they get it to stick to the pan in the first place?
The next time someone asks you what the point of 3D printing is, you can simply tell them that without 3D printing technology we may never have had a T-Rex shower head.
If your watch isn't going to last a day on a full charge, why not just buy one that has replaceable batteries?
That's £6-£8 a month for unlimited cloud storage and unlimited access to Office.
£0.38 per gigabyte might not seem like that much, but it all adds up and people aren't happy about it.
As it turns out, naming a Wi-Fi network "Al-Quida Free Terror Nettwork" is not something people at airports find even remotely amusing.
The iPad Air 2's anti-glare screen is a major innovation. Its little brother? Hmm.
Once-thought-Impossible innovations are entering our world at an accelerating pace. From tricorders to tractor beams, science fiction's time is now (or soonish at least).