A free App for the iPhone, which allows users to report and share local news developments, called Meporter launched on Tuesday in New York at the Te...
A free App for the iPhone, which allows users to report and share local news developments, called Meporter launched on Tuesday in New York at the Te...
The Chromebook, if it catches on, is pushing us to the clouds in a very new way. Which sheds light on Google's free-love attitude toward intellectual property, copyright protection and data ownership.
The iPad 2 may be on backorder for consumers, but Apple doesn't seem to have any shortage of them when it comes to its own uses.
Let's be patient with tablets and embrace a lab coat approach to our technology use and experience. Today the consumer and technician are kindred travelers in this dreamlike world of technology, where in short order, we can have that which we imagine.
Business owners have to blow away the fog to see the mountain of great opportunity.
Notice your kid shutting you out with earphones on the way to school or ignoring you while texting constantly? Don't worry, tons of families all over the world, especially in the U.S, are experiencing these behaviors too.
In the end, the act of writing a book will not change. Yet as the publishing world changes, as do the ways in which readers digest books, many of the most meaningful moments in an author's career will be lost or different in a way to make them unrecognizable.
I'm happy to announce the launch of the Encyclopedia of Gratitude -- a reference that changes how you experience life by giving you a world of things to be grateful for.
I live about four blocks from Ground Zero, and when I heard bin Laden had been killed by U.S. forces, I knew the celebration was something I didn't want to miss.
While my grandmother has barely slowed down since the days of running her own clothing boutique, we still wondered: at nearly 90 years old, would she be able to adapt to an iPad?
While American consumer culture drives Brazil's young, wired and affluent, the China deals are reminders of why Beijing has pulled ahead of Washington as Brazil's top trade partner.
Recently Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. took to the House floor to discuss one of the major causes of unemployment, the iPad. But earlier, he took to the same floor to laud the device. So what's going on?
It's clear that even as consumers enjoy better and faster access to more and more options, traditional media usage still dominates in many sectors.
In the aftermath of the recent disasters in Japan, this video about Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai's iconic print, The Great Wave off Kanagawa, is poignant.
The evolution of Android, from an easy-to-use smartphone OS into a premier tablet operating foundation, would be the ticket for Asian device makers to find their way into the US market.
The cable industry is bracing for a bitter slugfest, the two sides of a once-united house -- content and distribution -- scrapping over an innocuous app that delivers cable shows to the iPad.
What if you could suddenly afford that library of art books you've always wanted? What if, at the touch of a button, you could see how artists have depicted angels or demons through the ages?
"We labor in obscurity." These are the words of a literary translator who contacted Nina Sankovitch recently, as reported in her excellent post, "Foun...
I surmise that we're getting to a logical endpoint with tablets, as demonstrated by the iPad 2. The fact is that the new iPad is definitely cooler than the old one, but in an incremental sense, there's nothing new or revolutionary about it.
After three decades of invention, growth, and consolidation, we would be back to 1982 with an AT&T;, T-Mobile merger.
It seems that most all children love the ability to interact with mobile devices, but can these devices be a learning tool particularly well suited for kids with autism? For many apps, the answer is yes.