20 years ago today, Steve introduced the world to iMac. It set Apple on a new course and forever changed the way people look at computers.
Happy 20th anniversary, iMac!
20 years ago today, Steve introduced the world to iMac. It set Apple on a new course and forever changed the way people look at computers.
Apple has ostensibly acknowledged a microphone issue with certain iPhone 7 models.
According to Google's parent company Alphabet's most recent quarterly filing with the SEC, the traffic acquisition costs paid to partners like Apple for directing users to its search service will begin diminishing this year.
Samsung Electronics is working on a foldable smartphone code-named “Winner” that will reportedly come outfitted with three 3.5-inch OLED screens, two inside and one outside, with the two inside panels forming a large seven-inch screen when the phone is unfolded.
Raise your hands if you thought a high-profile vendor like LG would know better than to blindly copy Apple's notch design. Not so fast, because LG does suffer from Notch Copycat Syndrome.
Following internal crisis caused by the recent breach of user trust, Facebook is considering a version of its service that would be free of advertising provided users would pay to avoid ads.
In this tutorial, we’ll show you how to use the referenced Music library feature to stop the app from creating duplicate copies of your media and help save local space on your Mac or Windows PC.
When was the last time a journalist apologized for their irrational anti-Apple stance?
According to Google, its Assistant now works with more than 5,000 smart home devices.
Iron Man hit the silver screen ten years ago. Just a year earlier, Steve Jobs took the stage at MacWorld 2007 to give the world its first glimpse of Apple's revolutionary phone.
Spotify has officially acknowledged that it has 75 million paid subscribers.
Apple has stopped signing iOS 11.3 on Wednesday, a move that prevents iPhone and iPad users from downgrading or restoring to this particular version of iOS through iTunes.
The Cupertino-based company regularly stops signing older iOS versions just a couple of weeks after releasing a new software update. Given how Apple just released iOS 11.3.1 a little more than a week ago, this news shouldn’t come as much of a surprise.