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Facebook Security Breach Lands It in Trouble Again

Troubles have continued to mount after a Facebook security breach. It left the personal information of almost fifty million users vulnerable.

By Laura Tucker – Oct 1, 2018

New Google Maps Feature for Planning Events Not New Idea

A new feature in Google Maps will help you plan events by allowing everyone to vote on a location of where to meet. However, it’s not a new idea.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 28, 2018

Face Scanning at Airports Facing Difficulties

Face scanning at airports is being initiated by the Department of Homeland Security, but challenges are threatening the 2021 expected rollout date.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 26, 2018

Google Announces Vital New Changes to Search Function

To go along with Google’s twentieth anniversary, they have announced some major changes to their search function.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 25, 2018

Google G Suite Employee Tracking Featured

Google to Allow Employers to Track Their Staff Using G Suite

The Google G Suite productivity apps will now show your employe if you’re using their apps with the help of the new Work Insights tool.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 20, 2018

Microsoft Finds Uses for HoloLens Glasses with New Dynamics 365 Applications

The Microsoft HoloLens smartglasses seemed like they was in danger of being just a unique device, but now they are adding Dynamics 365 capability.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 19, 2018

New AR Facial-Recognition App Could Help You Remember Faces You’ve Forgotten

SocialRecall is developing a new app that uses facial-recognition technology and will help people remember the people they have met before.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 18, 2018

Four Leading U.S. Phone Carriers Working on ‘Project Verify’ to Limit App Passwords

The big four U.S. cell phone service providers are working together on a way to limit creating numerous passwords. This new system, the “Project Verify” app, could be rolling out soon.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 17, 2018

Google Killing Off Inbox and Giving It Six Months to Live

Google announced this week that they’re getting rid of their Inbox app. After the big redesign of Gmail earlier this year, they no longer need it.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 14, 2018

iPhone XS Announcement: Three Choices with Bigger Screens Featured

Apple made their yearly new iPhone announcement by introducing the iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, and iPhone SR. They also announced the Apple Watch Series 4.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 13, 2018

Artificial Intelligence Now Being Used for New Discoveries in Astronomy

Thanks to artificial intelligence, a machine-learning algorithm has been developed to search through data and identify fast radio bursts from distance galaxies.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 12, 2018

Vizio Smart TV: So Smart It Will Tell You to Sue the Company

A Vizio smart TV that was found to be spying on its users. The company has agreed to notify their customers of a lawsuit on the smart TVs themselves.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 11, 2018

Adware Doctor, Spyware Disguised as Anti-Malware Tool, Allowed into Mac App Store

Somehow spyware disguised as anti-malware, Adware Doctor, was allowed into the Mac App Store. It was removed after gaining 6,000 positive reviews.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 10, 2018

Harvard’s New Acoustic Printer Can Create Images with Any Liquid

Harvard University has created something new: an acoustic printer. What makes this so unique is that you don’t need ink cartridges. It works with liquid, literally any liquid you can imagine can be used to print with.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 7, 2018

Automatically Unzipping Files with Safari Can Leave Macs Open to Malware

Because of an exploit with Safari, hackers can interfere with downloaded zip files, leaving Macs open to malware, but there’s an easy workaround.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 6, 2018

Google Chrome Is Considering Changing URLs and Internet Access

Google Chrome would like to make URLs both easier to understand and more secure. They’re proposing changing the whole system, charging it doesn’t work the way it should.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 5, 2018

Lazarus Group Develops Cryptocurrency-Stealing Software for Mac

The Lazarus Group has made a new strain of malware, AppleJeus, which is designed to steal cryptocurrency funds and can infect Mac computers as well.

By Simon Batt – Sep 4, 2018

The Privacy War Continues with Formation of “Five Eyes”

In the continuing battle between government and tech companies, the intelligence community, naming themselves “Five Eyes,” wants to forge an agreement to ensure there is access to “lawfully obtained data.”.

By Laura Tucker – Sep 4, 2018

Will Apple’s Next Device Be Smart Glasses?

Apple needs a homerun to retain their title of being innovative. Now that they acquired a glass lenses company, will their next device be smart glasses?

By Laura Tucker – Sep 3, 2018

Autonomous Helicopters to Be Used as Ambulances and Later Passengers

Officials are utilizing autonomous helicopters, wanting to use them as first responders and eventually use the same technology to offer passenger service.

By Laura Tucker – Aug 30, 2018

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Trending

When Sony shipped the first Walkman in 1979, chairman Akio Morita insisted on a second headphone jack and a “hotline” talk button, convinced it would be rude for one person to listen to music alone — and within a few years buyers had ignored the sociable features so completely that Sony quietly dropped them

Jun 15, 2026

Russia still custom-builds the Soyuz return seats for ISS crew members using plaster casts taken weeks before launch, because astronauts grow as much as five centimetres taller during a long-duration stay and a seat moulded to their Earth-shaped spine would no longer fit the body that comes home

Jun 12, 2026

Mycorrhizal fungi colonised plant roots roughly 450 million years ago and biologists now suspect plants could never have moved out of the oceans onto bare rock without them, meaning every forest on Earth — including the redwoods, the Amazon, and the boreal belt — is still running on a partnership older than trees themselves

Jun 11, 2026

Close-up of a young adult using a smartphone outdoors, highlighting modern technology and connectivity.

The “CrackBerry” nickname stuck for a reason — and the variable-reward psychology that hooked early-2000s executives on their BlackBerrys is the exact same machinery now running every push notification on every smartphone in your pocket

Jun 11, 2026

Intricate network of tree roots and moss on a forest hillside, showcasing nature's resilience.

Suzanne Simard sealed paper birch and Douglas fir seedlings inside plastic bags, fed them carbon-14 and carbon-13 dioxide, and nine days later found carbon had crossed between species through fungal threads in the British Columbia soil beneath her boots

Jun 10, 2026

Close-up of glowing jellyfish swimming gracefully in deep green ocean waters.

A species of jellyfish called Turritopsis dohrnii can revert its adult cells back to a juvenile polyp stage when injured or starving, effectively restarting its life cycle, and biologists have so far failed to identify any natural limit to how many times it can do this.

Jun 10, 2026

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