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China is reportedly considering lifting a ban on gaming consoles that has been in effect for more than a decade.
Pope Benedict launched his own smartphone app streaming live footage of his speeches, and encouraged Catholics to use social networks to spread the good word.
Over the past week, Instagram and Facebook users started reporting that the photo-sharing app has locked them out of their accounts, and is asking for photo IDs.
Taiwanese electronics maker Acer expanded its Android smartphone line-up with a new handset called the Liquid E1, and it's not washed up at all.
BitTorrent has joined the cloud services race with a new service called Sync, which aims to provide safe and private cloud backup.
The International Telecommunications Unit (ITU) has approved a new video format that could be game-changing: the H.265 standard, i.e. the next-generation video format.
WindowsAndroid, as the name suggests, allows users to run Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich (ICS) on Windows PCs and tablets.
Google's quarterly earnings conference call mainly addressed known matters, but Google CEO Larry Page took the time to talk about hardware and the Nexus 4.
AT&T, the second-biggest wireless carrier in the U.S., has agreed to buy airwaves from larger carrier and archrival Verizon for $1.9 billion.
Governments continue to request more Google user data and the U.S. leads the way with more than two-thirds of requests involving subpoenas.
Yandex has launched a new app called Wonder, but found the app blocked on Facebook's social graph just hours after launch.
Mobile security firm Lookout started rolling out an update to its security and antivirus app for Android, adding a cool new feature: Lock Cam.
Samsung's Galaxy Note 8 tablet has been making headlines recently and will reportedly make its debut at the Mobile World Congress (MWC).
Twitter has launched its new Vine video service, but despite being well received, the app got off to a rocky start due to some bugs and an apparent Facebook block.
Intel and Safaricom have announced Africa's first Intel-powered smartphone, a handset named Yolo that is aimed at first-time smartphone buyers in Kenya.
The official retirement of Nokia's Symbian operating system was long-expected, and now the Finnish company has finally made it official - Symbian is history.
Intel is reportedly planning to host a conference in June ahead of Computex, where it will announce its next-generation Haswell series of processors.
The UK's data protection watchdog has fined Sony for the PlayStation Network data breach in April 2011, which compromised millions of users' personal details.
The U.S. has charged three Eastern European men with running an international cyber-theft ring that hacked into 1 million computers, including NASA systems.
AT&T U-verse users have been facing service issues this week as outages affected several areas across the nation.
Google's Nexus 4 has proved so popular that the company can't keep it in stock long enough and manufacturer LG has to ramp up production.
Apple and Samsung dominate the smartphone market, and rumors always surround the two giants as consumers dream about the next-generation iOS or Android handset.
BlackBerry maker Research in Motion (RIM) has announced that it is extending the deadline for Built for BlackBerry, as it received overwhelming submissions.
New Apple products always create a lot of hype and spark numerous rumors, and recently the tech world has been buzzing over a purported iPhone Math.
The TECK keyboard, according to its creators, is "the only truly ergonomic keyboard on the planet" and promises to provide a more comfortable typing experience.
Sony's PlayStation 3 Super Slim console hit Europe with two new colors, and the red and blue versions are slated to reach Japan next month.