A touristy trip to the Big Apple is an absolute must, writes Mike Bedigan, but be prepared to encounter $30 sandwiches, $150 show tickets, and $500+
The tech giant confirmed that it was pausing generative AI-enabled summaries of news notifications after complaints the technology was making errors.
Meta and Amazon are among other major firms that have rolled back their DEI programs ahead of White House return of Donald Trump, who has been highly critical of DEI policies in the past.
The M4 MacBook Air could launch in just a few months, but Apple is retiring another MacBook Air — and not the one you think.
Abrutal polar vortex will bury the Big Apple under snow on Sunday and then generate deadly single-digit temperatures, but with a wind chill of 15 degrees Fahrenheit below zero (-26
Apple Intelligence is the latest big thing from Apple. They talked about it during their Worldwide Developer Conference, the iPhone 16 event, the iMac announcement, the Mac mini announcement, and the MacBook Pro announcement.
NFL Draft a little into the future, things are going to start kicking into full gear as the college and NFL seasons finish up. Over the next several months, there are going to be a million mock drafts out there.
Techopedia explores the big tech releases we most look forward to in 2025, all on the brink of release. Which are you most excited about?
Not that customers have stopped buying the “declining” iPhone, by any means, but Apple would love to correct the perception that it’s stopped innovating in the smartphone space. As if stung by Mark Zuckerberg’s dubious criticisms, Apple will make a big push in 2025 to restore the iPhone’s momentum.
A looming ban on TikTok set to take effect on Sunday presents a multibillion-dollar headache for app store operators Apple and Google.
Apple has big plans for this year's products, its claimed, with one of those including a new Apple TV 4K. The report comes from trusted source Mark Gurman, and it is said the set-top-box will appear later this year.
In letters to Amazon, Apple, Google, Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI, and Uber, the lawmakers express concerns about the companies making contributions to “avoid scrutiny, limit regulation, and buy favor.” These sizable donations surpass the amount most of these companies contributed to President Joe Biden’s inauguration fund in 2021.