Apple Admits to Slowing Phones and the End of Wearables?
A rare admission from Apple, as the tech giant admits to slowing down old phones to prevent battery burnout. The company says the software is meant to keep iPhone 6s and 7s from unexpectedly shutting down because the processor has burnt out. But skeptics wonder if the company is trying to force users to upgrade to newer, more expensive phones.
And a new report from eMarketer predicts usage of wearables will slow next year, with smartwatch user growth dropping to less than 6 percent by 2021.
Ford Motor Co. is resuming construction on a Michigan electric vehicle battery plant that the company postponed two months ago during a strike by the United Auto Workers union.
The marketing slogan for Stanley Tumbler flask products is built for life and it looks like one video proves that to be true after a woman showed her burned-out car on TikTok along with her Tumbler cup, which was left undamaged.
Nvidia's stock closed at an all-time high Monday at above $504 a share, ahead of the company's latest quarterly earnings report which is due out later Tuesday.
The CEOs of three popular tech companies have been subpoenaed by the Senate Judiciary Committee, which ordered the heads of Discord, Snap and X to testify at a hearing on protecting children online.
'X' owner Elon Musk says he is suing watchdog group Media Matters after the group published an analysis writing that the social media company was placing advertisements from several brands next to anti-Semitic content.