The controversial video speaker is in stores Thursday. Yes, it monitors who you have called and for how long, but Facebook says it’s not listening in.
Author: Jefferson Graham, USA TODAY
What we know about Thousand Oaks gunman Ian David Long, a Marine veteran
Law enforcement officials say authorities have identified the gunman and the weapon he used to kill 12 at a bar in California.
Athletic firm Under Armour under fire for strip club expenses
In response to reports of sexual misconduct at the athletic wear company, it says it will now provide a “respectful and inclusive” workplace in statement.
New for November: iPad Pro, Amazon DVR, Pixel Slate & more
The first Black Friday sale went live this week. More new tech products will hit stores in the coming weeks from Apple, Amazon, Facebook and others.
Flickr adds unlimited storage for pros, lowers free usage
The long-dormant service was snapped up from Yahoo in July by photo site SmugMug, which just announced several changes, including $50 yearly fee for unlimited uploads or a limit of 1,000 photos that can be uploaded for free.
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A souped up new iPad Pro could cost you nearly $2,800 — more than a MacBook Air
Add keyboard, case, pencil, extra storage and dongles, and the price tag comes to $2,384, before tax. How the pricing compares to rivals.
We found out why more satellite customers cut cord – higher fees
Over 1 million pay TV subscriptions have been lost by the satellite and cable companies so far in 2018, as more cable alternatives become popular, or people just use Netflix or Hulu to be entertained instead.
Does the iPad still matter?
As Apple prepares to launch new iPads and Macintosh computers at a media event in New York, we ask about how relevant the iPad still is in your life.
Google Lens launches for mobile; promises more info behind photo
New service from Google will work with “hundreds of billions” of photos, with say, how to buy a chair you just saw or more info about a toy.
Boston Market becomes Los Angeles Market during World Series — in LA
Local managers of the fast casual food chain suggested running banners supporting the local team during the World Series and management agreed.