Google Drive details leak on French Google Enterprise Blog
Sacré bleu! Google's French enterprise blog has spilled the beans on Google Drive.
Sacré bleu! Google's French enterprise blog has spilled the beans on Google Drive.
The Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority this fall will become the first American railway system in the United States to allow riders to preorder and display their train tickets entirely through their smartphones.
The mobile industry may well remember 2012 as the year when LTE became the dominant wireless technology in the United States.
Google Drive is poised to give IT departments yet another headache to deal with.
Device manufacturers are starting to roll out some of their marquee smartphones in an effort to generate some buzz before Apple inevitably drops its newest iPhone this (northern) summer.
In an effort to save its spectrum deal with major cable companies, Verizon Wednesday said it would be willing to sell off several licenses for spectrum on the 700MHz band.
Verizon Business is now offering its customers the ability to have their LTE devices route traffic directly to their private IP networks instead of through the public Internet.
Sprint today announced that its second high-profile LTE device, the Samsung Galaxy Nexus, will be available starting April 22.
Let's face it: Your prospects of becoming an overnight billionaire by inventing the next Instagram probably aren't good.
Google CEO Larry Page isn't concerned about Android's lack of revenues, at least for the time being.
Fenway Park may be 100 years old this season but that doesn't mean the Boston Red Sox baseball stadium is stuck with antiquated technology.
SIP is growing quickly, but still has a long way to go before becoming the dominant trunking technology.
By now you know the drill: a company releases a new tablet or smartphone that has the fastest processor, sharpest screen resolution and sleekest design of anyone else on the market.
The Federal Communications Commission and the CTIA Wireless Association are joining hands in an attempt to take a bite out of smartphone crime.
If you've played "Fruit Ninja," "Cut the Rope" or any number of games on your iPhone, you probably aren't very impressed with their graphical capabilities, especially when compared with modern games such as "Gears of War" and "Skyrim." But as one panel on mobile gaming at PAX East 2012 this year demonstrated, you should probably be thankful for what you've got.