Chromebooks make the grade among school CIOs
School system CIOs in the U.S. are embracing Chromebooks, delivering a tremendous lift to the platform. That's also its downside.
School system CIOs in the U.S. are embracing Chromebooks, delivering a tremendous lift to the platform. That's also its downside.
If Facebook launches a social network for the workplace, CIOs will have to decide whether they can get past Facebook's history of privacy issues.
Facebook may be expanding from a social website where users share photos of their favorite sandwiches and pets, to a network focused on business users.
With Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference 2014 starting Monday June 2, it's déjà vu all over again with iPhone and iOS rumors that have been circulating since the end of WWDC 2013.
It looks like Apple will trumpet its entry into the home automation market next week at its annual developers conference.
Microsoft will let its foreign cloud customers decide what country their data is stored in as a way to avoid local laws that might compromise their data privacy, the company's top lawyer says.
Two of the longest-running go-to narratives in the Android market – HTC is a shambles and Amazon wants to release a phone – have been bolted together like an airplane's wing section, thanks to a report from the Financial Times that threw Android watchers into paroxysms of raising their eyebrows when it came out this week.
It appears that Amazon will eventually produce a smartphone -- the question is not if, but when.
Tesla Motors founder Elon Musk has raised the ante on the rest of the automobile industry, declaring in a recent interview with the Financial Times that his company's self-driving car will be street-ready by 2016.
Huawei calls the Windows Phone platform weak despite using it as the foundation for some of the smartphones it makes.
Early models of Google's wearable computer, Glass, may be manufactured in the U.S., according to a report.
In an interview with the Financial Times newspaper this week, Google CEO Eric Schmidt revealed that the company pondered purchasing a newspaper.