Sarah Tew/CNET SAN FRANCISCO — Raise your hand if you’ve ever plunked down $100 to $200 on a wearable device, perhaps a Fitbit or a Jawbone wrist-worn activity tracker, and then months later found it deposited in a drawer, without a charge and as despondent-looking as a last-generation cell phone. Even at the Wearable Technologies …
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Verizon Wireless adds more than 1.4 million contract customers
Verizon Communications CEO Lowell McAdam James Martin/CNET Verizon Wireless expects to report a net gain …
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Jason Cipriani/CNET Controlling technology with voice commands is becoming a part of our everyday lives. …
Read More »Cell phone unlocking bill moves forward in Senate
Consumers are one tiny step closer to being able to take their phones to another …
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The Cypher Labs AlgoRhythm Picollo, shown with an iPod Nano. Cypher Labs I’ve reviewed a …
Read More »Cricket’s back
A seasonal summer promo skims costs on some phones. Cricket Promotional sales may be a …
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PayPal Nielsen’s latest report on mobile payments isn’t too surprising, save one tidbit: people like …
Read More »Amazon asks FAA to let it ramp up drone development
Amazon’s Prime Air prototype. Amazon Amazon is asking the federal government if it can start …
Read More »iPhone 6 might let you ‘feel’ objects on screen
The iPhone 5S CNET The next killer feature on Apple’s expected iPhone 6 could be …
Read More »Scoop: Kyocera developing smartphone with sapphire crystal display
CNET has learned from an industry source that Kyocera, the Japanese-based mobile company known for …
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