AT&T has announced pre-orders beginning June 6 for the critical darling hybrid gadget, the ASUS PadFone X. Here's a look at the tablet/smartphone mashup, which is an AT&T exclusive for a no-money-down pre-order, online and in stores.
LG announced its new flagship LG G3 smartphone Tuesday, and although it comes with little surprises thanks to the amount of pre-release leaks, the phone represents a strong entry into the high-end market.
We said there'd be more details on Google's futuristic modular smartphone initiative, Project Ara, when the first-ever developers conference took place, and that's true. Here's one: according to Google's Project Ara chief, you might get your first crack at a next-generation customizable smartphone January of next year.
Oppo, a smartphone company most people have probably never heard of, has been launching insurgent devices with tricks up their sleeves that no other manufacturer has tried. Their latest, the Find 7, comes with another new trick: 50 megapixel shots.
The year 2013 will probably be remembered as the year when the general public learned that there are no guarantees of security and privacy in cyberspace. Aerospace manufacturer Boeing took a stab at a perfectly secure device, as it unveiled the "Boeing Black" this week, entering the race to make a smartphone that keeps its data safe.
Samsung's Galaxy S5 is set to be unveiled in just a few days, and a lot rides on its success. Samsung will be looking to reassert itself after the Galaxy S4 underperformed in 2013, and here's how the Galaxy S5 might help the South Korean electronics manufacturer do that.
Samsung's highly anticipated Samsung Galaxy S5 smartphone is set for a Feb. 24 unveiling in Barcelona. The device has been one of the hottest topics around the technosphere, given the less-than-stellar performance of the Galaxy S4 — so for those wondering, here's what to expect.
If recent anonymously sourced reports are to be believed, Google might begin forcing smartphone manufacturers to keep their Android systems up-to-date - otherwise Google will remove support for key Google apps.
In recent months, young social media service, Snapchat, has been at the center of security scandals. Jaime Sanchez, a Spanish cyber security consultant for Telefónica, has just uncovered a new cyber security problem with Snapchat - one that can crash your iPhone.
Google is not averse to taking risks, but it's also a company that has to make a profit. That's why Google surprisingly put in a bid to buy cellphone company Motorola Mobility in the summer of 2011, and also why it is selling it now.