"Minecraft" has begun raking in the big bucks for Microsoft less than a year after Microsoft bought Mojang, the Swedish game developer behind "Minecraft." However, the game has also experienced some problems this month, which Mojang has tried to rectify.
During Apple's Q1 2015 earnings call on Tuesday, chief executive officer Tim Cook said the Apple Watch will start shipping to consumers in April. This coincides with the estimated "early 2015" launch date given when Apple originally announced the smartwatch in September of last year.
About one month from now on February 26, the Federal Communications Commission will vote on new Open Internet rules that govern Internet Service Providers. But what looks like the moment of truth for Net Neutrality debate may be just the beginning of more quarrelling between ISPs and the FCC.
Over the weekend, Facebook launched an app called Facebook Lite, which is optimized for low-end Android devices in emerging markets across Asia and Africa.
Mortal Kombat X keeps giving gamers teasers about the new fighting game to debut in April. On Tuesday, gamers found out that Reptile will be included in the game.
Black Hawk helicopters and super-sized X-ray machines used for U.S. - Mexico Border patrol are being used for better security efforts at Super Bowl venues in Arizona.
On Tuesday, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office granted Apple's patent for a snap-on iPhone game controller that extends in-game controls onto joysticks or D-pads, saving screen space in the process.
In the three months that Apple's mobile payment service, Apple Pay, has operated, it has already achieved a goal other mobile wallets could not: persuading consumers to use it.
Twitter has had private messages for a long time, but it never allowed more than two people to talk. Now, the social media site is adding group messages.
It is almost impossible to imagine being a young person without Internet access these days, but until very recently, this was the case in Cuba, where home Internet connections are banned for all but a handful. Anyone who wants to go online is expected to pay what amounts to nearly a quarter of a month's salary for an hour of online use in government-run hotels and Internet centers. Most Cubans simply live offline, but a minority of islanders have secretly built a solution to their Internet problem.