January 28 is Data Privacy Day, and for both consumers and businesses, it marks a moment of examination into how users can best protect their data and personal information on the internet.
January 28 is Data Privacy Day, and for both consumers and businesses, it marks a moment of examination into how users can best protect their data and personal information on the internet.
Twitter rolled out an iPhone video-sharing app called Vine on January 24 that allows users to upload six-second videos to social media site. For users, this is nothing new.
While Cisco has been a fixture in the computer networking sector for years, its decision to stick to enterprise-geared products and services leaves room now for other less prominent companies, like Belkin, to make moves into the consumer market.
A recent poll conducted by Nielsen showed that among the high-growth emerging markets, Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC), smartphones are only prevalent in one of these countries.
Google and Amazon are emblematic companies at the helm of the cloud computing industry that have demonstrated how the flexibility of the cloud allows for diversified business models.
Telecom spending will rise in 2013 because of the global buildout of mobile technologies.
Less than a day after Apple released its first-quarter earnings report (the report came out just before market close on January 23) its stock price fell by more than 10%. Looking at the report itself, the news is not all that dismal.
As a result, the 4G network in Europe is fragmented, and some areas have given up on a faster network in the next few years.
A recent rash of grand-scale mobile-related developments has spread amongst companies seeking to secure leading footholds in the promising mobile market.
In the previous post about intellectual property wars, we spoke about the ambiguity of patent laws. The second major set of issues is the emergence of patent thickets and the related issue of “patent trolls.”