The iPhone 7 went on sale Friday and tech whizzes immediately went to work dissecting it to see what's inside. And, as widely expected, some models of the new phone include modems from Intel.
Transportation and cities are about to be revolutionized by autonomous vehicles, which will make private car ownership in cities obsolete in less than a decade, according to John Zimmer, Lyft president and co-founder.
Tesla announced Thursday that it has been selected by Southern California Edison to build a battery project at the utility’s Mira Loma substation that will have the largest output of any existing lithium-ion storage facility.
Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced Sept. 15 the settlement of the six lawsuits the state and Oracle filed against one another after the failure of the Cover Oregon health exchange website.
In wake of the Aliso Canyon gas leak earlier this year, the San Diego Gas & Electric and Southern California Edison utilities were tasked with storing enough energy for winter on short notice.
Here WeGo, Waze, MapFactor, Mapquest, Scout GPS, Maps.Me and InRoute are just some of the apps that are challenging Google Maps and Apple Maps, which dominate smartphone mapping services, by focusing on new and novel features.
HP Inc. said Monday it will acquire the printing business of Samsung Electronics for $1.05 billion in a deal the tech giant said will help it “disrupt” what has become an outdated market for copiers.
Dell Technologies plans to cut about 2,000 to 3,000 jobs after acquiring Hopkinton-based EMC Corp. in the largest technology acquisition ever, according to people familiar with the company’s plans.
IBM won a major legal victory Wednesday when a federal judge tossed two lawsuits that claimed the company botched its 2015 sale of its computer chip business to GlobalFoundries.
On Thursday, the LAPD and the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department unveiled a new phone app called iWATCHLA that makes filing a report as simple as a few keystrokes.
Qualcomm is teaming up with AT&T to test the operation of drones on cellular networks, which eventually could pave the way for unmanned aircraft package deliveries, remote inspection and public safety missions that require beyond line-of-sight navigation.
Intel confirmed Wednesday that it will spin out its online security division, currently known as Intel Security, and restore its original name — McAfee.
Speculation that Twitter could sell itself to another company has reignited, and don't expect the takeover rumors or skepticism to fizzle out anytime soon.
Intel bought a Silicon Valley chipmaker called Movidius, whose technology helps computers process what cameras capture. By pairing Movidius' chips with Intel's own RealSense 3D cameras, Intel said it could help drones navigate or improve the capabilities of virtual reality gear.
Hewlett Packard Enterprise, one of the two companies emerging from HP’s split in 2015, is reportedly looking to sell its software business for between $8 billion and $10 billion.
In two interviews with Irish media, CEO Tim Cook said Apple has done nothing wrong and was confident European courts would overturn the ruling on appeal.
As a one-time investor in Uber, Google has reportedly explored the option of turning its navigation subsidiary Waze into a ride-sharing app, potentially competing with the ride-sharing giant.
Shares of Twitter soared on Wednesday after a company co-founder said in an interview that the social network must ponder options such as a takeover, even though he believes the company is in a "strong position."
A two-year EU investigation determined that Ireland and Apple struck an illegal deal that allowed the technology giant to pay virtually no taxes from 2003 to 2014 on profits for sales throughout the 28-nation region.
Companies that depend on H-1B visas for a substantial part of their workforce may have a tougher time hiring more as Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Vista, has introduced legislation to restrict loopholes in their application process.
But under a landmark bill sent to Gov. Jerry Brown on Wednesday requiring far steeper reductions in greenhouse gas emissions than anything the state has ever attempted, the next 15 years will likely see big changes for California residents.
Apple Inc. is urging its estimated 1 billion iPhone customers to download an upgraded version of its mobile operating system after a plot was uncovered to use a so-called digital arms dealer’s spyware to hack into the iPhone of an embattled Middle Eastern human rights activist.
For the second year in a row, state lawmakers failed to pass measures that would have provided statewide rules on body cameras and informational disclosure, even as local police departments expanded their use of the technology.
Orange County found itself $26 million richer last week after an international software company paid a settlement, ending a lawsuit in which the county alleged it had been defrauded of millions while trying to replace its automated property tax system.
Even though most automakers, from General Motors to Volkswagen, are rolling out electric cars, the Air Resources Board still considers the Zero Emission Vehicle (ZEV) program essential, and not just in California. Seven other states have agreed to adopt California’s program.
In a fast-developing industry teeming with technologies that promise to be the next big thing, energy storage appears to be the biggest. Its supporters not only sing its praises but also tout what they say is its inevitability.