SwiftKey, the alternative Android keyboard and most popular paid app on Google Play, includes new layouts in version 4.3.
It will be a little while before small investors can tap Twitter, but that isn’t stopping people from wondering if it's a smart investment.
What can customers do to resolve the activation problems that have arisen with the Nexus 5 on the Sprint network?
Tesla says the digital dash and 17-inch touchscreen found in the Model S are based on Linux, and completely upgradable, and may someday include third-party apps and run Google's Android OS.
Real-life rocketman Yves Rossy just flew his homemade jetpack over Mt. Fuji, Japan’s tallest mountain. He is the only person ever to fly with jet-propelled wings.
"Call of Duty: Ghosts" first day sales reached the magical $1 billion but that does not reflect actual sales to gamers.
Some 2 million Iranians use social-networking websites like Twitter and Facebook by logging on through a foreign server.
When Twitter debuts on Wall Street Thurs., activists will gather at its SF HQ to protest its effects on rent and transportation in the city.
A new version of the underground marketplace Silk Road claims to have improved security measures.
What does the CyanogenMod team have to say about its CM 11 support?
Need a tablet with "Angry Birds," "Gone With the Wind," and the works of Kim Il-sung all conveniently in one place? North Korea has you covered.
Google engineers are taking to social media to express how they really feel about NSA surveillance programs.
While some players quickly jumped into the action after "Call of Duty: Ghosts" was released on Tuesday, others were entirely blocked from even running "COD: Ghosts" on their PCs due to an artificial RAM restriction.
Martin Gingras, a computer science student at Carleton University, came up with the idea for FBomb.co.
With less than a day remaining before Twitter's hotly anticipated IPO, here's a roundup of the highest-grossing American public offerings.
With 3.5 million people in LA, the gigabit service would be one of the largest city-led broadband projects ever.
U.S. law enforcement agencies requested data on more than 8,000 Apple devices in the first half of 2013.
The e-commerce giant has offered to sell Kindles at a discount to retailers, which can sell them to customers and get a cut of e-book sales.
Has a document leak accurately predicted the release date of the T-Mobile Nexus 5?
Are the components of this economic recovery sustainable?
Key question: Can Twitter leverage its user base into above-average demand for its shares?
Thick smog from air pollution is hindering China's network of security cameras.
Apple has been successful in its strategy to prioritize China as one of the initial launch countries for its new iPhones, a new report said.
Reports suggest Sony and Samsung’s LSI division have been competing to be a supplier of the 16-megapixel camera modules for the Galaxy S5.
Apple's report, published for the first time, shows requests made by the U.S. government for user-account information dominate the list.
Even as smartphone ownership rose in the U.S., only two among the top five smartphone makers showed quarterly growth in the U.S. market.
Researchers believe they have identified a 1.5 million-year-old region of ice in Antarctica.
Microsoft is narrowing its search for a successor to CEO Steve Ballmer.
Sony executive Shuhei Yoshida is reaching out to gamers on Twitter to explain the features and policies behind the upcoming PlayStation 4.
Did you catch the CryptoLocker malware and refuse to pay the ransom to get your files back? The hackers responsible are offering you a second chance.