Technology News – The New York Times

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Mike Isaac live-tweeted Mark Zuckerbergs testimony at a federal court last week until it almost got him booted from the courtroom.

By MIKE ISAAC

On its own, the debacle of Samsungs exploding smartphones was bad. What it seems to say about the state of South Korean industry may be worse.

By QUENTIN HARDY

The Swedish authorities arrested three men on suspicion of rape and urged people with access to images showing the episode to make them available to the police.

The internet company reported positive numbers in its most recent quarterly report, but it is still dealing with the aftermath of two major data breaches.

By VINDU GOEL

A reader asks about the now-ubiquitous cloud. Quentin Hardy, The Timess deputy technology editor, considers the question.

By QUENTIN HARDY

Snapchat is known for its fun and ephemeral messaging service, but what its recent move shows is that it wants to rule the trust industry.

By QUENTIN HARDY

Sprint bought a third of the service, which has struggled in a field dominated by streaming giants like Apple Music, Spotify and Pandora.

By BEN SISARIO

A countrywide, top-down corporate culture stifles South Korean innovation and may have contributed to the companys problems, critics say.

By CHOE SANG-HUN and PAUL MOZUR

The company said it would form an outside advisory group and focus on quality assurance but offered little insight into the breakdowns that caused it to fail to identify the phones problems.

By PAUL MOZUR

The airline did not describe the source of the problem, which forced the grounding of domestic flights for two and a half hours, but said it was not the result of a hack.

By NIRAJ CHOKSHI

As A.I. applications become more sophisticated, the music that companies like Jukedeck produce has started wading into the commercial domain of actual musicians.

By ALEX MARSHALL

The Taiwanese company, which makes iPhones for Apple, has plans for a $7 billion American investment.

By REUTERS

A review of important developments in the tech industry.

By MIKE ISAAC and SAPNA MAHESHWARI

The chip makers technology is at heart of the smartphone revolution. But as the companys influence grows, it is gaining unwanted antitrust attention.

By QUENTIN HARDY

Amit Singhal, a 15-year Google veteran, said he was joining Uber, a coup for a company that has publicly stated its intention to chase Google in autonomous-vehicle research.

By MIKE ISAAC and DAISUKE WAKABAYASHI

Most smartphones can store a visual history of your travels based on your GPS data, but you can turn it off.

How to keep up with the events on television, online and on mobile devices, and a security to-do list if you are there.

By PUI-WING TAM

The quirkily personal Instagram accounts of taste-making specialists have become the soft power of todays traders.

By SCOTT REYBURN

The highway agency found that while Teslas Autopilot feature didnt prevent a crash in Florida, the system performed as it was intended.

By NEAL E. BOUDETTE

Gov. Andrew Cuomos proposed budget is now calling the embattled initiative, which created just 408 jobs in two years, the Excelsior Business Program.

By VIVIAN YEE

Mike Isaac live-tweeted Mark Zuckerbergs testimony at a federal court last week until it almost got him booted from the courtroom.

By MIKE ISAAC

On its own, the debacle of Samsungs exploding smartphones was bad. What it seems to say about the state of South Korean industry may be worse.

By QUENTIN HARDY

The Swedish authorities arrested three men on suspicion of rape and urged people with access to images showing the episode to make them available to the police.

The internet company reported positive numbers in its most recent quarterly report, but it is still dealing with the aftermath of two major data breaches.

By VINDU GOEL

A reader asks about the now-ubiquitous cloud. Quentin Hardy, The Timess deputy technology editor, considers the question.

By QUENTIN HARDY

Snapchat is known for its fun and ephemeral messaging service, but what its recent move shows is that it wants to rule the trust industry.

By QUENTIN HARDY

Sprint bought a third of the service, which has struggled in a field dominated by streaming giants like Apple Music, Spotify and Pandora.

By BEN SISARIO

A countrywide, top-down corporate culture stifles South Korean innovation and may have contributed to the companys problems, critics say.

By CHOE SANG-HUN and PAUL MOZUR

The company said it would form an outside advisory group and focus on quality assurance but offered little insight into the breakdowns that caused it to fail to identify the phones problems.

By PAUL MOZUR

The airline did not describe the source of the problem, which forced the grounding of domestic flights for two and a half hours, but said it was not the result of a hack.

By NIRAJ CHOKSHI

As A.I. applications become more sophisticated, the music that companies like Jukedeck produce has started wading into the commercial domain of actual musicians.

By ALEX MARSHALL

The Taiwanese company, which makes iPhones for Apple, has plans for a $7 billion American investment.

By REUTERS

A review of important developments in the tech industry.

By MIKE ISAAC and SAPNA MAHESHWARI

The chip makers technology is at heart of the smartphone revolution. But as the companys influence grows, it is gaining unwanted antitrust attention.

By QUENTIN HARDY

Amit Singhal, a 15-year Google veteran, said he was joining Uber, a coup for a company that has publicly stated its intention to chase Google in autonomous-vehicle research.

By MIKE ISAAC and DAISUKE WAKABAYASHI

Most smartphones can store a visual history of your travels based on your GPS data, but you can turn it off.

How to keep up with the events on television, online and on mobile devices, and a security to-do list if you are there.

By PUI-WING TAM

The quirkily personal Instagram accounts of taste-making specialists have become the soft power of todays traders.

By SCOTT REYBURN

The highway agency found that while Teslas Autopilot feature didnt prevent a crash in Florida, the system performed as it was intended.

By NEAL E. BOUDETTE

Gov. Andrew Cuomos proposed budget is now calling the embattled initiative, which created just 408 jobs in two years, the Excelsior Business Program.

By VIVIAN YEE

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Technology News - The New York Times

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