Google launches Adiantum encryption for low-end Androids
Way faster than AES.
Google snaps up Fossil smartwatch tech, staff
Only for a singular technology, though.
Ericsson certificate expiry downs mobile data networks
Whoops.
COMPUTEX 09: Nvidia shows off hardware using its new Tegra system-on-a-chip, promising astonishing battery life for tiny computers.
COMPUTEX 09: Jen-Hsun Huang uses Nvidia Computex keynote to declare wide ambitions for Ion and that the "era of GPU computing is here."
Trent unleashes a torrent of "objectionable content" about Apple's censorship policy, after a Nine Inch Nails app is rejected.
Toshiba says it's now sampling the world's first 32nm NAND flash memory, which will lead to higher density USB drives.
IBM's partners, including AMD's former fabrication wing, GlobalFoundries, announce that they are developing 28nm chips.
Nokia has reported a massive 90 percent drop in profits in the first financial quarter of 2009, with the slowing global economy continuing to bite.
SandForce has announced its first range of SSDs for enterprise and mobile use, and it has a trick up its sleeve in the form of a neat new controller dubbed Duraclass.
Memory manufacturer OCZ has announced a line of high-performance Extreme Memory Profile (XMP) SODIMMs for laptops that use the Core 2 Extreme processor.
Nokia has announced a partnership with eBay-owned VoIP specialist Skype to preload its software onto selected smartphone handsets.
Google is set to introduce paid-for content to the Android Marketplace - with developers getting a 70 percent cut of the proceeds, and carries taking the remainder.
Garmin-Asus are allegedly planning an Android-based low-cost smartphone to be sold under the Eee brand, positioned alongside current WinMo and Linux devices.
Archos is planning to update its Internet Media Tablet range with a new ultra-slim device running Google's open-source Android OS.
Nicholas Negroponte, founder of the One Laptop Per Child project, has announced that the technology behind its XO "$100 laptop" will be offered up as an open-source project.
Motorola has announced the closure of its Windows Mobile development centre in Florida, prompting speculation that it is ditching the platform in favour of Google's Android.
Trials carried out by mobile service provider Vodafone of HSPA+ packet data service show a peak data transfer rate of 16Mb/s, offering true broadband speeds on the go.
Apple's App Store has beaten all expectations with the news that after just 142 days the service has reached 10,000 iPhone and iPod Touch applications.
The infamous iPhone-Dev team has managed to get a working copy of Linux to boot on an iPhone, although the hack is very much at the proof of concept stage.
Blaming the "current economic climate", Finnish mobile giant Nokia has announced it is to leave the Japanese market to others - aside from a small range of luxury handsets.
The latest build of the free mobile browser Opera Mini, version 4.2, has been released - and it brings some nice new features to the table along with Android support.
Packard Bell last night pulled the curtains back on its entry into the netbook market at an event in Central London.
Adobe has released a preview version of a native 64-bit Flash Player binary for Linux, allowing users on 64-bit systems to use completely native binaries when browsing the web.
Google and T-Mobile have jointly distributed the first patch for the Android mobile platform, as a result of a security flaw in the on-board browser software.
Opera has announced the release of a new beta for Opera Mobile, with newly-added support for Symbian handsets as well as existing Windows Mobile units.
October 14 2021 | 15:04