The Samsung Galaxy S20’s release date is March 6 and pre-orders on the S20, S20+ and S20 Ultra start Feb. 21. The new 5G phones start at $999.99.
Author: Edward C. Baig, USA TODAY
Move aside, Google Maps, Apple Maps and GPS: Why people still love their paper maps
Google Maps just turned 15 and Apple Maps got a makeover, but some people would rather stick with paper maps for emergencies and planning purposes
Google Maps turns 15: Here are 15 tips to get the most out of the app
Google Maps turns 15 this week, and many of the 1 billion-plus people who turn to Google’s navigation app do so for more than turn-by-turn directions.
Should you let your kids have a cellphone in school?
Digital device policies are all over the map in U.S. schools. Parents and teachers are divided on whether to curb or ban phone use on school grounds.
Translate this: How real-time translation breaks down barriers when you don’t speak the language
Lost in translation? AI-driven machine translation on your phone, computer and smart speaker has gotten good, but it is still far from perfect.
Bye-bye, BlackBerry? When the phones may finally disappear for good
TCL Communication said it will no longer sell BlackBerry-branded mobile devices as of this summer. TCL will support existing phones until mid-2022.
Microsoft Teams fixed after expired certificate caused business-disrupting outage
Microsoft Teams went down Monday. Microsoft’s Slack rival’s problem: an expiring authentication certificate. A “fully restored” status came later.
The 49ers will win Super Bowl 2020, Alexa predicts, but Siri and Google Assistant punt
Who will win Super Bowl LIV? While voice assistants often avoid opinions, Amazon Alexa says the San Francisco 49ers will beat the Kansas City Chiefs.
Apple earnings climb on strength of iPhone 11 sales, strong holiday season
Apple posted record 2020 first quarter revenues of $91.8 billion, up 9% from the same period a year ago and way above earnings forecasts.
Facebook privacy tool gives you more control on how you’re being watched online
Facebook has released a tool globally that could give you more control over how the social network traces your path across the web to serve you ads