With the polar vortex bearing down on the U.S., homeowners find themselves faced with frozen pipes. How do you thaw them and prevent freezing?
Author: Mike Snider, USA TODAY
Fruit juices, for kids and adults, may include lead and other metals, study finds
The fruit juices your child and you drink may have elevated levels of arsenic, lead or cadmium, according to a new Consumer Reports study.
Apple sued over FaceTime eavesdropping bug after attorney says it listened to testimony: Report
A Houston attorney sued Apple saying the FaceTime bug let someone eavesdrop when he was taking sworn testimony from a client, Bloomberg reported.
Cord cutting? Amazon has more movies, but Netflix has higher-rated films, tech site finds
Amazon Prime has four times as many movies as Netflix, but Netflix has a higher-quality collection, tech site Streaming Observer found.
Facebook reportedly looks to link Messenger, WhatsApp and Instagram messaging
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg reportedly has the social network working to make Facebook Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp messages work seamlessly.
Most expensive US home, a $238M NYC penthouse, reportedly sold to billionaire Ken Griffin
Ken Griffin, billionaire founder of the hedge fund Citadel, reportedly bought the most expensive U.S. home ever, an NYC penthouse for about $238 million.
Hulu updates monthly pricing: Live TV bill goes up while on-demand cost drops
Hulu has a new pricing plan coming. The streaming TV service is raising the price of Live TV by $5 monthly, while dropping on-demand by $2 to $5.99.
Netflix, Instagram team up for easier sharing of binge-watching recommendations
The latest update of the Netflix app for Apple devices lets you share what you are watching via Instagram Stories.
Apple’s iPhone SE sneaks back into smartphone marketplace – for a few hours, at least
Apple has quietly begun making the smaller iPhone SE available again. It quit selling the smartphone two years ago as consumers opted for bigger devices.
FDA head: Agency may call back more food safety staff, currently out due to shutdown
Food and Drug Administration head Scott Gottlieb says the agency may call back additional unpaid food safety workers during the government shutdown.