Food tech keeps your fruit fresher, longer
Food tech keeps your fruit fresher, longer
Food tech keeps your fruit fresher, longer
A firefighter creates device he says will save lives
A firefighter creates device he says will save lives
A firefighter creates device he says will save lives
CES 2020
CES 2020
CES 2020
Smart contact lenses
Smart contact lenses
Smart contact lenses
Pizza-making robot
Pizza-making robot
Pizza-making robot
How to Get Bestselling Books Delivered to Your Kindle Free
How to Get Bestselling Books Delivered to Your Kindle Free
How to Get Bestselling Books Delivered to Your Kindle Free
Doggie DNA Tests
Doggie DNA Tests
Doggie DNA Tests
Here`s what went wrong with the app used in the Iowa Caucus
Here`s what went wrong with the app used in the Iowa Caucus
Here`s what went wrong with the app used in the Iowa Caucus
Hands on with new Samsung phone
Hands on with new Samsung phone
Hands on with new Samsung phone
Assistive technology for those dealing with vision loss
Assistive technology for those dealing with vision loss
Assistive technology for those dealing with vision loss
New York Toy Fair
New York Toy Fair
New York Toy Fair
One of the Cheapest Cell Phone Plans
One of the Cheapest Cell Phone Plans
One of the Cheapest Cell Phone Plans
Clean and disinfect your dirty smartphone
Clean and disinfect your dirty smartphone
Clean and disinfect your dirty smartphone
Samsung`s Z Flip
Samsung`s Z Flip
Samsung`s Z Flip
New York Toy Fair
New York Toy Fair
New York Toy Fair
Streaming movies and TV shows
Streaming movies and TV shows
Streaming movies and TV shows
A gym that bio-hacks your body into shape
A gym that bio-hacks your body into shape
A gym that bio-hacks your body into shape
Hands on with LG`s latest dual screen phone
Hands on with LG`s latest dual screen phone
Hands on with LG`s latest dual screen phone
Obama, Biden, Gates Twitter accounts hacked in bitcoin scam
WASHINGTON -- Con artists on Wednesday apparently hacked into the Twitter accounts of technology moguls, politicians and major companies in an apparent bitcoin scam.The ruse included bogus tweets from Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Mike Bloomberg and a number of tech billionaires including Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and Tesla CEO Elon Musk.
WASHINGTON -- Con artists on Wednesday apparently hacked into the Twitter accounts of technology moguls, politicians and major companies in an apparent bitcoin scam.The ruse included bogus tweets from Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Mike Bloomberg and a number of tech billionaires including Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and Tesla CEO Elon Musk.
Twitter testing prompt that asks people to read articles before retweeting them
SAN FRANCISCO -- Twitter is testing a new tool that asks users if they’d like to open articles and actually read them before retweeting to their followers.The feature is being tested on Android phones in English “to help promote informed discussion,” the company said Wednesday.“Sharing an article can spark conversation, so you may want to read it before you Tweet it,” Twitter Support wrote.When someone goes to retweet the link to an article on Twitter but hasn’t clicked through to the story, they may be shown a pop-up message asking if they would like to read it before retweeting.The goal is to slow the spread of viral misinformation, according to Twitter’s product lead Kayvon Beykpour.“It's easy for links/articles to go viral on Twitter.
SAN FRANCISCO -- Twitter is testing a new tool that asks users if they’d like to open articles and actually read them before retweeting to their followers.The feature is being tested on Android phones in English “to help promote informed discussion,” the company said Wednesday.“Sharing an article can spark conversation, so you may want to read it before you Tweet it,” Twitter Support wrote.When someone goes to retweet the link to an article on Twitter but hasn’t clicked through to the story, they may be shown a pop-up message asking if they would like to read it before retweeting.The goal is to slow the spread of viral misinformation, according to Twitter’s product lead Kayvon Beykpour.“It's easy for links/articles to go viral on Twitter.



















