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CIO April 14, 2014 Tom Kaneshige |
Microsoft's Office for iPad Shakes Up Mobile Enterprise Microsoft's ubiquitous Office productivity suite's arrival on the iPad late last month means many things. |
Fast Company Harry McCracken |
Amazon Fire Phone Review: Ambitious And Inventive, But A Version 1.0 Product I've been testing a unit provided by the company over the last few days. |
Information Today July 22, 2014 Barbara Quint |
Sony Digital Paper E-Reader Reaches Out to Legal Market The company's marketing strategy involves partnerships with leading content management firms or content suppliers. |
Fast Company Alice Truong |
A Drunk's Best Friend: BACtrack Introduces A $50 Smartphone Breathalyzer BACtrack CEO Keith Nothacker has an ambitious goal: He wants every person of drinking age living in North America to own his or her own breathalyzer. |
Fast Company Rebecca Greenfield |
Google, We Made The Perfect Glass Ad For You Google has a "white men wearing Google Glass" image problem to overcome, which is why it has outfitted a lot of very beautiful female models with Glass for its advertising campaign. |
AskMen.com |
Smartphone Addiction Your attention span is so short, you can't even remember you've just closed that app? Clearly, you need help. |
Fast Company Gayomali & Truong |
It's Official: Amazon Announces The Fire Phone This is a machine engineered to make spending money as easy as a few button presses. |
Fast Company Chris Gayomali |
This Is The New HTC One In February 2013, HTC quietly unleashed its Hail Mary, of sorts: the HTC One, a big, beautiful, premium-looking device carved from a thick sheet of aluminum with a super-sharp 4.7-inch screen. |
Fast Company Alice Truong |
Samsung Debuts Milk, A Free Music Streaming Service For Galaxy Phones Another tech giant is entering the music-streaming space. Coinciding with the kickoff of SXSW Interactive on Friday, Samsung launched Milk Music, an ad-free music streaming service with no subscription fees for Galaxy phone owners. |
Fast Company Rebecca Greenfield |
Siri, Cortana, And Why Our Smartphone Assistants Have Such Weird Names Tech companies like Apple, Google, and Microsoft are making calculated bets that intelligent personal assistants are the future. |
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