Lamborghini Huracan RWD Spyder can walk on water – Roadshow
Lamborghini has a new Huracan, and with this one, less is more. Source: CNet
Read MoreLamborghini has a new Huracan, and with this one, less is more. Source: CNet
Read MoreiOS 10.2 originally took away the butt-shaped peach emoji — but Apple is now proving to be a company that cares. Source: CNet
Read MoreTechnically Incorrect: In a new ad campaign, Lyft paints Uber’s senior management as slick, unpleasant oafs. Source: CNet
Read MoreThe moon is as big and bright as the International Space Station is small and fast, but that didn’t stop one ambitious photographer from capturing both. Source: CNet
Read MoreYou can buy one variety of the chunky, chocolate-and-cream filled bars now. Two other treats are waiting till January, to lay waste to our New Year’s diets. Source: CNet
Read MoreTwelve of the 16 most popular tech jobs had pay gaps above the adjusted national average, Glassdoor found. Source: CNet
Read MoreGet comfortable. Amazon’s Alexa assistant gives a long-winded, not entirely literal answer when you request the value of pi. Source: CNet
Read MoreSocial Studies: Instagram has great stuff beyond your regular feed if you know where to look. I hunted for drone photography and wasn’t disappointed. Source: CNet
Read MoreSocial Studies: Microsoft launched the Xbox on November 15, 2001, and the rest is console gaming history. Source: CNet
Read MoreBonus content! We talk to CNET’s Dan Ackerman, the author of CNET’s full review of the new MacBook Pro. Source: CNet
Read MoreThe airline makes a “new sustainable alternative jet fuel” from limbs, stumps and branches left over after a timber harvest in the Pacific Northwest. Source: CNet
Read MoreThe search giant says it’s made a “leap” in giving you more natural translations. Source: CNet
Read MoreA new app linked to Google Photos turns your phone into a scanner, preserving print images digitally without removing them from an album or frame. Source: CNet
Read MoreSome Blu smartphone owners got a hidden feature they weren’t quite expecting. It turned out software from a Chinese company was transmitting all of their text messages and other data to China every 72 hours. The vulnerability was discovered by a Kryptowire, an American enterprise security firm. [ InfoWorld’s Mobile Security Deep Dive. Download it
Read MoreIT administrators take note: Microsoft’s Office 2007/Exchange 2007 wave of client and server software is set to exit support in October 2017, and extended custom support agreements are going away. Source: Microsoft
Read MoreWe talk about the trend of bogus articles on Facebook and Google as well as Twitter trolls and Amazon counterfeits. Source: CNet
Read MorePersonal data from phones, including several models from Blu, may have transmitting personally identifiable data to a server in Shanghai. Source: CNet
Read MoreIt’s likely to follow the same process as the 2.0-liter diesels, which fall under a similar settlement. Source: CNet
Read MoreThe highly anticipated iPhone and iPad game will offer limited, free content. It will cost you $10 to unlock the full experience. Source: CNet
Read MoreThe social media gives its users more tools to combat abuse, bullying and harassment. Source: CNet
Read MoreMicrosoft is making a preview available of its Azure cloud bot-as-a-service, which is built on top of Azure Functions serverless compute capability. Source: Microsoft
Read MoreFacebook and Google, two of the world’s most powerful internet giants, have taken a hit over fake news. That could mean some soul-searching is in order. Source: CNet
Read MoreSocial Cues: Trends on social media include the sexiest man alive and yet another viral challenge. Source: CNet
Read MoreGolden State Warriors star is offered coaching advice in humorous spot promoting online coaching site. Source: CNet
Read MoreThe dating app used to only have two choices for genders. Its update now gives users more than 35 options. Source: CNet
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