The new home security product is able to detect unusual events all over the house, using machine learning and low frequency sound waves undetectable to human ears.
Can you function without an internet connection? We’d hope so, but another study has emerged which has shown that young folks find net connectivity and smartphones are just as important as fresh air to breathe.
The mobile cloud market is due for some major growth over the next half a decade, at least according to the latest report on the matter.
US smartphone penetration has reached 62% - but 58 per cent also own a tablet, reports new research.
According to a report by Deloitte, the rise in the number of over 50 smartphone users is to blame for the decline in the average number of monthly downloads.
Analytics company App Annie claims that suggestions that the popularity of smartphone apps is on the wane are greatly exaggerated.
Android continues to gain momentum while Apple’s market share has declined slightly year-on-year.
The latest statistics for smartphones have been released by research firm IDC, and the unsurprising news is that Android is still top of the mobile OS tree by a long way.
According to a recently published Canaccord Genuity report, on which Apple Insider reported yesterday, Apple has made 94 per cent of global smartphone profits during the third quarter alone.
In reviewing the daily news stream it is impossible to miss the escalating frequency of incidents coming out of schools all across the country which relate directly to social media, texting, or apps used by kids.
CEO John Chen has said in an interview that he isn’t afraid to ditch BlackBerry handsets if they aren’t making money for the firm.
BlackBerry has lauched the Passport - a new phone claimed to be the final piece in its three-year-long turnaround.
A lot of Brits use their smartphones to access corporate email and corporate data in general, and they’re aware that such information is valuable, not only to themselves and their company, but to hackers, as well.
A new survey has found that organisations are experiencing considerable productivity boosts thanks to their workforce being equipped with mobiles, but more gains can be had.
Research by Imation finds 44% of organisations believe a member of their senior management has lost a mobile device in the last year, and 39% think someone in senior management had a device stolen.
Pick up any business or technology publication and you’ll read about how BYOD (bring your own device) raises a number of data protection concerns due to the fact that devices are owned by the user rather than the employer.
Consumers are set to spend £53.6 billion a year using their smartphones and tablets by 2024, compared with the £9.7 billion spent today, according to new research by Barclays.
Sales of tablets will increase in 2015, but in general it will slow down, according to a report from Gartner.
The demand for smartphones, globally, has reached its peak in Q4 of 2015 – up 14 per cent since last quarter, and 6 per cent since last year, says market analysts GfK.
Brits are spending nearly two hours a day online using a smartphone and over a third of adults check their phones within minutes of waking, new Ofcom report finds.
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