The latest gee-whiz project from Amazon is Scout, a cooler-sized robot that traverses your neighborhood sidewalks to deliver shipments.
Author: Mike Snider, USA TODAY
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.
Tesla to cut workforce by 7 percent, increase Model 3 production at lower prices
Saying the road ahead was “very difficult,” Tesla’s CEO Elon Musk said Friday that the company would be cutting its staff by about 7 percent.
Netflix price increases could cause some subscribers to downgrade, cancel streaming service
Netflix’s price hikes, including a $2 increase on its most popular plan to $13, could lead some subscribers to downgrade or cancel, surveys suggest.
Roku reneges on offering Alex Jones’ InfoWars channel, removes it amid backlash
Just one day after Roku added Alex Jones’ InfoWars channel, the streaming company removed the channel amid backlash.
NBC has its own streaming service in the works, due in 2020
NBC is working on its own streaming service, due to launch next year. It will be free to Comcast subscribers and others can subscribe.
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos is just the latest master of the universe to have life exposed
As a CEO, Jeff Bezos expects to be in control. But now, his personal life is fodder for the National Enquirer and internet meme makers.
Susan Zirinsky named the first female president of CBS News as David Rhodes departs
Veteran producer Susan Zirinsky will become the first woman to head CBS News as she becomes its president and senior executive on March 1.
Charter Spectrum-Tribune dispute causes TV channel blackout that hits millions across US
About 6 million subscribers in L.A., New York, Denver and 20 other markets have lost TV channels in a dispute between Charter and Tribune Media.
Avoiding the cold? You may as well binge. Streaming video is only going to grow in 2019
Whatever the weather, experts expect that more U.S. consumers will watch streaming video — and cut the cord — in 2019.