Great news Pokemon Trainers! Pokemon Go 1.9.0 for iOS and 0.39.0 for Android APK download are now being rolled out to app stores globally. Here's what is new in this update.
Google is getting ready to announce what it is believed will be not just one, but likely two new smartphones at an event scheduled for October 4th, and it now appears that there may be a distinctly iPhone-like feature coming to the newly renamed Pixel Launcher that is expected to run atop Android 7.1 the devices are expected to ship with. That new feature will seem instantly familiar to anyone who has used an iPhone 6s from last year or iPhone 7 from this year, although the way it is invoked may be slightly different in Google's case.
Another day, another story about Samsung's Galaxy Note 7, although this one fortunately does not include any smartphones catching fire or blowing up, so we should probably be thankful for small mercies.
According to a new report, a Florida-based man has become the first person in what is likely to be a long line of individuals looking to sue Samsung over the Galaxy Note 7.
The wait is finally over. Nintendo's Pokemon Go Plus wearable accessory is now on sale. Here are the details.
Niantic has made available for download Pokemon Go 1.7.1 for iOS, 0.37.1 for Android. The free update comes just a week after Niantic and Nintendo added the Buddy Pokemon feature to the game which has been well received amongst gamers.
According to Geekbench benchmarks comparison, the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus are theoretically faster than all MacBook Airs, and all top Android phones of 2016. Here are the details.
Apple may have had a lot of shade and distain thrown its way from consumers and analysts alike with the announcement that the 3.5mm headphone jack has been removed from iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, but it's looking likely that it won't be the last smartphone manufacturer to walk that path.
You can download Pokemon Go 1.7.0 for iOS, 0.37.0 for Android which brings with it a lot of new changes and features. Here are the full details.
If owners of the Samsung's Galaxy Note 7 thought that the exploding battery issue was just going to fade into the ether, then it appears that they are wrong. In a new warning, the United States Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has warned Galaxy Note 7 owners to "power them down and stop charging or using" the smartphone.














