Samsung has announced ArtPC Pulse, a Windows-powered desktop computer that looks very familiar to Apple's Mac Pro line from 2013.
After pulling the plug on worldwide sales of Galaxy Note 7 yesterday, Samsung today has announced that it is permanently discontinuing the production of its now infamous flagship smartphone.
It's over. Samsung has officially announced that the company is stopping sales of Galaxy Note 7 worldwide immediately following a number of recent incidents (seven to be exact in the United States alone) where the supposedly safe replacement Galaxy Note 7 units started catching fire just like the original model.
Verizon has now confirmed that it has halted replacement Samsung Galaxy Note 7 sales following AT&T and T-Mobile announcements. Here are the details.
So it's official now. AT&T and T-Mobile have confirmed to stop selling Samsung Galaxy Note 7 in what appears to be a response to a number of high profile explosion incidents involving replacement Galaxy Note 7 devices.
All signs point to a rocky future for Galaxy Note 7 as another replacement device is reported to have caught fire, melting inside a Minnesota teenager's hand.
Apple has been awarded $119.6 million from Samsung after the company won its appeal in slide-to-unlock patent infringement case against Samsung.
Want to exchange your replacement Galaxy Note 7 unit for any other phone from Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile or Sprint? Here are the details on how you can do that.
Exploding Samsung Galaxy Note 7 on a Southwest Airlines flight has now prompted a CPSC and FAA investigation. Here are the details.
When things aren't quite going according to plan, sometimes there's not a lot you can do other than hold your hands up and take what's coming to you. The problem Samsung is facing right now though is that it already did that when it recalled each and every Galaxy Note 7 that it had sold due to phone catching fire and exploding because of faulty battery.













