China's population of Internet users has grown to 591 million, driven by a 20 percent rise over the past year in the number of people who surf the Web from smartphones and other wireless devices, an industry group reported Wednesday.
The end-of-June figures from the China Internet Network Information Center represent a 10 percent rise in total Internet use over a year earlier. The number of wireless users rose to 464 million.
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U.S. Internet giant Google is scrambling to deliver pay television online and has met with some content providers on licensing, The Wall Street Journal reports Tuesday.
"If the Web giant goes ahead with the idea, it would join several other companies planning to offer services that deliver cable TV-style packages of channels over broadband connections," the Journal reported.
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Apple said Monday it would investigate claims that an iPhone electrocuted a Chinese woman who was making a call while charging the device.
The case drew attention -- both sympathetic and skeptical -- after a woman in the western region of Xinjiang wrote about the death of her 23-year-old sister Ma Ailun on China's popular microblog service Sina Weibo.
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South Korea's defense ministry said Monday it had ordered its staff to install a smartphone application that restricts key functions like the camera in a bid to prevent military leaks.
The ministry said that, from Monday, its 1,500 staff are no longer allowed to carry smartphones into their offices without installing the app, called "Mobile Management Device".
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If you’re lucky enough to drive a new luxury car, you’re probably used to the idea of the car connecting to your iPhone to play music and of web-connected dashboards that can offer you maps and weather. But that’s just the beginning for connected cars that will continue to get more comfortable and safer in the next several years.
You may not have heard the engines revving, but the race to bring you smarter connected cars is well underway. IBM IBM -0.38% and Sprint kicked it up a gear Wednesday through a new partnership that will bring the tech giant’s data management expertise to Sprint’s connected car platform through a new system, Sprint Velocity Service Bus.
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Microsoft announced a sweeping reorganization of the company Thursday to "enable us to innovate with greater speed, efficiency and capability in a fast changing world."
The U.S. technology giant said the "far-reaching realignment" would help integrate efforts around its software and devices.
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A U.S. judge ruled Wednesday that Apple violated antitrust law in a price-fixing case, saying the company "conspired to restrain trade" with publishers to boost the price of e-books.
Apple quickly rejected the decision and said it would appeal
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Google on Wednesday released an upgraded version of its popular maps app for Android-powered smartphones and tablets that ditches a Latitude feature that let people share locations with family or friends.
The new software began rolling out at the online Google Play shop, and a version tailored for iPhones and iPads will soon be available at the Apple App Store, according to Google Maps director Daniel Graf.
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Tablet prices are plunging amid a flood of new devices and cutthroat competition for market share.
Amazon has slashed prices of its Kindle HD tablets to as low as $169 in the U.S. and 139 pounds in Britain, while Barnes & Noble has cut the price of its Nook to as low as $129, and has announced plans to outsource production of its tablets.
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Apple Inc. says it plans to appeal a New York judge's ruling that found the company conspired with publishers to fix electronic book prices.
Apple spokesman Tom Neumayr says Apple didn't conspire to fix e-book pricing and would continue to fight the "false accusations." He says Apple brought much needed innovation and competition into the market in 2010.
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