Apple said Chief Executive Tim Cook and other top leaders received less total compensation in 2016 as the company missed its revenue and profit goals for the year.
Despite the disastrous launch of its Galaxy Note 7 smartphone, the South Korean tech giant forecast its highest profit in more than three years.
A software startup serving call-center operations scours Facebook and other social media to match agents to callers. The practice, however, raises concerns among privacy advocates.
Chinese smartphone upstart Xiaomi Corp. doesn’t need to raise additional cash to fund its expansion and plans to take a slow approach to expanding in the U.S., the technology firm’s Chief Financial Officer Shou Zi Chew said.
Carmakers are rushing to bring voice-assisted, artificial intelligence software into vehicles. Many of these auto makers are aiming to put autonomous vehicles on the road by 2020.
At the world’s largest technology hardware confab, one of the biggest brands is focusing on software this year.
Lego Boost kits, launching in the second half of this year, bring motors, sensors and the basics of coding to the beloved building sets.
If you’ve recently unwrapped a new phone, tablet or other gadget, don’t just toss out your old one. You could get some cash for it.
With Google’s PhotoScan app, Epson’s FastFoto scanner or a mail-in service, it’s easier to rescue and digitize family memories, writes Joanna Stern. 55
With the help of the Nintendo NES Classic Edition, one father attempts to pass on his love for videogames to his 7-year-old son.
The startup is revealing an all-electric car at CES that it says will be ready for production and will cast aside doubts about its future.
As 2016 nears an end, five of the seven most valuable companies in the world are tech companies. That helps explain why this year was a difficult year for these companies, writes Christopher Mims.
From gene editing to gravitational waves and artificial intelligence, these were the science stories that shaped 2016.
Donald Trump’s threat to compel Apple and others to manufacture more at home should strike fear into Shenzhen, where the world’s tech gadgets are made. Yet executives here aren’t worried by Mr. Trump. 172
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