Open the Find section on the home screen, and then select an app. Choose Get to download it. To download apps from Amazon's website, find one through a search and then select Get App. This article ...
The app allows officers conducting standard field sobriety testing to be more efficient, replacing the current paper and pen method of tabulating results. Catherine McDonald reports. Bruce Willis’ ...
Messenger is one of the most popular messaging services around, especially in the US, but it has its faults. Group chats, for example, are not end-to-end encrypted by default, meaning the company that ...
Like Windows Update, you can’t permanently disable automatic app updates in the Microsoft Store anymore. The Store removed the persistent on/off switch and now only lets you pause updates for 1–5 ...
For this week's giveaway, we've teamed up with Astropad to offer MacRumors readers a chance to win an M3 iPad Air, an Apple Pencil Pro, and a Rock Paper Pencil kit to go along with it. Astropad has a ...
Tiffany Wendeln Connors was a senior editor for CNET Money with a focus on credit cards. Previously, she covered personal finance topics as a writer and editor at The Penny Hoarder. She is passionate ...
Microsoft has added an OCR function (Optical Character Recognition) to the Windows Photos app, which basically means it can now recognize text in an image and instantly extract it for you. To use this ...
The finance app industry is a multi-sector behemoth with thousands of businesses new and old trying to make financial processes easier on mobile. In the past decade, we have seen in the introduction ...
But re-installing all your favorite and necessary apps can be a right pain, and it even means opening Edge to download Chrome (shudder). Fortunately, there’s an app that simplifies all of that: Ninite ...
A new report suggests that many people who belong to Gen Z use Find My and other apps to permanently share their location with groups of friends. A study earlier in the year found that 40% of Gen Z ...
In the 1990s, Romanian-Australian economist Stefan Mandel and his small team entered the lottery and won. Over and over and over again. The rest of this article is behind a paywall. Please sign in or ...