Most of us will fondly recall the satisfying thumb-click of our first BlackBerry. Now it is just thought of as that thing you owned before you got an iPhone.
If you’d have bought the first-generation iPhone when it debuted and then sold it today, like this one person who is making headlines for doing just that, then you could have made a sizeable profit.
Sure a lock screen is somewhat good enough, but setting up another barrier to thwart access to your precious information is critical.
Lifeguards in Germany have issued a warning that the alarming number of child drownings over the summer can be attributed to parents’ obsession with phones.
Samsung users have discovered a huge bug in some phones’ texting app, which sends pics from their gallery to contacts without their knowledge.
Where there’s smoke there’s fire, and Samsung will be feeling the heat as more evidence surfaces of their deeply flawed Galaxy Note 7 range.
If you’re anything like me, a Whatsapp message now and again is enough to keep the parents appeased. Why not sort them out with the perfect phone to do the job?
There is nothing worse, NOTHING, than when your phone battery hit the red zone. It can literally alter your life path. Who knows what could have happened if your phone was ON? Don’t let it happen to you.
Never mind the world being taken over my the zombie apocalypse, it’s mobile phones we need to worry about. Mine reminds me of everything, spells for me, takes me places. Long live the smartphone.
MTN goes old-school with the new Pay4Me service, allowing people to make reverse-charge calls across the MTN network.
Oh, kids, stop wishing your childhoods away. Because one day, you, like Kim Kardashian, will wish to hell and back that you hadn’t sent THAT picture to your then boyfriend.
Everyone is going to be queueing around the corner for this new baby. The unveiling of the new iPhone6 and iPhone6 Plus will see us cancelling phone contracts in order to get the very latest.
Apple is set to reveal their new iPhone 6 later this month – wonderful news! Bet everyone can’t wait to sit at dinner parties showing off their new accessories.
Our smartphone’s are like our third hand, or our extra brain, or in some cases our best friends. That feeling when we lose them is horrific. The thought of someone else having access to our private lives is even worse…
Because children can’t be trusted anymore and we don’t want our little darlings to join a cult in the back alleys of dodgy neighbourhoods. This app will help parents sleep at night.
The answer to our mobile phone-in-hand addiction and it is actually simpler than you would think
A new app helps you bail out of awkward or overbearing conversations with the push of a button.
Silent Circle’s new private calling plan for the surveillance age hides your number and traceable details during calls or message sessions.
For residents or tourists, every visit to Cape Town brings about an amazing experience. Usually this happens just too far for your nifty camera phone to capture the true feel of that moment, and you end up sharing rubbish. The new Nokia camera phone (‘Phablet’) is a game changer.
This could be the perfect invention for those chilly winter mornings. Gloves that double as a phone. This is exactly what O2, a communications company, has unveiled. The glove phone is phase two of the company’s Recycle collection. Designer Sean Miles constructed the gloves from vintage Mui Mui and Pineider gloves and coupled that with recycled phone parts. These […]
Celestica, the Toronto-based manufacturer that produces hardware for Research In Motion, have announced that they’ll be stopping production of BlackBerry hardware over the next three months, and charging the company $1 billion for unsold BlackBerry inventory. Between the BlackBerry 10 smartphone getting pushed back to late 2012, and new iPhone rumours, this could sort of be RIP RIM.
Tired of peoples’ phones hogging the dinner table ambience? Here’s a nifty little social exercise fresh out of America that puts a high price on handling your handset at the dinner table. It’s called the phone stack, and here’s how it works.
The Carrier IQ software, installed on most modern Android, Blackberry and Nokia phones, is supposed to record some of the things phones do so manufacturers can do quality control. Except it’s also been logging everybody’s text messages, web searches, and phone calls. Which is pretty bad.