Nearly 7 in 10 teens in a Common Sense Media study, kept their mobile device either in bed or within easy reach. And 29% sleep with the device.
Author: Edward C. Baig, USA TODAY
Parkland student journalists recognized at Pulitzer Prize ceremony
Pulitzer Prizes are issued for achievements in journalism, literature and the arts. Honorees covered shootings at Parkland, Pittsburgh, Annapolis.
First American Financial exposed data in millions of mortgage documents, report says
An estimated 885 million digitizeddocuments from mortgage deals dating back to 2003 have been exposed by First American Financial Corp, a report says.
12 iPhone and Android apps to get just in time for Memorial Day
From podcasts and recipes to global scavenger hunts and quirky roadside attractions, these iPhone and Android apps can help you kickstart summer.
New York subway riders can use iPhone, Apple Watch, Google Pay and credit cards to pay the fare May 31
New York City will let riders “tap and pay” with a “contactless” credit card from Mastercard and Visa, and certain mobile devices to ride the subway.
T-Mobile says it will match the special discounts making you reluctant to leave its rivals
People willing to switch to a T-Mobile plan called Magenta can have T-Mobile match or beat corporate, senior, military or other rival discounts
Should we ban facial recognition? From companies to cities, debate over privacy rages on
Facial recognition is spreading to where you live, work, shop and travel. What happens to the data? Would you trade privacy for safety?
T-Mobile-Sprint merger: Will you pay more for your cellular plan?
The $26-billion T-Mobile-Sprint merger cleared another major regulatory hurdle with the Justice Department approving the deal. What about consumers?
5G phones finally here: Verizon now selling Samsung Galaxy S10 5G; Sprint phones to follow
Sprint announced that its first 5G smartphone from LG will go on sale May 31. Meanwhile, Verizon has started selling the Samsung Galaxy S10 5G.
Video games are a ‘great equalizer’ for people with disabilities
People with disabilities and challenges are no less passionate about playing video games than others. The industry is finally paying attention.