
This Week in Tech and Science: October 14, 2015
Amazon rates itself, AT&T misses the mark, Microsoft’s first laptop and more.
Amazon rates itself, AT&T misses the mark, Microsoft’s first laptop and more.
By Darren Murph
For these athletes and photographers, alpine wonderlands are both office and playground.
By Tucker Bowe
Better, a new web platform and app, could be a plateau for nonprofits’ uphill battle.
By Nick Milanes
Everything you need to know about the new Nexus 5X, 6P, Pixel C tablet and more.
By Ben Bowers
The best smarthome products on the market today redefine what we should expect from everyday household objects. But like any good technology, using them together provides an entirely different level of convenience and intelligence.
By Gear Patrol
The sharing economy has already transformed countless industries. Getting online is next.
By Gear Patrol
The Canon 5DS and 5DS R are ultra high resolution and incredibly impressive.
Madden has ballooned into a giant franchise with countless competitive players and YouTube personalities.
By Nick Milanes
Samsung’s new smartwatch, Marshall’s music-loving phone, Bang & Olufsen’s new speaker and more.
By Tom Samiljan
Bowers & Wilkins’ flagship speakers get a bevy of new upgrades.
The iPad Pro comes with multitasking, an A9X processor and a new friend, the Pencil.
By Darren Murph
We only wanted one thing: an exclusive content package that would change television forever.
By Darren Murph
Samsung watches you sleep, Motorola tries again with the 360, Stanford’s “intelligent” cars and more.
By Darren Murph
The Leica name is legendary but their non-rangefinder cameras have never quite lived up to it.
The recently Kickstarted technology is revolutionary — but will its price point deter potential converts?
By Darren Murph
For budding entrepreneurs, getting funded is more or less the easy part. But the vast majority of crowdsourced and venture-backed products ship in an untimely fashion.
By Darren Murph
The iPod Classic is now a distant memory for many.
Unlike a paper map, Natural Atlas is a new, continuously changing online map that will allow users to update information about the outdoors in real time.
This pocket-sized device is the simplest way to bring a reliable internet connection with you, everywhere in the U.S.
By Gear Patrol