Feed the-guardian-technology Technology | The Guardian

Favorite IconTechnology | The Guardian

Link https://www.theguardian.com/us/technology
Feed http://www.theguardian.com/technology/rss
Copyright Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. 2025
Updated 2025-12-19 14:17
Inside Facebook's Swedish datacentre – a visual tour
Huge amounts of data are being generated by Facebook users around the world, at a rate that doubles every 18 months. The Luleå centre is a part of the global infrastructure connecting 1.3 billion users. Guardian photojournalist David Levene went to the Arctic circle to take a tour of the pioneering facility Continue reading...
How pink is the new 'rose gold' iPhone 6S?
Not much is new about Apple’s iPhone 6S, but it does come in a new colour. But is it baby pink? Salmon pink? Hot pink? Or maybe blood orange? We wish it would make its mind up, but whatever the colour, it certainly doesn’t look like ‘rose gold’ (whatever that is) Continue reading...
Twitter introduces poll feature – but is it a) good or b) bad?
Twitter trials new functionality in native applications, allowing users to click one of two options and see resultsTwitter has introduced the ability for some users to create polls within its mobile app and desktop site during a significant feature trial.The polling feature, which takes the form of a two-option choice, has been rolled out to Twitter staffers and certain – but not all – verified accounts. Continue reading...
The node pole: inside Facebook's Swedish hub near the Arctic Circle
Remote datacentre in Luleå cools itself using freezing outside air, has a fence to keep moose out and processes your selfiesFrom the outside, it looks like an enormous grey warehouse. Inside, there is a hint of the movie Bladerunner: long cavernous corridors, spinning computer servers with flashing blue lights and the hum of giant fans. There is also a long perimeter fence. Is its job to thwart corporate spies? No – it keeps out the moose.Related: Data centre emissions rival air travel as digital demand soars Continue reading...
What are your memories from the internet's bygone days?
Remember all those sites you used to use? We’d like to know what you used to get up to on the internetRemember a time before Twitter? Before Facebook? The internet used to be a completely different place. Continue reading...
Days of internet past: Tech Weekly presents Updog – podcast
Elena and Alex get misty eyed about the days of ye olde internete when the world wide web was black and white and needed winding up in the morningIn this week's instalment of Updog – our podcast dedicated to internet memes and all things digitally viral – Alex Hern and Elena Cresci trawl through the dusty corners of the internet to look back at the days of dial-up modems, LiveJournal and neopets.Elena's finally admits to her career plan B, Ginny Weasley Fanfic. Continue reading...
Star Wars Battlefront and this season's big games – Tech Weekly podcast
Winter games: the big video game releases of 2015 and what they tell us about the state of the industryWe're heading into video game release season, when all the major blockbuster titles are flung onto the market in the hope of snaring those Christmas millions. However, amid the flood of sequels, shooters and sci-fi epics it seems that variety and diversity of experience are being increasingly overlooked in the rush to give a certain demographic exactly what they think they want.Can big publishers really sustain this hugely expensive Triple A model into the next decade? On this week's games takeover podcast, Keith Stuart and Jordan Erica Webber take look at all the biggest releases with independent games developer Holly Pickering, journalist at Kotaku, Keza Macdonald and Nicholas Lovell from Gamesbrief to ask if creativity is being strangled in the mainstream video game sector. Continue reading...
Chatterbox: Friday
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Friday! Continue reading...
How supermodel Bar Refaeli's wedding sparked political dispute over Israeli airspace
Transport minister and aviation authority chief clash over couple’s demand for drones, helicopters and a hot air balloon to record happy dayThe imminent wedding in Israel of the supermodel Bar Refaeli would usually be the territory of celebrity magazines. And yet Thursday night’s event has stoked a bitter political spat between the country’s transport minister and the head of Israel’s civil aviation authority.The point of dispute is whether the 30-year-old celebrity and her husband-to-be, the billionaire Israeli businessman Adi Ezra, should have the airspace above their nuptials at a spa in the Carmel forest resort closed to all but a fleet of aircraft they have hired. Continue reading...
Bloodhound: 1,000mph supersonic car to be unveiled in London
Vehicle with the power of 180 F1 cars is put on display in Canary Wharf ahead of plan to break current world land-speed record of 763mphFor the last two years a supersonic car has taken shape in an ordinary-looking unit on an industrial estate near Bristol, a joinery on one side, a plumbers’ merchant on the other.On Friday, the car, Bloodhound SSC, will be unveiled for the first time in the much more glitzy surroundings of Canary Wharf in east London. Continue reading...
Facebook joins YouTube in showing 360-degree videos –including Star Wars
Social network giving virtual-reality content a boost in its news feed, with other partners including GoPro, LeBron James and ViceFacebook users watch more than 4bn videos a day on the social network. Soon, they’ll be able to watch some of them in 360 degrees.The company has begun supporting videos that allow viewers to pan round the scene in a full circle, six months after YouTube added a similar feature to its service. Continue reading...
The Ethical Adblocker solves all your problems with online adverts – ethically
How do you block ads without ‘leeching’ free content? This chrome plugin could be the answer. Provided you’re OK with the internet becoming a bit… sparseThe adblocking debate might just have been solved with the launch of the Ethical Adblocker.Adverts suck, and many people would prefer not to see them. But the economics of the internet are such that adverts are also the effective payment for reading free content online (such as this article here). Continue reading...
Mail Online digital advertising slows down to 16% annual growth
Daily Mail & General Trust reports digital ad revenue growth of 16% in 11 months to the end of August, compared to 49% in the same period last year.Mail Online has reported digital advertising growth of 16% in the 11 months to the end of August, a significant slowdown on the almost 50% rate of growth seen a year ago.Parent company Daily Mail & General Trust said Mail Online has reported ad revenue growth of 16% year on year, a £9m revenue increase to about £62m, in the year to the end of August. Continue reading...
Apple Watch OS2 review: more app potential but killer feature still missing
Smartwatch update brings forth improved Siri, added widgets, more watchfaces and good nightstand mode, but still lacks consistency and does nothing for battery lifeApple has updated the operating system of its first smartwatch with native apps, added complications and a few interface tweaks.
Nearly half of young people say tracking partners using technology is acceptable
The findings, launched by VicHealth, come from a national survey of 1923 people aged between 16 and 24 about attitudes towards violence against womenAlmost half of young Australians believe tracking their partner by going through their computer or phone, or by installing phone and computer tracking software, is acceptable.This was one of the findings from a nationally representative survey of 1923 people aged between 16 and 24 about their attitudes towards violence against women. The results were launched by VicHealth in Melbourne on Thursday. Continue reading...
US government hack stole fingerprints of 5.6 million federal employees
Office of Personnel Management hack, which US believes China is responsible for, originally thought to have compromised prints of only 1.1 million workersThe number of people applying for or receiving security clearances whose fingerprint images were stolen in one of the worst government data breaches is now believed to be 5.6 million, not 1.1 million as first thought, the Office of Personnel Management announced on Wednesday.The agency was the victim of what the US believes was a Chinese espionage operation that affected an estimated 21.5 million current and former federal employees or job applicants. The theft could give Chinese intelligence a huge leg up in recruiting informants inside the US government, experts believe. It also could help the Chinese identify US spies abroad, according to American officials. Continue reading...
Instagram passes 400m users as young shun tweets for photo op
Photo and video-sharing app’s current challenge, however, is to make money from a youthful audience for whom Twitter is ‘barely on the radar’Instagram, with its Kardashian selfies, retro filters and endless stream of images of meals, has reached 400 million active users, the company has announced. Facebook’s photo and video-sharing app has added 100 million users in the last nine months, with three-quarters now based outside the US.“While milestones like this are important, what really excites us is the way that visual communication makes the world feel a little bit smaller to every one of us,” the company said in a blog post, revealing that its fastest-growing countries include Brazil, Japan and Indonesia. Continue reading...
Pebble Time Round: the world’s 'lightest and thinnest smartwatch' is announced
Cross-platform smartwatch company releases new circular e-paper model that claims to beat all others on weight and thicknessSmartwatch pioneer Pebble has unveiled a new round model, which the company claims is the world’s thinnest and lightest, beating Apple, Samsung and Motorola.
VW CEO quits amid diesel scandal - video
Volkswagen chief executive Martin Winterkorn resigns, taking responsibility for the German carmaker’s rigging of US emissions tests of which he had no knowledge, according to the supervisory board. The head of IG Metall Trade Union, Berhold Huber, said the resignation was received with the greatest respect Continue reading...
How to save online advertising
The answer isn’t complicated, it’s just hard: find a way for publishers and advertisers to deal with one another directlyThe news that Apple was opening the iOS app-store to ad blockers for mobile devices created a storm in publishing circles, which meant that we heard a lot about them, because publishers publish things that are important to publishing.
Narendra Modi aims to bolster India's tech credentials on US visit
Indian PM sees visit to America as opportunity to enlist global IT industry leaders to help push for technological modernisation in his homelandThe flags are ready, the stadium is too. The dinner with the Fortune 500 CEOs is scheduled, and so is the one-on-one with president Obama.Narendra Modi, the prime minister of India, will be welcomed in New York on Wednesday with much goodwill – but also increasing doubts about his ability to deliver promised reforms in the emerging south Asian power.
Skylanders Superchargers review – the most fully featured instalment to date
The original toys-to-life series is back with a new driving feature and some neat tweaks to the well-known formulaThe novelty of the awkwardly named toys-to-life genre has well and truly passed. When Skylanders first appeared four years ago, the idea of unlocking characters and levels by placing toys on a “portal” peripheral was fresh and interesting. Now we’re on the fifth instalment and Activision has Disney Infinity, Nintendo Amiibos and Lego Dimensions to compete with. The emphasis now is on finding new gimmicks to keep things fresh.This year the theme is racing and with that a new line of air, land and sea vehicles have been added to the Skylanders ecosystem. This not only brings driving missions and a new racing mode but finally adds proper articulated toys along with the static collectable figurines. Kids can play with the cars even when they’re not on the console.
BT promises faster and wider internet coverage as criticism heats up
Gavin Patterson promises more services as Ofcom reviews BT ownership of Openreach and rivals criticise its dominanceBT has pledged to ensure every home in the UK has access to a minimum standard of internet access and to accelerate its rollout of faster fibre connections in an effort to head off criticism over its dominance of the UK broadband market.Gavin Patterson, the chief executive of BT, called for a “collaborative effort across industry and government” and a supportive regulatory and policy environment to help provide faster and more comprehensive internet coverage. Continue reading...
Apple iPhone 6S and 6S Plus review roundup: stronger, faster, heavier
They can shoot Live Photos, have pressure-sensitive screens, an always-listening Siri, and faster fingerprint sensors, but look identical to last year’s modelsApple’s new iPhone 6S and 6S Plus smartphones land in customers hands on Friday, but a select bunch of reviewers have been given early access.The Guardian is not one of those picked by Apple to receive a sample of the iPhone 6S and 6S Plus ahead of its release, and will publish a review after buying one at the same time as consumers. Continue reading...
Volkswagen scandal: US chief says carmaker 'totally screwed up'
Michael Horn admits carmaker was dishonest with US regulators as France calls for Europe-wide inquiry into emissions-fixing scandalThe US chief executive of Volkswagen has said the company has “totally screwed up” over the emissions scandal that has rocked the automotive industry.
Deezer plans float to keep up with rivals Apple and Spotify
Music-streaming service with 6.3m subscribers could be valued at €1bn in upcoming Paris IPOMusic-streaming service Deezer is planning to float on the Paris stock exchange by the end of the year in an attempt to keep up with larger, deeper-pocketed rivals such as Apple and Sweden’s Spotify.The company, founded in 2007 in Paris, has 6.3 million subscribers who can listen to a catalogue of 35m songs for a monthly fee of €9.99 (£7.20). Continue reading...
Chatterbox: Tuesday
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Tuesday. Continue reading...
Lufthansa to trial inflight high-speed internet for passengers
German carrier struck deal with Deutsche Telekom and satellite company Inmarsat for short- and medium-haul flightsHigh-speed internet access via smartphones could become a feature on European airline flights following a deal involving the German carrier Lufthansa – but voice calls will be blocked at first.Lufthansa will offer Wi-Fi on its short- and medium-haul flights from 2017, provided by the satellite firm Inmarsat and Deutsche Telekom. Continue reading...
Facebook accused of spying on Belgian citizens like the NSA
Data regulator’s opening volley in privacy lawsuit claims Facebook is contucting NSA-like snooping on citizens declaring that Belgium shouldn’t be intimidatedFacebook acted like the US’s National Security Agency, spying without authority on European users, lawyers representing the Belgian data protection authority said on Monday.In opening arguments in a closely watched case being brought against the social network company, Frederic Debussere, representing the Belgian privacy commission (BPC), referred to NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden’s revelations about surreptitious mass surveillance by the spy agency. Continue reading...
German minister tells Volkswagen to clear up emissions scandal
Shares fall by almost a fifth as economy minister says US claims over falsified data threaten reputation of German car industryThe German government has warned that the Volkswagen emissions fixing scandal is putting at risk the reputation of the country’s automotive industry, as shares in Europe’s largest carmaker slumped by nearly 20%.Shares plunged as investors responded to US accusations that the German carmaker falsified emissions data, an action that could attract penalties of up to $18bn (£11.6bn). The German economy minister, Sigmar Gabriel, expressed concern over the impact of what he called “a bad case” for the country’s vital car industry and he urged VW to clear up the allegations.
Twitter, Skype, Amazon: why does the internet keep breaking?
Big internet names have been cutting out and dropping off in the last week. Why are they playing with us in this way?First it was Twitter, the desktop client of which went down for over an hour last week, (that’s almost a year in Twitter time). Then it was Amazon Web Services, which glitched and took with it the likes of Netflix, Medium and Buffer over the weekend. Today, Skype has lost connection, scuppering those wishing to talk to long-distance other halves or interviewing for that job on a different continent.What is happening? Why is the internet breaking? And isn’t this all a bit Paper magazine November 2014? Continue reading...
Chatterbox: Monday
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Monday! Continue reading...
Games reviews roundup: Mad Max; 3D Gunstar Heroes; Forza Motorsport 6
A lame outing for the Road Warrior, but an old run-and-gun favourite finds a great new home on the 3DS while Forza roars back into top formFrom Fury Road to the middle of the road: this adaptation does nothing wrong but equally, nothing to stand out, which is a disappointment given its source material. Continue reading...
Ten of the best photography apps
From slick filters to selfie tweaks, and simple editing tools to storing and even selling smartphone snaps, here are some tools to fuel your photo lifePoint, shoot and share: smartphones have sparked an explosion in photography. According to tech analyst Mary Meeker’s annual internet trends research, more than 500m photos were uploaded and shared every day in early 2013.That’s startling enough, but a year later, Meeker claimed the daily total had risen to 1.8bn. She did not update the figure in her 2015 report, but it’s reasonable to expect another sharp increase given the growth in both handsets, and the popularity of apps for photo sharing. Continue reading...
Kim Dotcom in court for US extradition hearing after three years of delays
Using a specially designed chair brought into the courtroom in Auckland, the internet tycoon finally faced proceedings over his $175m Megaupload empireAfter more than three years of legal wrangling, two supreme court cases and 10 delays in the proceedings, the extradition hearing for internet tycoon Kim Dotcom and his co-accused has finally begun in Auckland.A sea of lawyers and reporters flooded the district court on Monday to see Dotcom, sitting in a large leather arm chair specially brought in for ergonomic reasons. Continue reading...
50 apps to improve your smartphone
From lifestyle aids to productivity tools, travel planners to social media, here are the apps that should have a place on your homescreenA recent study by market research firm Nielsen claimed that the average person uses 27 apps a month, which sounds like very few considering that Apple and Google’s app stores both have more than 1m apps available. The key, of course, is that the 27 apps can be almost entirely different, depending who you ask.Some apps do have mass audiences: Facebook and Twitter in the social networking category; WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger and Snapchat for messaging; Google Maps for getting around; Spotify for music; YouTube for video; Kindle for reading ebooks; Instagram for photo-sharing; and so on. Continue reading...
US and China in urgent talks on cybersecurity deal, says report
The agreement to address attacks on power stations and telecoms networks could be unveiled when Chinese president Xi Jinping visits the US this weekThe United States and China have been engaged in urgent negotiations in recent weeks on a cybersecurity deal and may announce an agreement when the Chinese president Xi Jinping arrives in Washington on Thursday, according to reports.Related: What will the privacy and security landscape look like in 2025? Continue reading...
Sony Xperia Z5 review: good but not exceptional
Fast, great camera, microSD card, waterproof and the most convenient fingerprint scanner in the business make for a solid, if unremarkable smartphoneThe latest smartphone from Sony has the fastest camera available on a smartphone and promises a two-day battery, but does it deliver?
Peace app creator pulls top ad blocker because its success 'doesn't feel good'
Tumblr co-founder Marco Arment said benefits of removing ads for iPhone iOS 9 users does not outweigh possible damage to content that depends on revenueThe maker of Peace, a bestselling ad blocker for iPhones, has pulled the app just days after its launch saying the app’s success “just doesn’t feel good”.Marco Arment, co-founder of Tumblr and creator of the Instapaper reading app, launched Peace on 16 September. The $2.99 app became the bestselling app in Apple’s iTunes store almost overnight. Continue reading...
What lies behind the boom in mobile adblocking?
Apple enabled mobile adblockers in the newest version of Safari, and they’re taking the world by stormWednesday’s launch of iOS 9 introduced fully-native mobile adblocking to millions of users for the first time, and they voted with their feet. One specific ad-blocker, Peace, a $2.99/£2.29 app developed by Instapaper creator Marco Arment, is the number one paid app in the UK, US, Australia and Canada, while two others, Crystal and Purify, are in the top-ten in a number of countries.But there’s a lot of confusion over what the blockers can and can’t do, how to enable them, and what Apple’s role is in the whole thing. Continue reading...
Robot swarms: scientists work to harness the power of the insect world
The hive mentality is inspiring the latest advances in technology and the US military is already experimenting with swarms of robotic boats and aircraftsArmies of robots are already here – they’re mostly just very small.As robotics advances, scientists continue to take cues from the natural world, whether it’s by building robots out of material from animals, like cloned rat muscle or jellyfish matter, or building them in imitation of dogs or cats. And now, those scientists are learning to simulate intelligence by imitating a swarm. Continue reading...
Seven wonders of the world to explore on Google Street View
With the news that Yorkshire is to get the Google Street View trek treatment, we take a look at seven other beautiful virtual toursYou may not have heard of Roseberry Topping, Guisborough woods or Cleveland Hills – areas of Yorkshire in the UK – but very shortly it will become much, much easier to visit them. In fact, you won’t even have to step outside.
Facebook's new opt-out for tracking ads is not enough, says privacy expert
Social network provides new opt-out tool for behavioural adverts, but doesn’t stop collection of user dataFacebook has rolled out a new tool that allows users to choose whether tracking data from ‘Like’ buttons and other social elements is used to serve them ads, but privacy experts say the move does not go far enough.
Play it your way: how Twitch lets disabled gamers earn a living online
When epilepsy put Mackenzie out of work, she found a new way to make ends meet: streaming herself playing games. From Street Fighter experts with no arms to quadraplegic Diablo champions, a growing number are finding an unlikely source of income – and a real sense of communityIn the summer of 2014, Mackenzie had just started working two minimum-wage jobs in Colorado when she suffered a major epileptic seizure at home, one that left her reeling and disoriented. She was home alone and, following the attack, too bewildered and drowsy to know to call in sick. The infraction was enough to earn Mackenzie, who was 22 at the time, a so-called “no call, no show” blot on her record from each employer – a restaurant, where she worked tables, and a gym. While both companies knew about Mackenzie’s history of severe seizures, this was, they said, grounds for dismissal. She was told not to return to work. “I’m in the process of fighting it,” she tells me. “But both companies have a lot of money … ”Mackenzie’s seizures are so severe – she was featured earlier this year on MTV’s True Life: I Have Epilepsy – that she is unable to drive (or climb, or swim, or wield a knife, among many other things). Neither will she take the bus to work because, if she suffers a fit on board, well-meaning members of the public inevitably call for an ambulance to take her to the hospital – a costly trip in the US. Indeed, Mackenzie’s medical debts currently total more than $30,000. Jobs that are walking distance from her home are hard to find, and harder still to hold down. Continue reading...
Apple meets California officials to discuss self-driving car
The meeting in California, which is developing regulations for driverless vehicles, suggest the technology giant is close to unveiling an autonomous automobileApple executives have discussed their plans for an “autonomous vehicle” with officials at California’s department of motor vehicles (DMV), the Guardian has learnt.
Apple should have been awarded injunction against Samsung, court says
Court of appeals states lower court abused its right of discretion in blocking Apple from stopping Samsung sales of smartphones in the USApple should have been awarded an injunction against Samsung in their long-running smartphone patent war, the US court of appeals ruled on Thursday.The court of appeals for the federal circuit in Washington DC said the lower court, led by US district judge Lucy Koh, abused its discretion by denying Apple an injunction against Samsung after a jury ordered the Korean company to pay $120m in May last year for infringing three of Apple’s patents. Continue reading...
Tech Weekly presents Updog: when politics and Tumblr collide
What happens when you combine teenage Tumblr fandoms and the labour leadership election? You get the Lolitics community.This week in our podcast dedicated to internet memes and all things digitally viral, Marie le Conte joins Elena Cresci and Alex Hern for a look at Britain's most dedicated fans of George Osborne's hands, John Major's Cones Hotline, and dreamy mid-90s Peter Mandleson Continue reading...
Whatever happened to Minority Report's technology predictions?
As Leap Motion lays off staff and Project Soli remains unknown, wider adoption of computers that use gestural control proves more difficult than predicted
American Airlines forced to ground US flights after computer glitch
Chicago, Miami and Dallas-Fort Worth all affected by issues caused by a computer malfunctionAmerican Airlines was forced to ground large parts of its fleet on Thursday night, after a computer malfunction led to a widespread outage.Flights from Chicago O’Hare, Dallas-Fort Worth and Miami were all halted while the company struggled to deal with the issue. Continue reading...
10 of the best Rugby World Cup 2015 apps
How to follow this year’s tournament from your iOS or Android device, as well as testing your virtual playing (or management) skillsAs England and Fiji prepare to kick off this year’s Rugby World Cup, tens of thousands of fans will be watching in the stadium, and millions more on television.In 2015, though, your smartphone and tablet provide plenty of ways to keep up with the action, and indulge in your rugby union habit around the matches in other ways. Here’s a selection of 10 of the mobile apps worth trying. Continue reading...
...341342343344345346347348349350...