The first totally immersive home virtual reality rig is a pricey, awkward, isolating—and occasionally brilliant—glimpse of the future of computing, Geoffrey A. Fowler writes.
Apple’s powerful new 4-inch iPhone has the size and battery performance that many have been waiting for. Geoffrey A. Fowler sizes up whether the iPhone SE is the right fit for you.
For $400, the New Matter MOD-t, Printrbot Play and XYZPrinting da Vinci Jr. 1.0W make 3-D printing much more accessible to families and schools. But using them is still a project, writes Geoffrey A. Fowler.
A personal, guided tour to the best scoops and stories every day in The Wall Street Journal, from Editor in Chief Gerard Baker.
Samsung’s new Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge outshine the Apple iPhone 6s and Android rivals. But Geoffrey A. Fowler wonders: Without a whiz-bang new feature, is it worth $680?
On Thursday, Amazon.com Inc. unveiled two little devices, Tap and Echo Dot, which contain speakers and microphones to connect to its Alexa voice-controlled artificial intelligence. They follow the Echo, an Internet-connected shelf speaker that’s become a cult hit in the past year.
The Phantom 4 makes awesome aerial photography safer with five cameras that sense and avoid obstacles including trees, buildings and people, Geoffrey A. Fowler writes.
Eero combats frustrating Wi-Fi dead zones with an armada of little wireless routers, Geoffrey A. Fowler writes.
After shaking up its Galaxy smartphone design last year, Samsung is keeping much of that sleek glass and metal look for 2016. But for the reunion tour, the S7 brings back a number of gone-too-soon Galaxy S4 and S5 features that were actually useful, including expandable storage and waterproofing.
LG is matching its chief rival by introducing a VR headset and a 360-degree camera. But it also made key changes to its flagship phone to address customer concerns, and threw in some crazy future-looking features, too.
Emergency-room visits by smartphone-distracted pedestrians have soared 124% over the last five years. What responsibility do tech companies have to address our addiction, asks Geoffrey Fowler.
Make your digital self less attractive to vermin like hackers, phishers and overly aggressive marketers.
Uber driver distraction, short battery life and other digital aggravations.
Strivr Labs co-founder says VR has the potential to change the way users feel—and behave
If you’re looking to purchase a TV, ask yourself, how big should it be? Do I need 4K? Should I wait until next year? Geoffrey A. Fowler offers shopping tips.
Fitness tech, like Mio’s new Personal Activity Intelligence metric, is moving beyond step-tracking to 24/7 heart-rate analysis. Can Big Data make getting fit simpler?
Like New York, cities all over are getting speedy Wi-Fi. But before using free, speedy hot spots, proceed with caution, warns WSJ’s Personal Technology columnist Joanna Stern.
Passwords are getting longer, but they're not getting stronger.
Bragi Dash and Earin earbuds are completely untethered and may usher in a future of “hearable” computers. But they are also works in progress.