Twitter merriment ensues.
Most smartphones go to existing customers, with the real growth coming from tablets and other devices.
Enter Ethereum.
Here's a little video to make you feel better about how you can't figure out Snapchat.
It's also adding a million users every five months, the company says.
It was big nasty job, and lots of eggs got broken along the way.
But Gawker's plan is to win Round 2.
The iOS and Android app is due later this year.
Do millennials watch TV?
It's not just China that is seeing a slowdown.
The name, says Tinder, is pronounced too much like its own.
The poll reveals that the race is tightening and too close to call, but Twitter doesn't care about nuance.
She was trying to say something smart about gun control, but it backfired.
Beck "acted like he was auditioning to be Mark Zuckerberg's manservant."
The upstart app backed by several Wall Street banks is going mobile.
The conservative commentator walked away from Wednesday's meeting obviously impressed.
Could it be you?
I met her a few times. She wasn't a radical.
Did you know young people are online? Crazy.
Disruptive!
That 'bimbo' retweet? 'Over your life, Megyn, you've been called worse.'
"Narcos" is coming to Univision.
The fiber fight rages on.
It's "far more open and fair to conservatives than Twitter," says Erick Erickson.
Select employees of some big local companies can hitch a ride with the app's pilot program.
Berkshire Hathaway also boosted its stake in IBM and sold shares in AT&T.
A cool, if obvious, new feature.
Amit Singh moves from selling apps to shilling Cardboard.
The billionaire says he'd run if he could 'throw bombs' at Trump.
The NBA legend said he has to focus his time on a new project.
The comedian interviewed TED curator Chris Anderson for her new Netflix talk show.
The live stunt du jour is a Washington Post columnist literally eating his words.