Technology blog + Mobile phones
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Have your say on latest health-tracking service, as well as Chinese copyright, running robots and crash test dummies. By Stuart Dredge
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Mobile, powered by the cloud, is changing the game for sports teams around the world. It can do the same for your business. Benjamin Robbins explains how
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The sports industry is leading the way in the use of technology to engage with fans - what can businesses learn from this connected approach?
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The Guardian will host an evening debate on the future of secure mobility, in association with Symantec and Accenture, on 29th September
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Phil’s family is now using Android smartphones and tablets, and he wants to know what he can do to secure them. Jack Schofield advises
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Also featuring a self-driving car, an Apple acquisition, and new Motorola/Google device. By Alex Hern and Samuel Gibbs
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Plus Orange data leak, overlay video chat is the new Twitter, bitcoin, and Apple v Samsung. By Samuel Gibbs and Alex Hern
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Samuel Gibbs: plus 3D printing replacing Airfix, Nike prefers socks over bands, and the world's fastest lift
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Samuel Gibbs: Plus end-to-end Gmail encryption, apps going the way of consoles, Facebook going all out on ads, and more
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Samuel Gibbs: Plus Apple suggests turning your laptop off and on again if it's behaving badly, Samsung sells more phones than Apple, Nokia and BlackBerry combines, flying drones get a roll cage, and more
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Ben Rose: It wasn't just the availability of rival smartphones that killed off BlackBerry (it did fine against Nokia's Symbian, after all). It was the loss of all those things it excelled at - such as thriving in a world where data was expensive
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Jack Schofield: Carol is going away and wants her elderly relatives to be able to send SMS messages to her mobile phone. Also, videographer/photographer dutchofspadez is looking for a tablet to display his work...
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A video appears to show that Apple's new Touch ID sensor can recognise the patterns on a cat's paw as though they were human fingerprints.
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Rob Freeman: What if you left your phone on the train, in a foreign country, with Airplane mode enabled and the SIM locked? How would it ever find its way back? Here's the way to make sure
How secure is your favourite messaging app? Today's Open Thread