January 2, 2014
TechWeekEurope’s iPad Air Quiz Winner Announced
Simon Lewis, a Director at account company Lewis & Co, wins an iPad Air
How Governments Will Shape Data Centres
Governments' energy policies and surveillance activities will unintentionally shape our data centres, says Peter Judge
Nokia Could Win HTC Sales Ban In Germany
Court ruling on technology patents means that HTC’s German sales could be halted
Can European Telcos Protect Customers From The NSA?
European telcos could ease customers' fear of US-based surveillance, if they can build the right services, says Birger Steen
Chinese Newcomer Xiaomi Wants To Sell 40 Million Smartphones In 2014
Budget-friendly, Android-powered devices are taking China by storm
Windows 8 And 8.1 Market Share Passes 10 Percent
Windows 7 continues to lead the way, but Windows XP is still worryingly widespread
HP Blames The Market For 5000 More Job Cuts
2014 may not be such a happy new year for some as HP announces more misery on the jobs front
Half Of Britons ‘Now Own A Tablet’
Research from Deloitte shows that over half of Britons have access to some kind of tablet device
Eric Schmidt Takes Responsibility For Google’s Social Networking Failures
We should have seen Facebook was coming, says Google’s chairman
Google Bumps Off Bump
Shuts down the file-sharing app - four months after it was acquired
Millions Of Snapchat Usernames And Phone Numbers ‘Leaked’
Hackers claim they wanted to show up Snapchat security weakness
Syrian Electronic Army Hacks Skype Social Pages And Blog
Hackers leave anti-NSA spying messages across Microsoft-run accounts
Apple Denies NSA Backdoor For iPhone
Apple denies it created a backdoor to allow the NSA to spy on the iPhone
Microsoft Midori OS Details Emerge
Technical details have emerged about Microsoft's non-Windows operating system, codenamed Midori
Cyber-Attackers To Target Internet Of Things
Attackers will increasingly target devices that make up the Internet of things during 2014, experts warn
Boffins Claim Longer Data Storage With MRAM Innovation
Researchers in Singapore develop MRAM technology to ensure data stays intact, even during a power failure