Sam Machkovech of Ars Technica talks about the new Star Wars: Battlefront game, Google AMPs up the Web, YouTube Kids offers wine tasting tips, where are my wearable holograms, and more...
Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg promises to give away 99% of his wealth - but not yet, the EFF says Google is violating the privacy of student users, Samsung announces a virtual reality web browser, and more...
Windows has scaled back its phone business with 7800 layoffs, networks at Delta Airlines and NYSE failed today, GoPro released its newest wearable camera the Hero 4 Session, Google Search results are sexist, and more...
Supreme Court nominee Kavanaugh on the fourth amendment and technological developments, Kavanaugh's views on Net Neutrality, Ajit Pai pushes for tighter rules on Google and Facebook, is an Uber driver an employee?
Microsoft Store, Microsoft Signature, Microsoft takes on Google and Yahoo, and more.Our guest is Kevin Eagan, chief technology strategist for Microsoft's Store division.
New iPod Shuffle, Google Voice, Stephanopoulos to interview McCain via Twitter, The Web Turns 20, and your calls.For detailed show notes, visit techguylabs.com.
Aereo loses in Supreme Court fight, warrantless cellphone tracking found unconstitutional, Google I/O and Android L, Facebook's psychology experiment on 689,000 users, and a new world record for playing the entire Super Mario Bros.
Netflix files a petition to stop the Comcast/Time Warner Cable merger, the FCC gets a new CTO, Snapchat user numbers soar, why the Google/Twitch deal fell apart, and is Apple planning a 12.9 inch iPad?
The FCC meets to decide the future of net neutrality in the United States, Google gets flooded with take-down requests in Europe to remove links, Apple's acquisition of Beats misses a beat, and more.
The NSA's plan to infect millions of computers, Yahoo gets help from Yelp to fight Google, Angry Birds creates a RPG, Tunes Radio might break free from iOS 8, and what we learned from SXSW.
Oculus Kickstarter backers speak out against the buyout from Facebook, King's IPO has a rocky start, Google I/O details emerge, Twitter gets more photo features, and TWIT might not mean what you think it does.
Google backing up Wi-Fi network passwords, phones that support multiple carriers, pairing multiple bluetooth devices to a smartphone, converting VHS tapes to a digital format, backing up terabytes of data, and more of your calls.
The NSA's big SIM card hack isn't as bad as we thought, Medium gets more social networking and blogging features, Reddit joins Google in its quest to cover up naked people online, and more...
What a Samsung slump might mean for Android, the leaky ship that is the next batch of Nexus devices, HTC's plans for wearables, yet another messaging platform for Google, the Big Android BBQ, and more!
Apple announces iPad Air 2 with Touch ID and iMac with Retina 5K display, Apple Pay launches Monday, how Apple SIM will change the wireless industry, Google announces Nexus 6 and Android 5.0 Lollipop, and more.
Amber & Sarah chat with Wenzani's Jenny Fielding on taking travel brands mobile, Twitter gets a revamp, Soundtracking gets an Android app, Google Currents is live, Simple Present for gifts, & social ornaments are RAD!
A round up of social media news from Kurt Wagner at Re/Code, Twitter snoops, Tim Cook talks, Google wants to solve the mental health crisis, the skinny on Facebook's new dislike button, and more...
Ready to ditch cellular and use only WiFi on your phone? One company thinks you are. WikiLeaks is mad at Google for not leaking something, a popular Twitter client isn't accepting new users, and more.
The FCC chairman comes out in favor of strong net neutrality even for mobile networks, China institutes a nation-wide real-names policy, Apple may be launching a search engine to compete with Google, and more...
Twitter gets more into video, Facebook pays media companies millions to stream live, Android apps running on Chrome OS, and Jason Howell attempts to turn on two-factor authentication with his Google Voice number.
A review of the Samsung Galaxy Note 7, recording multiple tracks from a live performance, a Windows alternative to Apple's Messages, updating an old Android phone, sharing videos in Google Photos, and more of your calls.
Before This Week in Google, Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Stacey Higginbotham talk about what happened to the old Brick House, play around with the new PTZ camera, and Stacey and Kevin's corporate retreat.
Motorola and Verizon unveil the new Droid Turbo 2, one of the world's biggest car designers says Apple and Google could take over the car industry, Wal-Mart is testing delivery drones, and more...
Apple hints at bringing back home sharing, Google's self-driving cars hit the Lone Star State, Samsung's Mobile division is failing, Which is the best Android phone for you?, Showtime launches a streaming service, and more...
Elizabeth Warren says she wants to break up Google, Amazon, Facebook, and Apple. Here's why that's a terrible idea.For the full episode, visit twit.tv/twig/499
Since Fortnite is bypassing the Google Play Store, here's how to get Fortnite for Android without getting malware.Watch the full episode:https://twit.tv/twig/469
Amazon phone exclusive for AT&T, Google Fit tracks your health, the history of Android, Samsung's new Galaxy F, Galaxy Tab S, Huawei Ascend Mate2 4G LTE, Amazon Prime Music can't kill Spotify, and more.
Denise Howell, Evan Brown, Stephan Kinsella and Harry Surden discuss the LOT Network, formed by companies such as Google, Dropbox and Newegg to promote "innovation by reducing the risk of litigation from Patent Assertion Entities."
A jury awards Apple more in verdict against Samsung, Apple on a medical tech hiring spree, same day delivery expands for Google Shopping Express, Amazon lets you Tweet into your shopping cart, and 3D printed make-up.
Top email services all claim the right to read the email on their servers, Microsoft will pay XP users to upgrade, Turkish tweets are up despite Turkey's Twitter ban, and Google distances itself from DARPA.
Amber & Sarah chat about what Twitter's IPO means for the future, YouTube's new Google+ commenting system, Facebook's new Like buttons, Context photo app is the new Snapchat, Sunrise calendar is socially superior, & more!
Leo & Sarah cover their favorite "sharing economy" apps like Lyft & Hotel Tonight, Google Maps and Chrome get updated, IMDB adds tix purchases, Duolingo for language learning, Tiny Thief for game addicts, & more!
Sarah Lane talks about the future of search for Siri and Safari on iOS with the news that Bing and Yahoo may be in talks with Apple to replace Google as the default search engine.
Oracle and Google's $9.3 billion lawsuit, the right camcorder for video podcasting, a camera that won't get you kicked out of a concert, fixing a bent iPhone, the next step in VR and more of your calls!
Denise Howell, Matt Curtis and Emory Roane discuss Google's decision to fire a software engineer over a controversial internal memo.For the full episode, visit twit.tv/twil/395
France wants to see Google's secret search algorithm and dictate search results, Wikileaks posts everything stolen in the Sony Pictures hack, Bloomberg terminals that global financial traders depend on crashed for hours today, and more...
On This Week in Google, Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, Stacey Higginbotham, and Kevin Marks talk about Algospeak and how algorithms are impacting how people communicate online.For the full episode, visit twit.tv/twig/569
On This Week in Google, Cathy Gellis joins from Washington DC after she spent the morning at the Supreme Court witnessing the action happening with the Andy Warhol fair use case involving a famous Prince photograph.
A new index ranks Silicon Valley companies on the rights of users, a new home gadget lets you control how your kids use the Internet, the new Google Nexus 6P bends right before it breaks, and more...
Leo Laporte: It's time for TWiT: This Week in Tech! Tim Cook is going to give away his fortune, Ellen Pao loses in court, and the FTC should have investigated Google, or not. We'll talk about it next, on TWiT. NETCASTS YOU LOVE FROM PEOPLE YOU TRUST, THIS IS TWiT! Bandwidth for This Week in…
Government's role in online privacy. Mary Meeker's 2017 Internet trends report. Android creator Andy Rubin's new Essential phone. The true meaning of "covfefe." Does Netflix care about Net Neutrality? Chipotle hacked. Google's expensive gender pay gap.
Before and after This Week in Google, Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Stacey Higginbotham talk all about Leo's obsession with the Whirley Pop, the Wuppertal trolley, and a book club for Club TWiT is discussed at length.
After This Week in Google, Leo Laporte talks with John Slanina about the upcoming Triangulation interview with author Andy Weir. Also, classic science fiction and, you guessed it: Valheim.
Google offers users the 'right to be forgotten', software for making trippy images with deep learning, carpooling service for commuters in Israel, study suggests ad-targeting system discriminates based on gender and other personal traits, and more.
Google's Stadia gaming: pricing, release date... and disappointment. Apple's new Mac Pro is a BEAST, while Microsoft brings Variable Refresh Rate to DX11 games. All that and more on This Week in Computer Hardware ep 520!
Florence Ion, Ron Richards, and Josh Vergara talk about the recently revealed Pixel 4 spec sheet by 9to5Google.For the full episode, visit twit.tv/aaa/441