Pogue's Posts
The Latest in Technology From David Pogue
Why can't an American overseas buy an e-book?
The Virgin MiFi review got a lot of reaction -- including complaints from readers on what I didn't mention.
A new Windows PC comes covered with advertising stickers even though computer companies are trying to make their laptops beautiful. They ought to stop.
The small size of Apple's bookstore really shouldn't be a factor in your decision whether to buy a Kindle or an iPad.
A new feature from Google makes it clear that one day, the Internet, not the outrageous cellphone companies, will connect our calls.
My absence from blogging is explained.
Since students make up a critical portion of the target audience for Livescribe's new smartpen, I figured my summer intern would be the perfect person to review it.
A critical mass of tricks and tips for the iPhone 4 have started to pile up. Here's a look at three cool iOS 4 features that nobody, including Apple, seems to be talking about.
David Pogue talks to John Palfrey, Harvard Law School professor, co-director of Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet & Society, and author of "Born Digital."
Predictably, Steve Jobs's gesture did nothing to satisfy the most vocal Apple bashers, but it seems to be a decent good-faith move on Apple's part.
Surely there are apps no one has invented yet. What do you want on your phone?
David Pogue interviews David Mikkelson of Snopes.com, where Internet veterans go to get the truth about online rumors.
Line2, an iPhone app that makes and receive calls either using the AT&T airwaves or the Internet, now takes calls automatically over Wi-Fi so you don't use any AT&T minutes.
The Rapiscan airport security machines, the ones that photograph your naked body, are a bad use of technology.
Copyright laws may seem simple. But a discussion over sheet music proves that the issue is not.