Uber Plans To Lay Off Another 3,000 Employees
Less than two weeks after Uber shared plans to lay off 3,700 employees, the company announced that it will let another 3,000 workers go.
Less than two weeks after Uber shared plans to lay off 3,700 employees, the company announced that it will let another 3,000 workers go.
The seven-seater would have had almost twice the range as Tesla's Model X.
The coronavirus pandemic has given rise to a new wave of viral disinformation, and anti-vaccine advocates are on the front lines.
If it's not Google Meet with colleagues, it's Zoom hangouts with friends and FaceTime with family. The issue is, online video interactions are fundamentally different from face-to-face ones.
A radical, untested idea suggests that hyperbaric chambers, rather than ventilators, are what we need to tackle COVID-19.
A new character bug is causing Apple devices to crash.
Stuck indoors? Try restoring an old TV show or movie.
We pick the best games for the Nintendo Switch, updated for April 2020.
Bennu has the distinction of being the subject of the highest resolution mosaic ever made of any planetary body.
Tesla's EV plants are shuttered due to the coronavirus, but like other automakers, it's retooling its operations to build ventilators.
Valve's done it again.
Needleless injectors render needles needless.
There's a surge in bios now looking for quarantine amor; cuddle pals and shut-in lovers, to "ride it out," if you will. It's enough to make the "wash your hands" pop-ups look criminally negligent.
It's about more than good looks.
Want to be one of the earlier astronauts to return to the Moon or explore Mars? You now have your chance.
When you think of 3D printing, you probably imagine a structure being created layer by layer, from the bottom up. Now, researchers say they have developed a completely new way of creating 3D objects that offer remarkable resolution "in record time."
We're barely one month into 2020, and one social media trend has truly taken the definition of "viral" and rammed it down our collective throat.
Google and Facebook are attempting to stay ahead of coronavirus misinformation and to provide users with helpful, accurate resources.
Last year Facebook agreed to stop turning on the tech to scan your photos by default, which built a template of your facial data and automatically suggested tags in photos based on it.
The procedure could significantly reduce the need for heart transplants.