Adventures in Tech – The rise and fall of HTC

HTC used to be the king of Android, but as the new One M8 is revealed, the company’s future is far from certain. Adventures in Tech examines the rise and…

Smartphone gauntlet is oddly compelling concept tech

More from Mobile World Congress 2016: http://bit.ly/24mukpB We’re weirdly impressed by the design of this bizzarre manacle, built by FlexEnable to demonstrate the company’s curved-screen tech. Subscribe to CNET: http://bit.ly/17qqqCs…

Adventures in Tech – The making of Raspberry Pi

http://cnet.co/1tYgFRw Can this plucky microcomputer save the computing industry? Adventures in Tech heads to Raspberry Pi HQ to find out. If you’re ready for more Adventures, check out how to…

Adventures in Tech – PS2: Gaming’s greatest sequel

http://cnet.co/1mVjo9t How do you build the most popular games console ever? CNET explains the magic behind Sony’s PlayStation 2. If you’re ready for more Adventures, check out how to subscribe…

Adventures in Tech – Xbox: How Microsoft cracked gaming

http://cnet.co/1rZYadA It was little more than a PC in a box, but the Xbox shot Microsoft to the forefront of the console race. Here’s how Microsoft found its cool. source

Adventures in Tech – The psychology of Android vs iOS

Why do we get so passionate about our operating systems? Adventures in Tech explores the psychology that fuels smart phone fandom. source

2015 in tech

Read more at CNET.com – http://www.cnet.com/ From Apple’s first wearable to hacking scandals and Back to the Future Day — these are the moments that rocked the tech community in…

The tech ‘Back to the Future’ predicted for 2015 — and what it missed

How does today’s tech compare to the alternate 2015 visited by Marty McFly, and which modern marvels could never have been predicted back in the ’80s? source

Nokia 5G tech can follow your smartphone

We check out Nokia’s futuristic system for getting a focused beam of 5G to your smartphone. Hit play now. source

Adventures in Tech – RIP Windows XP

http://cnet.co/1joNnb0 As support for Windows XP ends, Adventures in Tech offers a eulogy to the last of the great operating systems source