Apple Updates iMac Family with Stunning New Retina Displays
The idea behind iMac has never wavered: to craft the ultimate desktop experience. The best display, paired with high-performance processors, graphics, and storage — all within an incredibly thin, seamless enclosure. And that commitment continues with the all-new 21.5‑inch iMac with Retina 4K display. Like the revolutionary 27‑inch 5K model, it delivers such spectacular image quality that everything else around you seems to disappear....
Abduct four pals for couch co-op in PS4’s ‘Alienation’
This doggie in the window is free, but if you want to show the Resogun developer some love with your wallet, there are options for that as well. Paid add-ons include weapon unlocks, different colored bullets and a season pass that grants access to the game’s forthcoming expansions. Oh, and dropping $10 on that opens up the game’s soundtrack and a dynamic (read: moving) theme for your PlayStation 4. For a refresher of what...
Abduct four pals for couch co-op in PS4’s ‘Alienation’
This doggie in the window is free, but if you want to show the Resogun developer some love with your wallet, there are options for that as well. Paid add-ons include weapon unlocks, different colored bullets and a season pass that grants access to the game’s forthcoming expansions. Oh, and dropping $10 on that opens up the game’s soundtrack and a dynamic (read: moving) theme for your PlayStation 4. For a refresher of what...
Apple Reports Record Fourth Quarter Results
CUPERTINO, California — October 27, 2015 — Apple® today announced financial results for its fiscal 2015 fourth quarter ended September 26, 2015. The Company posted quarterly revenue of $51.5 billion and quarterly net profit of $11.1 billion, or $1.96 per diluted share. These results compare to revenue of $42.1 billion and net profit of $8.5 billion, or $1.42 per diluted share, in the year-ago quarter. Gross margin was 39.9 percent...
Google: Symantec antivirus flaws are ‘as bad as it gets’
Google’s Project Zero team searches for “zero-day” code flaws and gives companies 90 days (plus a two week grace period) to fix them. In this case, Ormandy published the blog post shortly after Symantec pushed the fixes, saying the antivirus company did resolve the bugs “quickly.”However, he excoriated Symantec for the danger of the errors and its incompetence in allowing them. In one case, he found a...
