Wearables have become a popular way of tracking daily workouts, eating habits and sleep cycles. But one man inadvertently captured what happened when his heart broke.
The four nationwide cell phone carriers, the smartphone chipmakers and the major network equipment companies are working on developing 5G network technology for their customers.
Boats dragging high-tech detection devices across the Indian Ocean have failed to solve the mystery of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370. But searchers have discovered a shipwreck some 200 years old at the bottom of the sea.
Google has released its annual roundup of what the U.S. searched for this year. They aren't the top searches by volume, but top "trending" searches, meaning they saw the biggest spikes.
The Facebook founder and other business leaders should push for ways to use big data to anticipate and prevent violence and terrorism, Sreedhar Potarazu says.
The vast majority of cops are good people who don't need a body camera to have them do the right thing. But with such distrust between the black community and law enforcement, this is a concrete step to minimize the systemic lack of faith.
Fans will get a sneak peak behind the scenes of Taylor Swift's world tour, the pop star announces. Apple Music will debut a film of "The 1989 World Tour Live" on December 20, just in time for Christmas.
Elon Musk is sinking large amounts of money into something that scares him: artificial intelligence. The Tesla and Space X founder is among the big-name technology investors behind a new nonprofit AI research center.
There is no shortage of earbud headphones that claim to be the perfect fit for your ears. But everyone knows those claims are bogus. A Montreal startup thinks it has the solution: Earbud headphones that mold to your ears.
Tashfeen Malik advocated jihad in messages on social media, but her comments were made under a pseudonym and with strict privacy settings that did not allow people outside a small group of friends to see them, U.S. law enforcement officials told CNN on Monday.
Juliet Starrett and her husband were running the sack race at their children's school field day when they noticed something was wrong -- the kids couldn't get into the sacks.
AT&T will deliver ultra high-speed Internet to 38 more cities through its GigaPower service. But when those installations will be complete and how much customers will pay are unclear.
British luxury automaker Jaguar Land Rover has unveiled a new convertible SUV -- a ragtop version of the sleek Range Rover Evoque with a power-folding back roof.
The Concordia research station in Antarctica is Earth's closest analogue to long-term space missions, making it home to scientists from the European Space Agency. Their eventual goal? A manned mission to Mars.
Scientists have created a substance that blings even brighter than diamonds, but chances are you won't wear it. You'll take its byproducts as medicine instead.
With a few mouse clicks and a credit card, you can order the beginnings of a specific type of baby. And as genetic technology improves, there will be many more ways for us to choose the kind of child we have.
Mobile salons make regular visits to major tech companies such Yahoo, Adobe, Genentech, Google and LinkedIn. Everyone from senior execs to interns stop by for blowouts, buzz cuts and beard trims.
In July, a threat emerged from an ISIS-associated Twitter account with few followers. The account alluded to an upcoming terror attack at a beach resort in Tunisia. Just a month before, a similar attack left 38 dead.
Facebook exec Sheryl Sandberg said the social media site helped her get through the grief she felt after her husband, Dave Goldberg, died suddenly in May.
Fed up with the lack of Muslim voices in mainstream media, Amani Al-Khatahtbeh set out to create an alternative. Enter MuslimGirl.net, which Khatahtbeh aims to establish as the first mainstream media network by and for Muslim women.
India could have 657 million Internet users by 2019. In many cases, they'll stick with mobile, turning the desktop computer -- and its Web browsers -- into a relic
Plane manufacturers have come up with some interesting ideas. The latest: Turn cabins -- the part where you sit -- into detachable modules separate from the planes. Then mix and match 'em, and you save all kinds of time and money, Airbus says.
It has been 100 years since Albert Einstein presented his theory of general relativity to an audience of scientists. Virtually everyone has heard of Einstein and his theory, but few have any idea of what the theory actually is.
Thanks in large part to CEO Satya Nadella's cloud strategy, Microsoft is suddenly the cool kid on Wall Street once again. Could Nadella turn out to be Microsoft's best CEO ever?
The biggest cyberattacks, the ones that can blow up chemical tanks and burst dams, are kept secret by a law that shields U.S. corporations. They're kept in the dark forever.
Breakups in the age of social media can be rough. Facebook is testing a new feature that will help ease the pain, without forcing you to unfriend exes or delete past posts.
There is only one male northern white rhino left in the world. His name is Sudan, he's 42-years old -- practically geriatric in rhino terms. His sperm count is low and his hind legs are weak -- meaning he's in no position to mate.
What will buildings look like in the future? If this week's World Architecture Festival (WAF) is any indicator, the built environment will become more modular, multi-purpose and sustainable.
She was a glamorous Hollywood actress who romanced Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy and Jimmy Stewart onscreen and was hailed as "the world's most beautiful woman."
It's a lesson most female astronomers learn at some point in their careers when they face unwanted sexual behavior from professors, advisers or anyone who holds their future in their hands.
By Thom Patterson, video by Madeleine Stix and Nick Scott, CNN
I'm sitting in a gigantic Mack truck. Fifty feet away, a huge blimp nearly as long as a football field hovers in front of me, filling up the windshield.
A Harvard medical pioneer calls it "astounding" — an "incredible achievement" and a "quantum leap forward" in the battle against cancer, autism, Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.
A Bulova Chronograph worn by Apollo 15 flight commander Dave Scott while on the moon -- the only privately owned watch to go to the moon -- is hitting the auction block.