Walt Mossberg reviews a new free service that creates a detailed physical and digital profile of your medical and personal information to be stored online in case of an emergency.
The Stitcher App's smart station feature delivers audio content from your favorite radio shows, and shows you haven't discovered yet, to your device.
Rip those discs, clear the clutter and finally join the future of music.
Apple brings a new addition to the MacBook family: The MacBook Pro with Retina Display is the first MacBook Pro to rely solely on flash storage and has an improved processor and graphics.
Scientists at Duke have built an experimental camera with more than 30 times the data-collecting capacity of today's best consumer digital devices.
Financial damage aside, the greatest risk for users might be loss of privacy.
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Samsung's new Galaxy S III Android phone is a strong competitor for the iPhone but lacks any game-changing capabilities, writes Walter S. Mossberg.
Managers are fighting an epidemic of grammar gaffes in the workplace, where looseness with language can create bad impressions with clients, ruin marketing materials and cause communications errors.
The latest generation of services promises to help you invest and budget better—but they have their downsides, too.
Facebook and videogames may be sleep's worst enemy, but technology can also be bedtime's best friend.
The lamentation that "Everyone's a critic" has never been more true. Orchestras, no less than pizza joints, have been under pressure to use Twitter, Facebook and YouTube to promote and engage. But promote and engage whom?
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Google redesigned its PC operating system, Chrome OS, but the new version still doesn't shine.
Which 3-D movies are worth it? Consulting with critics, special effects experts and industry executives yielded these results.
Sens. John Kerry and John McCain proposed legislation that would establish a "privacy bill of rights" to protect people from the increasingly invasive commercial data-collection industry.
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Big advertisers, ad agencies and ad networks are working with Internet-browser makers on a "do-not-track" system, a shift from the industry's previous skepticism about such a tool.
From a handy way to store a range of passwords to an application that will help keep track of ongoing alcohol consumption, The Wall Street Journal Europe presents 10 apps you can't live without.
"Augmented reality" is the latest buzz technology to grip the digital world. The commercial opportunities for companies that embrace it are vast, even if not immediately obvious.
It's not about bigger or lighter. That's been done for decades. Instead, your next racket will measure how well you play the game.
New headphones, traditional looks.
Ditch those file cabinets and boxes in your attic. New online options make it possible to securely store your most important files remotely.
As with much on the Internet, the tools range from cutting-edge to useless. Here's a guide.
Are you a mom or dad who's guilty of "oversharenting"? The cure may be to not share at all.
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