Amid rumours of Apple planning an iPhone mini for release later in the year, Samsung has released a "mini" version of its market-leading Galaxy S III.
A sales war could determine whether Apple, Google or Amazon will dominate the fastest-growing area of personal computing.
From high-end smartphones to feature phones, Arthur Goldstuck declares his choice for the best phones of 2012.
A US judge has denied Apple’s request for a permanent injunction against Samsung’s smartphones.
A Steve Jobs biopic starring Ashton Kutcher, "jOBS", will be the closing night film at the 2013 Sundance film festival.
South Africans can now purchase music and music videos in local currency from Apple’s iTunes store, and use the popular Match service.
Smartphones and tablets powered by Google’s Android software are eating into Apple’s turf by feeding appetites for innovation and low prices.
Two of the world’s biggest technology companies may be heading for a divorce as rumours circulate that Apple may abandon Intel chips.
Britain’s Pearson and Germany’s Bertelsmann are to merge their publishing units, Penguin and Random House, to recover ground lost to Amazon and Apple.
Apple has opened its biggest Asian store yet in Beijing, with hordes of shoppers descending on the three-floor complex.
The first decline in personal computer sales in a decade has prompted analysts to ask whether tablets will kill the PC, writes Alistair Fairweather.
Apple chief executive Tim Cook has apologised to customers frustrated with glaring errors in its new maps service.
Apple sold out of its latest smartphone, with more than five million iPhone 5 sales in the three days after it hit stores.
It’s the naysayers vs the sales figures, features vs functionality and everyone else vs Apple. Alistair Fairweather unpacks the new iPhone 5.
Apple is expected to secure its acquisition of a company specialising in fingerprint scanning days after the next iPhone goes on sale.
Microsoft may have stolen a march on its smartphone rivals by putting social connectivity at the heart of the user experience.
Apple has filed a new patent infringement action in the US against Samsung, alleging that it’s continuing to steal its technology.
You’d have to be an idiot not to see that Samsung stole from Apple. But the fallout is fun to watch, writes Khaya Dlanga.
Samsung has hit back at Apple after a $12-billion drop in its market value in the wake of its loss to the iPhone maker in a high-profile court battle.
How can you tell when a tech market has fully matured? When companies start suing each other for patent infringements, writes Alistair Fairweather.
Apple’s victory in a landmark US patent case against Samsung could reshape the mobile sector and slow the momentum of Google and its Android system.
A report from research firm IDC says there were four Android phones for every iPhone shipped in the second quarter of 2012.
Apple has released the latest version of its Mac operating system, dubbed OS X Mountain Lion.
It’s a busy time for corporate earnings as big-name companies, including Apple, Facebook and Barclays provide trading updates in the week ahead.
Vendors of Apple products in Iran scoffed at media reports that the consumer technology giant was banning US sales to customers of Iranian background.
Microsoft has succumbed to Apple envy and launched its version of the iPad. Charles Arthur reports.
Abuses continue at Foxconn despite warnings from Apple, a rights group says, with staff enduring gruelling workloads and humiliating punishments.
Facebook is preparing to take on Google and Apple’s domination of the smartphone market by creating its own handset, codenamed Buffy.
Apple’s iPad outmuscled its Android-powered tablet computer rivals in early 2012, in a global market suffering from post-holiday hangover.
Apple and five publishers have been sued by the United States’s justice department for conspiring to fix the prices of e-books.
Pupils from various schools have told the <i>M&G</i> iPads assist the learning process by making it more interactive.
Apple’s Tim Cook fulfilled a desire of investors by initiating a quarterly dividend and share buyback that will pay out $45-billion over three years.