Elon Musk is bringing the Silicon Valley mantra of "move fast and break things" to Washington. We might not like the result.
"Move fast and break things" was already a suspect idea in business. Now it's poised to wreck government, too.
CEOs' kudos for Trump’s win—and the silence of once-outspoken employees—is a clear sign of how much the tech world has ...
Macworld At the heart of every Apple device is an Apple processor. Apple has been using its own chips in its iPhones and ...
California's San Francisco Bay Area is still solidly blue — but less than it used to be.
Billionaire Peter Thiel credited Elon Musk's public support of Donald Trump with helping other tech leaders feel safe ...
Some tech start-ups and investors anticipate a golden era when Donald Trump returns to office, thanks to government contracts ...
At the GlobalFoundries Technology Summit 2024, the theme was “AI Everywhere” as AI has impacted everything from IoT to the ...
Marc Andreessen said Trump's victory was a relief from the "repression" he and other startup founders in the crypto space ...
While Paraguay might be on the lips of tech execs in Silicon Valley and East Asia, the country still has a lot of work to do ...
In San Jose, 4,000 proposed new apartments will use waste heat for their heat and hot water, significantly lowering energy ...
Private equity firm ZMC has announced via press release that it has acquired a controlling stake in Pure Wafer, the largest ...