Alphabet Inc Class C

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Apple is planning to begin accepting smartphones that use the Android platform as trade-ins on new iPhones.
Apple's success this quarter will turn much more on iPhone sales than the launch of the Apple Watch or early demand for it.
Wikimedia CommonsGoogle Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) has made a very small disclosure after the close, The internet search giant disclosed in an SEC filing that its Chief Financial Officer was announcing...
Timex, America's iconic watch brand known for "it takes a licking and keeps on ticking," has launched a smartwatch as it tries to elbow into a market that presumably will be dominated by Apple.
With every major tech company in the world chasing part of the cloud computing market, what are they fighting for? Close to $300 billion.
24/7 Wall St. has identified nine solid companies that are on very stable ground but that just refuse to pay dividends to their shareholders.
No single company has enough followers on Twitter to crack the list of the top 50 most followed. Google leads the list at number 103.
When Apple reported fourth-quarter iPhone sales of more than 74 million units worldwide, the company overtook rival Samsung Electronics as the share leader in the smartphone market.
Every report we see on smartphone operating systems puts Android at the top of list. Where it counts -- the bottom line -- Apple is picking up all the marbles.
In what has to be good news for large smartphone manufacturers like Samsung, smartphone ownership rose to 2 billion last year.
More than a third of that total of more than 2.8 million portable devices are used for gaming: more than a billion in fact.
A new research note from Jefferies makes the case that it is time for stocks with international exposure to begin to outperform.
Google was one of the worst-performing huge tech company stocks over the past year, but in 2015 its shares have made a turnaround.
Social media scrapbooker Pinterest is in talks with investors to raise $500 million in a round of funding, according to the Wall Street Journal.
The Federal Aviation Administration has proposed a regulation framework for unmanned aircraft systems that could scuttle Amazon.com's plan to use drones to deliver packages.