Your smartphone, as it turns out, is covered with 10 times as many bacteria as a toilet seat, according to a 2012 study from ...
Bacteria and viruses move easily between surfaces like the ATM machine or the pole on the bus, where they can live anywhere from hours to more than a week, and your phone. And once germs reach your ...
iPhones go everywhere. They're always in our pockets, on kitchen counters, and every now and then, they end up in a bathroom somewhere. So, wiping your iPhone on your shirt and calling it a day may ...
If calls and media sound muffled, your phone's speakers might be dirty. Here is a safe, step-by-step cleaning routine that uses basic supplies.
Your phone is practically an extension of your body at this point. It goes with you to the office, the gym, restaurants, and yes, even the bathroom. But for something that gets handled constantly, ...
The World Health Organization has plenty of details on how you should properly wash your hands to protect yourself against infection and to prevent the spread of flu and coronavirus. But if we wash ...
How often do you pick up your phone, let others touch or use your phone? What about how there are more than 25,000 germs live on your phone? More importantly, the coronavirus can live on your phone?
Think twice before wiping down your devices with Windex and paper towels.
SAN FRANCISCO -- While the Centers for Disease Control says the main way for people to become infected through the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) is through person-to-person contact, there is ...
Your smartphone is certainly a marvel of technology, providing you immediate aid in everything you do, while still fitting in your pocket. It's no longer something you use just to make calls, and for ...