Investigators are using a tracking device called a "signal sniffer" that can detect signals emitted from electronic devices as the search for Nancy Guthrie continues in its third week. David Kennedy, ...
(NewsNation) — Investigators are using a signal sniffer device in the search for Nancy Guthrie, in hopes of detecting a signal from her pacemaker. Guthrie’s pacemaker disconnected from her phone in ...
As the search for "Today Show" host Savannah Guthrie's mother, Nancy, enters its third week, new evidence in the form of a glove was found near her home. The family has been ruled out as suspects in ...
Authorities are attempting to use the device to detect the signal on Nancy's pacemaker over two weeks after she was reported missing Savannah Guthrie/Instagram Nancy Guthrie was reported missing on ...
Authorities are using a "signal sniffer" as the search for Nancy Guthrie enters its third week, according to reports. The tracking tool has been attached to a helicopter in an attempt to detect ...
Fourteen years after the last titles in the .hack series, CyberConnect2 is celebrating the studio's 30th anniversary by unveiling .hack//Z.E.R.O., also known as "Project Dusk." With no release date ...
It's developer CyberConnect2's 30th birthday, and to celebrate this milestone, the studio has announced .hack//Z.E.R.O., a brand new installment in the long-running .hack series over which the company ...
Authorities deploy bluetooth 'signal sniffer' in search of Nancy Guthrie's pacemaker Fox News correspondent Alicia Acuna reports the latest developments in the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie as the ...
As the search for Nancy Guthrie entered its third week, authorities reportedly resorted to using a high-tech Bluetooth scanner in hopes of detecting her pacemaker signal. According to NewsNation, law ...
Microsoft has warned that information-stealing attacks are "rapidly expanding" beyond Windows to target Apple macOS environments by leveraging cross-platform languages like Python and abusing trusted ...
If you’ve had a cold recently, you know the drill: You drag yourself to the store and prepare to spend the next four days scanning row after row of cold meds. By the time you find the meds that fit ...