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PC / Tech. > Unavoidable
Monday November 3, 2025. 12:30 AM
PLUS: Cyber-exec admits selling secrets to Russia; LastPass isn't checking to see if you're dead; Nation-state backed Windows malware; and more Infosec in brief Australia’s Signals Directorate (ASD) last Friday warned that attackers are installing an implant named...
Sunday November 2, 2025. 09:34 PM
OpenAI 'hasn't yet turned a profit,' notes Wall Street Journal business columnist Tim Higgins. 'Its annual revenue is 2% of Amazon.com's sales. 'Its future is uncertain beyond the hope of ushering in a godlike artificial intelligence that might help cure cancer and transform ...
Slashdot reader BrianFagioli summarizes some news from Nerds.xyz: Creative Technology has launched Sound Blaster Re:Imagine, a modular, Linux-powered audio hub that reimagines the classic PC sound card for the modern age. The device acts as both a high-end digital-to-analog...
San Francisco's local newscast ABC7 runs a consumer advocacy segment called '7 on Your Side'. They received a disturbing call for help from Dave Dornlas, treasurer of a nonprofit supporting a local library: GoFundMe has taken upon itself to create 'nonprofit pages' for 1.4...
'Amazon has deployed Rivian's electric delivery vans in Canada for the first time,' reports CleanTechnica, with 50 now deployed in the Vancouver area. Amazon's director of Global Fleet and Products says there's now over 35,000 electric vans deployed globally — and that they'v...
'People are creating 'dumb homes,'' the VP of research at the Global Wellness Institute, tells the web site Axios. Some are swapping NASA-style setups for old-fashioned buttons, switches and knobs. Others are designing digital detox corners — all part of a bigger 'analog...
'It's been hard for me to understand why Atlas exists,' writes MIT Technology Review. ' Who is this browser for, exactly? Who is its customer? And the answer I have come to there is that Atlas is for OpenAI. The real customer, the true end user of Atlas, is not the person...
Live TV is far from dead, but it looks a little bit different these days. These are our favorite services.
This motorized office chair has a built-in battery that powers a spinal massage when you need a break from the screen.
CBS News investigates what happened when police thought they'd tracked down a 'porch pirate' who'd stolen a package — and accused an innocent woman. 'You know why I'm here,' the police sergeant tells Chrisanna Elser. 'You know we have cameras in that town...' 'It went right...
Aura’s new digital photo frame changes the game with a fully wireless device and E Ink screen.
Where to lock in, power down, and actually enjoy your business trip.
“Anomalous” heat flow, which at first appears to violate the second law of thermodynamics, gives physicists a way to detect quantum entanglement without destroying it.
Meta’s new display-less smart glasses are quite good, but the vibes are off.
We dive into the pros and cons of cold plunging to see whether this popular wellness trend really is worth the chill.
The venue where the first game of the World Cup will be held on June 11 next year is a legendary piece of world soccer history. It's getting a new field, a new roof, and countless modern upgrades.
Millions will set their clocks back an hour tonight for Daylight Saving Time — only to set them forward an hour six months later. But does anyone like doing this, asks Yahoo News: A recent AP-NORC poll found that about half of the American public, 47%, oppose the current...
No datacenters required Fortytwo, a Silicon Valley startup, was founded last year based on the idea that a decentralized swarm of small AI models running on personal computers offers scaling and cost advantages over centralized AI services.…
'We've spent the last year rebuilding major components of our system,' Cloudflare announced this week, 'and we've just slashed the latency of traffic passing through our network for millions of our customers,' (There's a 10ms cut in the median time to respond, plus a 25%...
The Wall Street Journal looks at swarm robotics, where no single robot is in charge, robots interact only with nearby robots — and the swarm accomplishes complex tasks through simple interactions. 'Researchers say this approach could excel where traditional robots fail, like...
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