Latest Technology News
I cracked open a ‘1,000W’ portable charger after it failed me in minutes – and wished I hadn’t
Meet the ‘too good to be true’ portable charger. Here’s my general buying advice for these types of products.
Read MoreAmazon just slashed SSD prices for Prime Day – these are the 5 best deals I’ve found
I track SSD deals, and found huge markdowns from top brands like WD, Samsung, and more ahead of Amazon Prime Day.
Read MoreI just saved $180 a year on my Google AI plan without losing my Drive storage – here’s how
Google AI Plus is cheaper now, and may be the easiest way to reduce my Google One bill without giving uo storage or AI.
Read MoreLiquid Glass for Linux? PearOS makes another Mac move – how it looks now
PearOS has been promising to become the MacOS of Linux for some time now, and the latest release just might deliver.
Read MoreAnthropic’s new Claude Fable 5 is the same base model as Mythos but with guardrails attached
Claude Fable 5 brings Mythos-class AI coding power to general users, but with cybersecurity guardrails, fallback models, and pricing that could make developers think twice.
Read MoreI used ChatGPT to build a free PDF editor because I didn’t trust it to change my files – it’s glorious
The smartest way to use AI may not be letting it touch your files, but asking it to write software that handles them safely.
Read MoreMy 7 essential laptop-bag items after decades of working remotely
Have gear, will travel: Here are the gadgets and trinkets powering my mobile office for the rest of the year.
Read MoreThe biggest announcements at Apple WWDC 2026 – including Siri, iOS 27 dev beta, and more
We’re reporting live from Apple Park to cover the company’s developer conference. Here are the latest updates.
Read MoreApple’s new Siri AI comes with hidden costs that power users should know of
Apple unveiled a revamped Siri at WWDC, but is it enough to put the company back in the AI race?
Read MoreThe two biggest iOS 27 features at WWDC for me had nothing to do with Siri AI
Enhancements to foundational technologies are always welcomed – and potentially more useful – than the flashier ones.
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