A Robot Is Sprinting at You. Claude or Grok at the Wheel?
Claude plays it safe; Grok goes rogue. What that means when machines start driving real decisions.
Claude plays it safe; Grok goes rogue. What that means when machines start driving real decisions.
AWS is running Firecracker microVMs inside EC2 instances to launch browsers in under a second. The trick? Stripping the virtual machine down to almost nothing.
Instagram's algorithm now prioritizes AI-generated content over friends. We explain why this happened and what it means for you.
Your Linux terminal has a hidden HTTP client built into the kernel. No curl needed. Here's why that matters right now.
Real computers are for real work, and I'm done pretending phones can replace them.
Sony's PS6 reveal breaks 30 years of gaming hardware tradition. It is not about power. It is about a bet on the edge.
Why traditional midterm polling is failing—and the one data point that matters more than approval ratings.
Most meeting transcription apps record everything. Trace lets you flag moments mid-call. That changes everything.
Nintendo's forgotten office accessory turned a gaming handheld into a PDA. It bombed, but it predicted our future.
Andy Jassy's private talks with US officials reportedly triggered an investigation into Anthropic—revealing Big Tech's real AI playbook.
Why the 'every frame is a painting' era is over, and what replaced it.
Apple quietly rewrote the TrueType hinting engine in Swift—here’s why that matters for every font on your iPhone.
How to set up a local coding agent on macOS without the cloud, using open-source tools and a few terminal tricks.
A look at NVIDIA stock split and what it means.
AMD left a critical RCE flaw unfixed for months. Here's the real story behind the silence.
Netflix's top 10 list this week proves the algorithm is dying—and that's a good thing.
Tomorrow’s Starship launch isn’t just a test—it’s SpaceX’s last chance to prove the lunar landing architecture works before NASA’s deadline.
The smallest Linux distribution now powers most of the internet. Here's why 3.24.0 changes the game.
Apple’s latest monster is absurdly powerful for today’s apps and games. That overkill is exactly what makes it a device for tomorrow.
Why thousands of designers are ditching modern tools for software that's older than they are.