Home is where the smart lights inexplicably stop working.
The internet's age-gating era is on its way.
C'mon Google, let's make things interesting.
Lots of Google Home users say they can't even turn their lights on or off right now.
Google launches have a tendency to be leak-prone, but this is next level.
Armed with new data showing AI actually boosts search volume, the tech giant has turned a perceived threat into a powerful new weapon.
Not much left to the imagination now.
With an $85 billion war chest, Google is waging an infrastructure arms race to own the physical foundation of the AI revolution.
ChatGPT is already handling one sixth of Google’s daily search volume, and Sam Altman says he’s just getting started.
Fidji Simo, the former Instacart CEO, is betting she can turn AI from a luxury into a utility that closes the gap between the haves and have-nots.
Waymo’s robotaxis are fully driverless and expanding fast, while Tesla’s service is still limited and invite-only. The gap is bigger than you think.
The slop in search will continue until you give up on Google.
You might not ever become a homeowner, but that doesn't mean you can't make your not-a-house as smart as possible.
Sure, but let's see these models medal on a 100-yard dash.
I mean sure, why not?
Perplexity's CEO lays out a near-future where entire white-collar roles are automated by a new generation of AI browsers, transforming a week's worth of work into a single prompt.
The most powerful artificial intelligence company in the world just admitted it needs help from one of its biggest rivals to stay afloat.
The more these models 'think,' the harder to understand they become.
Google's Pixel 10 family of phones (and likely a new foldable) and more are coming before iPhone season hits.
For years, Google's empire was a mess of disconnected gadgets. A new plan to merge Android and ChromeOS aims to finally build a true Apple killer, and the stakes have never been higher