This week's top tech stories dealt with objects in the sky and AI going too far.
The AI Pin maker wants a billion dollars for the company, and Microsoft unveils its AI vision with Copilot+.
To make matters worse, programmers in the study would often overlook the misinformation.
Google's purchase of HubSpot is in line with its goal to 'take market share from Microsoft,' according to one analyst
Copilot+ PCs took the spotlight, but software like Recall plus Copilot plugins are going to make Windows 11 even more AI-centric.
Recall can take screenshots of everything a user does on the company's new AI-powered laptops
Bell worked on the first successful minicomputers, paving the way for the PC revolution.
The new feature on Copilot+ PCs will take over a chunk of your hard drive—and it has no qualms about screenshotting your passwords.
The company will reward your leap of faith with a handful of exclusive AI software features.
There are tons of new Snapdragon X Elite-powered PCs, plus a new Surface Pro 2-in-1 that wants to be your everything device for supercharged AI.
The new Yoga Slim 7x and ThinkPad T14s feature Qualcomm's ARM-based Snapdragon X Elite.
Reports say Apple will have its own in-house AI to improve Siri, and the makers of ChatGPT are working on a chatbot for iPhones.
Nearly 20 years of goodwill with Sly Cooper and Infamous finally paid off with the studio's foray into samurai action.
The pricey Proteus accessibility controller lets you map any set of buttons on any side of a series of cubes.
About half a million customers of the Australian fund UniSuper were locked out of their accounts for a week
From homework help to scam detection, Google introduced new features to Gemini AI on the first day of Google I/O 2024.
This hardly used Switch feature is getting dropped.
Dario and Daniela Amodei made the case that Anthropic's AI is the best on the market.
Microsoft will build a new AI data center in Wisconsin, on the same land where Foxconn previously invested
A vast majority of the world's software runs on open-source code. Can it be secured?