Categories Uncategorized Vanpowers City Vanture e-bike review: Sleek, streamlined, and hard to define Post author By Ars Technica Post date February 5, 2023 There aren't many e-bikes like it—partly because you can build it yourself.
Categories Uncategorized Samsung Pro SSD reliability questioned as longtime partner shifts to Sabrent Post author By Ars Technica Post date February 3, 2023 Custom PC-builder Puget says it's had issues with the Pro line since the last gen.
Categories Uncategorized When will United Launch Alliance’s Vulcan rocket fly? Post author By Ars Technica Post date February 3, 2023 The Peregrine lander is ready for launch. Sort of.
Categories Uncategorized Until further notice, think twice before using Google to download software Post author By Ars Technica Post date February 3, 2023 Over the past month, Google has been outgunned by malvertisers with new tricks.
Categories Uncategorized After 16 years of freeware, Dwarf Fortress creators get their $7M payday Post author By Ars Technica Post date February 2, 2023 "When we pass from this world, you will be the reason we are remembered."
Categories Uncategorized Razer’s $280 mouse is covered in gaping holes Post author By Ars Technica Post date February 2, 2023 With a magnesium-alloy exoskeleton, the Viper Mini SE weighs 1.73 ounces.
Categories Uncategorized Enter the hunter satellites preparing for space war Post author By Ars Technica Post date February 2, 2023 Startup plans to launch prototype pursuit satellites on a SpaceX flight later this year.
Categories Uncategorized (Most of) AMD’s gaming-centric Ryzen 7000 X3D CPUs launch Feb. 28 Post author By Ars Technica Post date February 1, 2023 7800X3D launches in April for $449, while 7900X3D and 7950X3D are coming soon.
Categories Uncategorized Paper: Stable Diffusion “memorizes” some images, sparking privacy concerns Post author By Ars Technica Post date February 1, 2023 Out of 300,000 high-probability images tested, researchers found a 0.03% memorization rate.
Categories Uncategorized Samsung Galaxy S23 is official, with special-edition Qualcomm chip Post author By Ars Technica Post date February 1, 2023 Samsung dumps the Exynos SoC internationally and gets a higher-binned Qualcomm chip.