Categories Uncategorized Hands-on with Apple Vision Pro: This is not a VR headset Post author By Ars Technica Post date June 6, 2023 This was the best headset demo I’ve ever seen. But there’s room for improvement.
Categories Uncategorized Google Workspace users can now log in without a password, thanks to passkeys Post author By Ars Technica Post date June 6, 2023 After the consumer launch last month, businesses can ditch their Google passwords.
Categories Uncategorized Internet users love fiber service—too bad you probably can’t get it Post author By Ars Technica Post date June 6, 2023 Fiber beats cable and everything else in ACSI customer satisfaction scores.
Categories Uncategorized They plugged GPT-4 into Minecraft—and unearthed new potential for AI Post author By Ars Technica Post date June 3, 2023 A bot plays the video game by tapping the text generator to pick up new skills.
Categories Uncategorized Google’s Android and Chrome extensions are a very sad place. Here’s why Post author By Ars Technica Post date June 2, 2023 It was a bad week for millions of people who rely on Google for apps and Chrome extensions.
Categories Uncategorized Some Google Pixel Watches are falling apart Post author By Ars Technica Post date June 2, 2023 Several users report the back of the Pixel Watch just falls off after a short time.
Categories Uncategorized Oppo Find N2 review: Beautiful hardware that Android just can’t deal with Post author By Ars Technica Post date June 2, 2023 Square-screened Android devices don't play well with the app ecosystem.
Categories Uncategorized Millions of PC motherboards were sold with a firmware backdoor Post author By Ars Technica Post date June 1, 2023 Hidden code in many Gigabyte motherboards invisibly and insecurely downloads programs.
Categories Uncategorized AI-expanded album cover artworks go viral thanks to Photoshop’s Generative Fill Post author By Ars Technica Post date May 31, 2023 Generative Fill uses AI to dream up larger versions of famous artwork.
Categories Uncategorized Reddit’s API pricing results in shocking $20 million-a-year bill for Apollo Post author By Ars Technica Post date May 31, 2023 Apollo developer says pricing isn't "remotely reasonable."