CrossOver 26 takes another swing at Windows games on Mac and Linux
CrossOver 26 pushes Windows game compatibility further on Mac and Linux with updated Wine components, graphics improvements, and support for newer titles.
CrossOver 26 pushes Windows game compatibility further on Mac and Linux with updated Wine components, graphics improvements, and support for newer titles.
One in four Americans has encountered a fake profile or AI bot on dating apps. Romance scams are no longer rare… they are routine.
OpenAI says ads in ChatGPT will not affect answers or privacy, but once money enters the chat, skepticism is warranted.
Baseus has moved its X1 Pro AI dual-tracking security camera from Kickstarter to Amazon, putting its solar-powered, subscription-free approach to the test.
Sushi is live on Solana, leaning on Jupiter for routing and execution. The move makes strategic sense, but it raises familiar questions about whether multichain DeFi actually delivers meaningful benefits to traders.
NextSense Smartbuds promise to improve sleep by reading brain activity and responding in real time, but brain-sensing earbuds raise plenty of unanswered questions.
The AV-Comparatives security survey 2026 shows Windows 11 still dominating desktops while Linux gains credibility and paid security software remains the trusted choice.
Linux 6.19 arrived right on schedule on Super Bowl Sunday, delivering a low drama kernel release while Linus Torvalds prepares for the jump to version 7.0.
A reported $6 million bitcoin ransom in the Savannah Guthrie case is reigniting an uncomfortable debate about cryptocurrency, crime, and whether digital currencies should be banned.
New York lawmakers are pushing a bill that would freeze new large data centers for years while the state studies their impact. Supporters call it cautious. Critics say it sends investment, jobs, and innovation straight out of New York.
Canon is celebrating 30 years of its PowerShot camera line with a limited edition G7 X Mark III that looks great, even if the anniversary logo is easy to miss.
Google is warning that quantum computing could crack today’s encryption, and attackers may already be planning for that future.