AI adoption is exploding in creative work but not in security
Google search data reveals creatives are racing ahead with AI tools in design, audio, and writing, while security professionals remain skeptical.
Google search data reveals creatives are racing ahead with AI tools in design, audio, and writing, while security professionals remain skeptical.
Google has launched Flight Deals, an AI powered tool in Google Flights that uses natural language to find affordable trips in seconds.
HTC is back with the VIVE Eagle, a lightweight pair of AI-powered smart glasses that blend style with practical features like music playback, voice control, photography, and real-time translation. While I’m skeptical about its chances against Meta Frames, I’m still rooting for HTC to make a comeback.
Google is spending $9B on Oklahoma AI and cloud expansion. The company calls it a win for innovation… but it might be locking in its dominance.
Fantasy football is becoming a proving ground for AI, but I can’t imagine letting it make my decisions. Where’s the fun in that?
Microsoft has unveiled Dion, a new open-source optimizer that could make massive AI models faster and cheaper to train by using low rank orthonormal updates.
Gmail, Google Calendar, and Google Contacts integration arrives in ChatGPT Pro with GPT-5, making life easier but raising privacy concerns.
The United States remains the top AI powerhouse in 2025 with unmatched computing capacity, but other nations are quickly stepping up their game.
I finally got my hands on GPT-5 and it is far better than the online complaints suggest. Here is why the critics are wrong.
Google is rolling out an AI-powered version of Google Finance in the U.S. with upgraded chart tools, real-time data, and a smarter way to research the markets.
Guitar Center is using AI to make shopping for gear more like jamming with a personal tone expert. Its new Rig Advisor tool delivers artist-inspired suggestions, comparisons, and inventory details right from your phone.
OpenAI’s GPT-5 is officially here, offering faster answers, better reasoning, and fewer hallucinations. But is it actually useful for real work?