Deals and Steals: Pampering yourself
Tory Johnson is back with hot deals from brands we’ve partnered with that will help you pamper yourself.
Tory Johnson is back with hot deals from brands we’ve partnered with that will help you pamper yourself.
Listen up! Brands like Zepp, Jabra, Signia and Horizon are delivering some of the best inexpensive hearing aids on the market.
Prime Day is confirmed to be kicking off sometime in July. Here's all the info we have, along with super deals you can shop early.
Apple's newly released laptop is powerful but ultra-portable — it's just half an inch thick.
Google is embarrassed about its AI Overviews, too. Google -- a company whose name is synonymous with searching the web -- whose brand focuses on "organizing the world's information" and putting it at user's fingertips -- actually wrote in a blog post that "some odd, inaccurate or unhelpful AI Overviews certainly did show up." The admission of failure, penned by Google VP and Head of Search Liz Reid, seems a testimony as to how the drive to mash AI technology into everything has now somehow made Google Search worse.
It may be stealthy, but its HEPA filter means business: 'Helped make my apartment a better place,' says one fan.
Late Friday afternoon, a time window companies usually reserve for unflattering disclosures, AI startup Hugging Face said that its security team earlier this week detected "unauthorized access" to Spaces, Hugging Face's platform for creating, sharing and hosting AI models and resources. In a blog post, Hugging Face said that the intrusion related to Spaces secrets, or the private pieces of information that act as keys to unlock protected resources like accounts, tools and dev environments, and that it has "suspicions" some secrets could've been accessed by a third party without authorization. As a precaution, Hugging Face has revoked a number of tokens in those secrets.
Reviewers over 50 say this formula transforms their skin — scoop it up at the lowest price it's been all year.
These picks come with one or two-day shipping, and some digital gifts can be sent straight to his inbox.
At least that's the tag many are using to describe the new user interface for Instagram's X competitor, Threads, which resembles the column-based format of Twitter's old app TweetDeck (now X Pro). Two weeks after first testing the functionality that allows Threads users to pin columns to the home screen of its desktop web app, Instagram head Adam Mosseri announced on Thursday that this alternative view was starting to roll out globally -- just in time for everyone to discuss the hottest political news of the year: the Trump verdict. The new user interface option positions Threads as a more serious X rival for those in search of real-time news and information, as it notably allows users to work around Meta's ill-thought-out decision to distance itself from political discussions across Instagram's platforms.
Former Activision studio Toys for Bob partners with Xbox to publish its first game as an indie. This is something of a homecoming, as Microsoft owns Activision.