Something to Tech About: Biometrics and unlocking your phone
In this edition of Something to Tech About, Ron Smiley informed us why your thumb might be all wrong when it comes to unlocking your phone.
In this edition of Something to Tech About, Ron Smiley informed us why your thumb might be all wrong when it comes to unlocking your phone.
Other sectors have rallied on AI demand, raising the stakes for the chipmaker's latest quarterly update.
The tech startup Humane is reportedly seeking a buyer for its business and is hoping to sell for anywhere between $750 million and $1 billion.
Microsoft wants to put its Copilot everywhere. It's only a matter of time before Microsoft renames its annual Build developer conference to Microsoft Copilot. Hopefully, some of those upcoming events will be a bit less lackluster than this year's edition, which lacks any real standout announcements after Microsoft already announced its new Arm-based laptops and AI features in Windows 11 at a separate event the day before Build.
Uber and Lyft drivers in Minnesota will see higher pay thanks to a deal between the state and the country's two largest ride-hailing companies. The upshot: a new law that gives some protections to drivers while placing limits on state government. The bill, which Governor Tim Walz has supported publicly and is expected to sign, stipulates that starting January 1, 2025, drivers will be entitled to earn at least $1.28 per mile and $0.31 per minute.
Stay dry with this half-off deal on a Flash Stretch Rain Jacket from REI.
An Apple iPad for $80 off is calling our name, as is a sleek stick vac marked down by over 50%. That's just for starters.
Kickstarter has finally changed its rules to allow financial pledges and backing after a campaign has closed. This has been in testing for the past few months.
Microsoft debuted a litany of new AI offerings as part of its Build developer conference as its fight with Google and Amazon continues to heat up.
“A lot has changed. It's so hard to get noticed now,” Short told Yahoo Entertainment in a new interview.
A new coalition called Tech Against Scams is bringing companies together to fight online fraud.
Hosting scams on your platform is bad for business, which is why on Tuesday, a group of major tech companies including Match Group, Meta, Coinbase and others are jointly launching a new coalition to take on online fraud across dating apps, social media and crypto. The new coalition, Tech Against Scams, will work to find ways to fight back against the tools used by scammers and to better educate the public against financial scams.
Decentralized social networks aren't immune to botnet-driven spam, as a recent spam attack on Bluesky demonstrates. Earlier this month, a flood of posts reading "remember to always vote Trump" showed up on Bluesky's network posted by accounts with random names and default avatars. The spam didn't originate on Bluesky, though.
After his exit from hit series "Yellowstone," Kevin Costner is turning his attention to his four-part passion project "Horizon," which made its debut at the Cannes Film Festival.
Also on our cheat sheet: Spring savings on Dyson, Salomon and Vitamix, plus other early Memorial Day deals.
Not even LeBron can say he's launched a signature basketball collection with Wilson.
It’s criminal that there’s been no way to play Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door for over a decade.
While many climate investors focus their efforts on breakthrough, deep-tech solutions, Patrick Sheehan at ETF Partners has other ideas. “I’ve actually got nothing against carbon capture and storage, apart from the fact it’s probably going to be commercialized too late,” he told TechCrunch. Instead, Sheehan and his colleagues are diving into more software-centric companies that promise to still move the needle.
ASUS isn’t sitting out the rush of AI-enhanced Copilot+ PCs. The company’s Vivobook S 15 has Windows AI features like memory assistant Recall, the image generator Cocreator, and several ASUS-exclusive AI apps.
Microsoft's new Surface Pro, its first hybrid Copilot+ PC tablet, doesn't look much different than its predecessors.
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