Sony removed the tiltable screen from its new RX1R III full-frame compact camera to maintain similar dimensions to the previous model, despite adding numerous new features and charging $5,100 for the device, The Verge reports. The company increased the camera’s… Continue Reading →
It’s widely accepted conventional wisdom that when it comes to creative works—TV shows, films, music, books—consumers crave an optimal balance between novelty and familiarity. What we choose to consume and share with others, in turn, drives cultural evolution. But what… Continue Reading →
Photo by Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call via APThe Senate passed a $9 billion rescission bill yesterday. If you’re wondering what that means, you’re not alone. Rescission is a rarely used mechanism where the executive branch goes back to Congress asking… Continue Reading →
Ars Technica’s community is—in our biased opinion—second to none online. For more than 26 years, readers have enabled and inspired our work, creating a community with an amazing signal-to-noise ratio. To aid these efforts, we’re updating our Posting Guidelines to… Continue Reading →
The Trump administration yesterday sued three Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) board members who refused to leave their offices after President Trump fired them. On April 28, the White House informed Democratic board members Laura Ross, Thomas Rothman, and Diane… Continue Reading →
Daniel Stenberg, creator of the curl utility, is considering ending its bug bounty program due to a surge in low-quality, AI-generated reports that are overwhelming the small volunteer team. Despite attempts to discourage AI-assisted submissions, these reports now make up… Continue Reading →
Comments Link to original post https://blog.cloudflare.com/cloudflare-1-1-1-1-incident-on-july-14-2025/ from Teknoids NewsRead the original story
xAI’s first AI companions on the Grok app are a lustful anime girl and a homicidal panda. Link to original post https://techcrunch.com/2025/07/15/of-course-groks-ai-companions-want-to-have-sex-and-burn-down-schools/ from Teknoids NewsRead the original story
For more than two decades, hard drive manufacturer Seagate has been experimenting with heat-assisted magnetic recording (HAMR) technology for increasing hard drive density—drives that use tiny lasers to heat up and expand parts of the drive platter, write data, and… Continue Reading →
BrianFagioli shares a report from NERDS.xyz: Blender 4.5 has arrived and it’s a long-term support release. That means users get two full years of updates and bug fixes, making it a smart choice for anyone looking for stability in serious… Continue Reading →
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