Blake has over a decade of experience writing for the web, with a focus on mobile phones, where he covered the smartphone boom of the 2010s and the broader tech scene. When he's not in front of a ...
Anthropic’s Claude is launching a wild new tool that lets you ask AI on your phone to remotely control your computer to execute tasks. A new feature in Claude Cowork and Claude Code will allow the AI ...
Alienware is determined to bring OLEDs to the masses, and the Alienware 27 240Hz QD-OLED display is priced at an extremely ...
Arabian Post on MSN
Microsoft pushes Surface into pricier territory
Microsoft has lifted prices across its Surface hardware range, making its premium laptops and tablets significantly more expensive as a global memory shortage ripples through the personal-computer ...
I've discovered that the updated PlayStation Portal is a smart way to enjoy PS5 games without emptying my wallet due to the ...
David Nield is a technology journalist from Manchester in the U.K. who has been writing about gadgets and apps for more than 20 years. He has a bachelor's degree in English Literature from Durham ...
Anthropic’s AI assistant Claude has taken a notable step into everyday office work with the launch of new computer-controlling capabilities. The latest update was revealed through a demo video shared ...
IEEE Spectrum on MSN
AI models trained on physics are changing engineering
Large physics models are increasingly used to bypass simulation ...
Anthropic is trialling a feature that lets users send prompts to Claude from a smartphone. Claude will complete the task on its own on a person's computer. Anthropic's product underscores its push ...
Anthropic is joining the increasingly crowded field of companies with AI agents that can take direct control of your local computer desktop. The company has announced that Claude Code (and its more ...
In 2024, as Anthropic suggested at the time, the feature wasn’t really ready for productive use — it was genuinely crazy to watch work but also slow, error-prone, and prone to quickly losing track of ...
No, this isn’t science fiction. Real-life researchers taught a dish of roughly 200,000 living human brain cells to play the classic 1990s computer game “Doom.” Experts at Cortical Labs, an Australian ...
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