A new survey by KFF, an independent health policy research firm, suggests that people who rely on social media and AI chatbots for health advice are more likely to believe false claims about vaccines.
In the Q&A, Sony president Hideaki Nishino, studio business CEO Hermen Hulst, and senior vice president of finance Lynn Azar ...
Just when Apple products were finally beginning to feel a bit more affordable to the masses, the brand got chomped by the AI ...
On Wednesday, OpenAI announced its first custom AI chip, Jalapeño, as the first stage in its plan to develop first-party ...
Game Oracle, a gaming industry research platform, has published a two-part data study on how developers use generative AI in ...
NASA has announced yet another milestone for the Perseverance rover: It's officially traversed the length of a marathon on ...
Despite the drop in sales of these pretty famous gaming consoles, total US spending on gaming hardware in May 2026 rose ...
Microsoft has announced another round of global Xbox price hikes effective August 1. Thanks to rising storage and memory ...
Google didn't highlight LHDC in its main Android 17 marketing material, making this a pleasant surprise—if you know how to ...
Apple's foldable iPhone now appears to be on track for a September 2026 launch, as new supply chain reports indicate the ...
While the frames are from the same company behind Ray-Ban and Oakley, the glasses themselves are significantly more ...
Intel's recently announced Raptor Lake Next, a revival of the architecture it used for 13th- and 14th-generation CPUs, is ...