ReMarkable’s new color tablet might be a little too minimalist

“Read and write as naturally as you do on paper”

“Just like a pen on paper”

“Like you’re looking at real paper”

“Paper-like”

In a world of distraction-filled, overly complex, sometimes downright-burdensome gadgets, there’s no higher ideal than to match the effortless approachability of a 2,000-year-old technology: paper. The above quotes come from the marketing for Amazon’s

How #BookTok made the Kindle the internet’s latest obsession

Move over Stanley cup,  the humble e-reader is the latest TikTok obsession. Self-proclaimed “Kindle girlies” are decking out their e-readers with stickers, accessories, and remote-control page-turners. Gone are the days of curling up with an old-fashioned paperback—thanks to the burgeoning #BookTok subculture, e-readers are the new “It” accessory. 

Amazon Kindle sales have been growing in double-digit percentages f

Fulcra wants to give you one safe place to store and analyze your personal data

People today use all kinds of digital systems to track and plan their lives and health, from calendar apps to smart watches to sleep monitoring systems.

But each of those tools typically store data in their own specific formats and repositories, making it difficult to easily analyze information from multiple sources to spot patterns like nighttime activities that disrupt sleep or monitor trends. A startup called Fulcra Dynamics hopes to

Anthropic’s new Claude Enterprise arrives to take on OpenAI’s ChatGPT Enterprise

Anthropic announced on Wednesday a new “Claude Enterprise” plan that makes it easier and safer for teams across an organization to share proprietary data with powerful large language models.

Under the new plan, Anthropic doubles the size of its model’s context window to 500,000 tokens, meaning that companies can feed Claude twice as much information at one shot, compared to previous plans. That’s the equivalent of 200,000 lines of computer code. Claude Enterp

Fridgescaping, explained: Why influencers are decorating the inside of their fridges with flowers

Gen Z and millennials are showcasing the inside of their refrigerators on social media to thousands, if not millions, of views. Here, ready meals and condiments make way for fresh flowers and framed pictures of pets nestled among market vegetables and bowls of berries. Gone are the days of the f

Sony pulled the plug on a new PS5 game after 2 weeks and is offering refunds. What happened?

Every video game has a lifespan. Some, like Pac-Man, are played for decades. Some support a small, but dedicated, player base for a few years before quietly disappearing. Concord, an online multiplayer video game recently released by Sony, lasted less than two weeks before its publisher decided enough was enough.

Sales of the act

Why will.i.am believes AI will change radio forever

Radio inspired will.i.am’s career. Now, the musician and entrepreneur is eager to innovate on the dying medium with Radio.fyi, a new interactive AI model. Will shares his philosophy about AI development, the dawn of “intelligent media,” and why he believes Radio.fyi will likely be a big part of radio’s future. 

This is an abridged transcript of an interview from Rapid Response, h

Is AI really a job killer? This California company puts those fears to rest

Imagine a customer-service center that speaks your language, no matter what it is.

Alorica, a company in Irvine, California, that runs customer-service centers around the world, has introduced an artificial intelligence translation tool that lets its representatives talk with customers who speak 200 different languages and 75 dialects.

So an Alorica representative who

This Chinese disinformation group is zeroing in on the 2024 U.S. election

When he first emerged on social media, the user known as Harlan claimed to be a New Yorker and an Army veteran who supported Donald Trump for president. Harlan said he was 29, and his profile picture showed a smiling, handsome young man.

A few months later, Harlan underwent a transformation. Now, he claimed to be 31 and from Florida

Tesla’s plans revealed for a new variant of the Model Y EV

Tesla plans to produce a six-seat variant of its Model Y car in China from late 2025, two people with direct knowledge of the matter said, as the U.S. automaker strives to increase the appeal of its best-selling yet aging electric vehicle (EV).


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