

A portable monitor is becoming an increasingly useful accessory — and one of the most popular mobile displays on Amazon is nearly half off for Prime Day.
KYY’s portable 15.6-inch 1080p mobile display is just $69.98 on Amazon for Prime Day, which is an outstanding deal for a display that wasn’t too expensive

Cloud storage is great and super handy, but sometimes you just gotta move a lot of files around, physically, really fast. And if you don’t want to load all your data onto a couple of million floppy disks, the Crucial X9 Pro portable SSD is a great way to do it. This little gadget gets you 2TB of storage you can put in your pocket without worry, and

Wait, wait! We might’ve found the best thing you can get this Prime Day–Samsung’s blazing-fast 9100 PRO SSDs are currently on sale at Amazon. It won’t even cost you that much, with Amazon delivers discounts of up to 37 percent.
The 1TB Samsung 9100 PRO SSD is down to $142.49 right now, which is 29 percent

Building a new PC from scratch can be super fun, especially if you score some sweet deals on the individual components. Luckily, AMD Ryzen CPUs are massively discounted this Prime Day, so now’s the perfect time to buy.


YouTube has an AI slop problem, with both the main site and the booming Shorts section filling up with low-effort crap shoveled in front of viewers by the millions. New policies are trying to demonetize, or sometimes even ban, accounts that take

If you’re looking for the best upgrade for your desk, this Huanuo monitor arm might be it. It usually sells for $50 — already a bargain — but during Prime Day you can get it for just $34.92. That’s the best price we’ve seen for this particular model and an all-around absurdly low price for a solid monitor arm.

Microsoft is currently working on the next major update for Windows 11, which will be released under the name 25H2. This update includes a way to remove unwanted Microsoft apps from Windows 11. With the help of a simple group policy, it’ll be possible to declutter the system, making it leaner and faster.
Until now, users who wanted to remove unnecessary blo

Browser extensions can be just as dangerous as regular apps, and their integration with the tool everyone’s constantly using can make them seem erroneously innocuous. Case in point: a collection of more than 200 extensions for Chrome and other major browsers are being used to “scrape” website content. This essentially turns browser users into a free data center, with