
#playALLYourgames proclaims the first bit of marketing copy for the ROG Xbox Ally, the third-gen Asus handheld PC that’s also borrowing Microsoft’s Xbox brand. “This is an Xbox,” declares the very next line. The design even gets a new, dedicate

You probably share your password for Netflix. Or a delivery service. Maybe you’ve got a group or joint email address, too.
Many people stop there. But others go further—as far as sharing the password to a personal email address or even a bank account. And that’s dangerous territory.
Why? Trust is fragile. The people closest to you can change. (Ju

RTX 50-series laptops aren’t so easy to come by, with short supply and stock sold out all over the place. But right now, if you act fast, you can get the Lenovo Legion Pro 7i for $2,400 at B&H. That’s a hefty $450 discount on a top-tier gaming laptop with a next-g

BleepingComputer reports that AI company OpenAI has suffered a major outage today affecting several of the company’s AI services, including AI chatbot ChatGPT and AI

Arm-powered Windows devices, based almost entirely on the Qualcomm Snapdragon family of processors so far, are pretty neat. They can be thinner and lighter than Intel- and AMD-based setups, and they last considerably longer on battery power. Yet while most of the Arm compatibility issues are solved either with native apps or good emulation,



A few days ago, Microsoft announced via the Windows Insider blog some new AI features and improvements for the Photos app.
Among the new features is “Relight,” which lets you adjust the lighting in a photo by placing up to thr

I’m the kind of person who hates to see pen marks and lines on the pages of paper books. It makes my eye twitch, and I’m sure you feel the same if you’re a book lover like me. And that’s why I love the Kindle Scribe, an e-reader that lets you write and draw on ebook pages.
If the Kindle Scribe seems right up your alley, now’s the best time to grab

Graphics cards are getting so big that they’re bigger than some computers now. A tired joke, perhaps, but it’s absolutely true. There’s plenty of room inside a modern desktop GPU (at least in terms of pure volume, with the chunky cooler) to fit all the parts you need to run a full PC… and one company did just that. Weird, but fascinating.
Gamers Nexus took