OpenAI could be making a phone with AI agents replacing apps
The phone could go in mass production in 2028, an analyst says.
Latest AI & ML news from Tech News
The phone could go in mass production in 2028, an analyst says.
This $129 device uses MagSafe to stick on the back of an iPhone to power transcription across apps
John Ternus, Apple's incoming CEO, is a hardware guy, signaling Apple may be putting devices back at the center of its strategy.
Apple’s sold-out Mac mini is spawning marked-up eBay listings as demand surges for the compact desktop, now favored for running local AI models and to…
Meta has commandeered a big chunk of Amazon's homegrown CPUs (not GPUs) for AI agentic workloads, signaling that a new kind of chip race has begun.
Era thinks that we will see many form factors of AI hardware, including glasses, rings, and pendants
Apple's top job comes with almost unrivaled power and money, but it comes with plenty of baggage, too.
Starting April 19, the price of the Meta Quest 3S (128GB) and Meta Quest 3S (256GB) will go up by $50 to $349.99 and $449.99, respectively. The price …
Motorola is suing dozens of content creators and social media platforms including Instagram, X, and YouTube over posts it alleges are defamatory.
On Wednesday, Amazon announced the launch of its new Fire TV Stick HD and Ember Artline televisions, both now available for preorder.  Following …
Fundraising is reportedly flowing for Fluidstack after it secured a $50 billion deal to build data centers for Anthropic.
These glasses are a step back from an ambitious plan that once called for Apple to launch a variety of mixed and augmented reality devices.
Specs has long been teasing the next version of its augmented reality glasses. A new partnership with Qualcomm promises some movement in that departme…
The two tech giants are looking to co-develop custom chips, at a time when demand for CPUs is high due to a growing global shortage.
Apple’s new MacBook Neo isn’t just the most affordable MacBook — it’s also the company's most repairable laptop in “about fourteen years."
The Army described this as a single enterprise contract consolidating more than 120 separate "procurement actions."