CES returns to Las Vegas
The Consumer Electronics Show is back! Tech expert Marc Saltzman joins Liem Vu from Las Vegas to discuss some top tech items he’s spotted.
The Consumer Electronics Show is back! Tech expert Marc Saltzman joins Liem Vu from Las Vegas to discuss some top tech items he’s spotted.
Since 2021, Samsung's Galaxy Chromebook 2 has been one of Engadget's favorite Chrome OS devices. A $200 discount makes this laptop even better.
Dozens of TVs are on sale on Amazon Canada, and prices start at less than $200.
“Really high-end headphones for an amazingly good price.”
Enjoy major savings on Echo Shows, Ring doorbells, Fire HD 8 tablets and more.
From Prime Video to early access to deals, there are many ways you can save money with Amazon Prime. Find out how much Prime costs and if it's right for you.
For as little as $20, you can make lost keychains (and more) a thing of the past.
Top Story Text goes here. Text goes here. Text goes here. Text goes here. Also on this day Justice Department homing in on Google Ad Manager in antitrust probe 2020: The feds were interviewing publishers and ad-tech rivals about whether Google has too much control “over the monetization of digital content.” Tripadvisor’s new ‘Review Hub’ […] The post This day in search marketing history: February 5 appeared first on Search Engine Land.
Samsung, LG, Toshiba, Amazon Fire: What to scoop up now at Amazon, Walmart, Target and beyond.
If you 're working with limited space but still want to keep your things organized, this portable inkless label maker on Amazon is a must-buy.
Big Tech companies have a new obsession: artificial intelligence. This week, chief executives across the sector packed earnings calls with mentions of the heavily hyped technology, which until recently existed more in the background than as a solid contributor to the bottom line. In conference calls after financial results, tech execs uttered the phrases "AI," "generative AI," or "machine learning" from two to six times as often as they did in the previous quarter, according to a review of conference transcripts by Reuters.
Google looks set to unveil how it plans to rival the wildly successful ChatGPT AI, possibly within days. The technology giant has scheduled a 40-minute event for Wednesday 8 February, when it will reveal how it is "reimagining how people search for, explore and interact with information". It's not clear whether the event will be AI-focused, but it comes days comes after Google's chief Sundar Pichai announced that the firm will make its chatbot technology available publicly in the coming weeks.
San Francisco-based AI chatbot maker, Replika -- which operates a freemium 'virtual friendship' service based on customizable digital avatars whose "personalized" responses are powered by artificial intelligence (and designed, per its pitch, to make human users feel better) -- has been ordered by Italy's privacy watchdog to stop processing local users' data. The Garante said it's concerned Replika's chatbot technology poses risks to minors -- and also that the company lacks a proper legal basis for processing children's data under the EU's data protection rules. Additionally, the regulator is worried about the risk the AI chatbots could pose to emotionally vulnerable people.
Thousands of shoppers have given these iconic buds a perfect review.
Samsung Electronics Co has agreed to pay $150 million to British nanotechnology company Nanoco Technologies to settle patent lawsuits over technology used in Samsung's LED televisions, Nanoco and an investor in its cases said Friday. Nanoco and Chicago-based litigation funding firm GLS Capital said in a release that the settlement, which includes a license agreement and the "transfer of certain patents," resolves litigation in the United States, Germany and China. Samsung and Nanoco told a Texas federal court on the eve of a trial last month that they had agreed to settle the dispute, but no terms were disclosed at the time.
Here's a list of the best 2-in-1 convertible laptops you can buy, as chosen by Engadget editors.
Apple TV, Apple Music and other Apple services are coming to third-party webOS TVs.
(Bloomberg) -- Technology bellwethers Apple Inc., Amazon.com Inc. and Alphabet Inc. posted results Thursday that show an economic slowdown is throttling demand for everything from electronics and e-commerce to cloud computing and digital advertising.Most Read from BloombergUS Downs Chinese Balloon, Prompting Protests from BeijingTrump Offers $1 Million Bond to Appeal Clinton Suit SanctionsFrom China to Big Sky: The Balloon That Unnerved the White HouseThousands Mistake US Research Balloon for Ch
In the words of Kylie Jenner: “Need.”
Jamie Lee Curtis shared throwback photos from her childhood in the 1960s and ’70s on Instagram. Fans loved the nostalgic shots.
Police have not yet found a connection between the doctor and his alleged attacker