Adobe is bringing its creative AI assistants into public beta and springing them across the Creative Cloud ecosystem. Starting on Thursday, you can use the AI assistant in the beta versions of Photoshop, Premiere Pro, InDesign, Illustrator and Frame.io. These creative, agentic AI tools were first announced in April. It’s Adobe’s biggest swing yet at … Read More “Adobe Says Its Expanded AI Agents Are There to ‘Guide You Down the Happy Path’” »
Pros Intel and Qualcomm CPUs offered Strong overall performance with long battery life Compact, thin and rigid design Top-notch keyboard, touchpad Cons HP’s pricing fluctuates wildly so you may need to be patient before buying Sharp, polished edges are pointy and prone to scratches Limited ports If I had $2,000 to spend on an everyday, … Read More “HP OmniBook Ultra 14 Review: Stunning Design, Strong Performance Make It a MacBook Killer” »
Running out of color options for events in Google Calendar shouldn’t be an issue going forward. The previous limit of 11 predefined colors has now been expanded to give users access to up to 200 custom colors for individual events across the native Calendar web and mobile apps, and the Calendar API. This started rolling … Read More “Google Calendar finally has more color options for events” »
Quinn Nelson of Snazzy Labs is one of the first people to receive the Trump Mobile T1 Phone – and one of the funniest to review it. The video below is quite long, but it goes into great detail in examining the hardware and software of the phone. That said, the video actually starts with … Read More “Snazzy Labs answers the question: is the Trump Mobile T1 Phone spying on you?” »
I’m a lifelong Apple loyalist, but one feature on my iPhone 16 was so annoying that it threatened to derail my entire experience with the smartphone. It wasn’t until I went digging in my settings that I found I could disable this button, and it was so effective I haven’t looked back since. This is my … Read More “This Hidden Apple Setting Helped Me Take Back Control of My iPhone Camera” »
The 30% rent rule has been a personal finance staple for decades. It stipulates spending no more than 30% of your gross income on housing, and you should have enough left over for everything else. But the problem with this rule is that everyday life is much more expensive than it used to be. Housing, … Read More “The Traditional 30% Rent Rule Is Officially Dead in Today’s Economy” »
A recent trend in gaming accessories is the move to Hall effect and tunneling magnetoresistance technology. It started in controllers a few years ago, and it was only a matter of time before it made its way into gaming keyboards. There are now dozens of great HE and TMR keyboards to choose from. So now, … Read More “If You’re a PC Gamer, It’s Time to Upgrade to Magnetic Keyboard Switches” »
There’s been a lot of talk recently about RAM prices going through the roof because of AI data centers gobbling up the entire supply, yet OnePlus doesn’t seem to have gotten the memo. The company has just started offering the 15R with more memory than before, in India only for now. OnePlus 15R 5G The … Read More “OnePlus defies RAM crisis, offers the 15R with more memory” »
Remember the days when cable and satellite companies sold premium packages with more exclusive channels? Buying with your provider was probably cheaper than buying the channel separately when you could. That may feel like a distant memory, but when you think about it, we’re living out a blast from the past with streaming bundles. CNET’s … Read More “Is Bundling Your Streaming Services Really Worth It? Our Expert Chimes In” »
Tesco is also dealing with migration challenges related to data security because its new, unnamed virtualization software is incompatible with the Veeam and Zerto products it uses. “Manifestly unfair and excessive” price hike Tesco initially requested at least 100 million pounds (about $133.6 million) in damages each from Broadcom, VMware, and reseller Computacenter, plus interest. … Read More “Tesco moving 40,000 server workloads off VMware amid Broadcom’s “abusive conduct”” »




