WIRED
Network-attached storage (NAS) provides accessible shared space on your home network. After testing, these are my favorite NAS devices.
Stainless-steel pans may lack nonstick coatings, but they’re unfussy, they sear well, and they’re built for a lifetime of hard work.
Sure, anyone can use OpenAI’s chatbot. But with smart engineering, you can get way more interesting results.
With Apple raising prices soon, you can save a lot of money by buying a used handset or upgrading an older device—safe in the knowledge that it'll last longer than ever.
The cryptographic keys that secure your computer's boot sequence will start to expire on June 24. Here's what that means for you.
After adding one to my home, here's why you might want a home battery, how they work, and what to look for, plus some installation tips.
I did the research and taste-testing to find the best greens powders worth your money. Bloom Nutrition’s Superfood Greens Powder is my tried-and-true pick.
Plus: Gay bars in San Francisco using face scanners, France quits Palantir, Apple plans to change its private email and more.
Researchers have demonstrated they can make coffee comparable to conventional espresso using ultrasonic waves. Because the process doesn’t need hot water, it consumes 75 percent less energy.
Years after initial tests, researchers are now racing to see if a vaccine developed in 2011 can help fight the current Bundibugyo outbreak in Congo.
For young people, the trend removes the stigma of being unmarried and alone, and recasts it as something to aim for, not avoid.
Apple’s fall macOS release will let you build Shortcuts by typing what you want to happen. But Claude Code and Codex users don’t have to wait.
The crypto platform claims you can “pay anyone to do anything,” from quitting a job on camera to getting a memecoin-themed tattoo. But it mostly seems like people trying to scam each other.
The biggest World Cup ever is pushing fans, players, and host cities to their limits—and experts say this is only the beginning.
Getting the future right is now big business. But at a festival in Berkeley, forecasters worry that sports markets could take the whole industry down.
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