Are AI browsers actually all that good yet?
WordPress’s new browser-based service lets users create private sites without hosting or signup, turning the platform into a personal workspace for writing, research, and AI tools.
Researchers say a vulnerability in Perplexity’s Comet AI browser could expose local files and credentials through malicious ...
Microsoft's latest Copilot update addresses the pain of jumping between windows by just turning the app into an Edge-powered ...
Browser-based editing programs like Zendocs offer many of the same features as standard PDF editing programs without the hassle that often comes with having to frequently transfer files across ...
AI-powered web browsers are being hailed as the future of internet browsing, yet I haven't found one I actually want to use—or would be willing to pay for—until some fundamental issues are addressed.
It might be time to use your car as a cinema ...
WebMCP exposes structured website actions for AI agents. See how it works, why it matters, and how to test it in Chrome 146.
Users can now add separate ChatGPT accounts for a more personalized browsing experience while keeping their activity neatly separated.
You can scarcely browse the internet these days without hearing about AI web browsers, be it Copilot Mode in Edge, Gemini in Google Chrome, OpenAI’s Atlas, Opera ...
What problems do the new AI browsers from OpenAI and Perplexity solve for users? Or, do they create fresh headaches for SEOs, marketers, and organizations?
We’re in the midst of a classic computing revival, with numerous recreations of older hardware, such as THEC64 Mini and the Amiga A1200. This retro goodness isn’t limited to just hardware, though.