
How the A.I. Boom Could Push Up the Price of Your Next PC
A.I. companies are buying up memory chips, causing the prices of those components — which are also used in laptops and smartphones — to soar.
By Don Clark and Loren Elliott
A.I. Complicates Old Internet Privacy Risks
Artificial intelligence is convenient and easy to use, but you should think about what you say to the chatbots.
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A.I. Is Giving You a Personalized Internet, but You Have No Say in It
The relentless addition of artificial intelligence in popular apps raises questions about what’s at stake. The answer: the future of the internet and its lifeblood, digital advertising.
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A.I. Has Arrived in Gmail. Here’s What to Know.
Google’s A.I. assistant, Gemini, can create a to-do list based on recent emails, among other new tricks. There are implications for your privacy.
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The Tech That Will Invade Our Lives in 2026
From talking computers to self-driving cars, here are the trends to watch.
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10 Pieces of Tech Jargon That Confused Us in 2025
Here’s a cheat sheet for decoding this year’s A.I.-driven tech lingo, from RAG to superintelligence.
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How to Watch Free Live Television on Your Phone or Tablet
Whether by app or old-school antennas, budget-friendly options abound.
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How to Deal With That Drawer Full of Old Gadgets
This month, resolve to revive or relinquish those old music players and point-and-shoot cameras — and retrieve any files trapped on the devices.
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Save Holiday Time With These Handy Smartphone Features
Try these useful shortcuts for sharing your Wi-Fi with guests, wrangling your to-do list or deciding what to do with family and friends.
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Take Command of Your Powerful New Smartphone Camera
This year’s high-end models from Apple and Google raise the bar for mobile photography, but users should take the time to learn the settings and features.
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How One German Toymaker Made Money Despite U.S. Tariffs
A combination of strategic planning, good timing and a long-awaited product helped the maker of electronic story boxes weather the onset of tariffs.
By Melissa Eddy and

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Iranian TV and Social Media Project Defiant and Distorted View of the War
State media and online propagandists are striking a confident posture, despite heavy losses. Some of the content was generated by artificial intelligence.
By Tiffany HsuSteven Lee Myers and

Trump Announces A.I. Industry Pledge to Pay for Power
Companies including Google, Microsoft and OpenAI committed to pay for the power plants and grid upgrades needed to run their data centers.
By David McCabe and

Lawmakers Question Intel’s Use of Tools From Blacklisted Chinese Firm
A bipartisan group of senators raised national security concerns about the chipmaker, which is now partly owned by taxpayers.
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The Pentagon’s Favorite Tech Guy Is This Hawaiian Shirt-Wearing Founder
Palmer Luckey, who founded the defense tech start-up Anduril, has become the It Guy as President Trump aims to modernize the U.S. military with autonomous weapons.
By Sheera Frenkel and

Elon Musk Defends Social Media Posts in Twitter Shareholder Lawsuit
Mr. Musk said he did not expect his posts in the lead-up to his 2022 acquisition of the social media site, now X, to affect the company’s share price.
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A.I. companies are buying up memory chips, causing the prices of those components — which are also used in laptops and smartphones — to soar.
By Don Clark and Loren Elliott

Claude Code generates computer code when people type prompts, so those with no coding experience can create their own programs and apps.
By Natallie Rocha

Under the shift, which Google said would eventually be rolled out to all users, old addresses would remain active. Messages and services would not be lost.
By Adeel Hassan

After the country barred children under 16 from using social media, many parents have been asking whether similarly tough action is needed in their own countries.
By Adam Satariano and Lynsey Chutel

Nations like France, Spain, Malaysia and Denmark are considering barring young people from platforms like Facebook and TikTok amid fears about their potential harm.
By Lynsey Chutel

It can be easier to talk to strangers, which might explain why Reddit has become an increasingly popular resource for wedding planning.
By Sarah Diamond

If companies can modify internet-connected products and charge subscriptions after people have already purchased them, what does it mean to own anything anymore?
By Brian X. Chen and Cole Wilson

He and a partner founded Tekserve, a Manhattan emergency room for frozen hard drives, keyboards, screens and their confounded owners.
By Sam Roberts

The new artificial intelligence model is the second the company has released this year. OpenAI and Anthropic made similar updates a few months ago.
By Tripp Mickle and Cade Metz

With the arrival of Amazon’s Zoox robot taxi in San Francisco to compete with Waymo, autonomous services are gaining momentum. But there are pros and cons.
By Brian X. Chen, Cade Metz and Balazs Gardi
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