Programmers hold to a wide spectrum of positions on software complexity, from the rare command-line purists to the much more ...
Disco is not coming to replace Chrome, but rather to test GenTabs, an AI-forward way of using the web. Disco is not coming to replace Chrome, but rather to test GenTabs, an AI-forward way of using the ...
Google on Thursday introduced a new AI experiment for the web browser: the Gemini-powered product Disco, which helps to turn your open tabs into custom applications. With Disco, you can create what ...
In case you didn’t hear — on October 22, 2025, the Internet Archive, who host the Wayback Machine at archive.org, celebrated a milestone: one trillion web pages archived, for posterity. Founded in ...
A librarian robot with headphones holds books as patrons mull about. Credit: VentureBeat made with Midjourney Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba’s famously prolific Qwen Team of AI model researchers and ...
Why this is important: Atlas could fundamentally reshape how we use the web. For years, browsers have been passive windows into the internet, tools that waited for users to click, type, and search.
King Charles' brother revealed he would no longer use his royal titles, saying the "continued accusations about me distract from the work of His Majesty and the Royal Family" Stephanie Petit is a ...
EASTON, M.d. - The Town of Easton has launched "Engage Easton," where the general public can comment on upcoming and current town projects. Town officials say the goal of the interactive platform is ...
Back in the days when people used to install software by inserting floppy disks into the slots on desktop computers, a few visionaries dreamt of being able to run software directly on the Internet and ...
Dianna Gunn built her first WordPress website in 2008. Since then, she's poured thousands of hours into understanding how websites and online businesses work. She's shared what she's learned on blogs ...
Tim Berners-Lee may have the smallest fame-to-impact ratio of anyone living. Strangers hardly ever recognize his face; on “Jeopardy!,” his name usually goes for at least sixteen hundred dollars.