When Google was sold for Rs 1000: A fun tech tale!
… are halfway through 2025, and technology is just blasting off to … part of our daily lives. Tech giants are spending billions to …
… are halfway through 2025, and technology is just blasting off to … part of our daily lives. Tech giants are spending billions to …
Microsoft and Amazon Capex in Focus Amid Potential AI Pullback Yahoo FinanceView Full Coverage on Google News
If you’re ready to upgrade your PC experience while gaming or working, we have just the deal for you. The LG UltraGear 32GS95UE is a 32-inch 4K OLED monitor with great specs, and right now it’s on sale for $997 at Amazon and B&H. That’s a massive $400 discount!
This monitor is stunning, delivering the world’s first VESA-certified dual mode. Basically, if you want to keep the visuals at 4K, you’ll get an amazing 240Hz refresh rate, but if you can deal with cutting the resolution to 1080p, you can unlock a jaw-dropping 480Hz of refresh.
Throw in the near-instantaneous 0.03ms response time and you have yourself a gaming-capable monitor that can handle any fast-paced action and give you the competitive edge you deserve. The monitor comes with both Nvidia G-Sync and AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, so it’ll work with any system you have to reduce screen tearing and stuttering.
The bright OLED panel is one to enjoy, elevating your favorite games, movies, and TV shows with vibrant colors and deep blacks. Ultra-fast OLEDs are still pretty uncommon, so this deal is one to jump on if that’s something you’ve been pining after. Plus, this monitor has a feature called Pixel Sound, which emits sound from behind the OLED panel so you can get away with not having headphones or speakers. Cool!
Upgrade your PC setup with this ultra-fast 32-inch 4K OLED gaming monitor for just $997 (was $1,400). You can get it at Amazon or B&H at this super-discounted price, but if stock runs out, Best Buy also has it on sale for just a few bucks more.
Save $400+ on the ultra-fast LG UltraGear 4K OLED gaming monitorBuy now at Amazon
Even in the first generation, catching ’em all was a tall order with 151 Pokémon. Now, nine generations later, you need more than a Pokédex to keep track of the full Pokémon list.
GPUs can’t power it, games don’t benefit from it…but it is still pretty cool.
May is the Second Annual Inherited Retinal Disease and Genetic Testing Month at Prevent Blindness PRWeb
The IcyBreeze Cooler is now discontinued, but you can still buy one if you know where to look. Should you, though? Let’s see what owners think.
A high severity flaw affecting Broadcom’s Brocade Fabric OS (FOS) has allowed attackers to run arbitrary code on affected environments with full root-level privileges.
The flaw, tracked as CVE-2025-1976, is particularly dangerous as it can allow complete takeover of FOS devices, including Fibre switches and directors, which are core to Storage Area Networks (SANs), potentially enabling attackers to modify system files, configuration data, firmware, security mechanisms, and install persistent malware.
Continue reading on CSO.
OpenAI, which spends far more money than it takes in, is trying something new to stanch the bleeding. The company just announced that all users, including on the free tier, can shop from ChatGPT Search. “You can now search for a product, compare options and buy products in ChatGPT,” OpenAI said in a press release. Categories currently available include fashion, beauty, home goods and electronics, with expansion to more categories set to come later.
The search results you’ll obtain are “chosen independently and are not ads,” the company promises. The updates are available in 4o and are rolling out to ChatGPT Plus, Pro, Free and even logged-out users. Along with the shopping, OpenAI introduced search in WhatsApp, enabling users to send a WhatsApp message to ChatGPT to get up-to-date answers. Also new are improved citations, trending search and upcoming memory integration.
Trusting ChatGPT for accurate shopping advise may be a risk, as the app tends to (still) make stuff up when it doesn’t know an answer. It seems that OpenAI is accessing reviews from Wired and other sites to get information on products, presumably through license agreements. It’s not clear how OpenAI is making money on shopping since it’s surfacing organic results and not paid placements, but it could be through affiliate revenue.
The company certainly needs the cash. OpenAI only made $4 billion last year, reportedly after spending $9 billion. The company expects to boost that revenue by a factor of 30 to $125 billion by 2029, though it didn’t give any specifics on how it plans to do so. As it stands now, OpenAI makes the bulk of its money from paid subscriptions and the rest through licensing its API. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/openai-adds-shopping-features-to-chatgpt-search-133057362.html?src=rss
Leading SAF company to discuss the industry-changing power of the new VFA-SPK production process and technology
BRYAN, TX, UNITED STATES, April 29, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ — BioVeritas, LLC., a leading sustainable fuels and biochemicals company …