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Technology

Highlights

  1. Microsoft Surrenders OpenAI Board Position

    As regulatory scrutiny picks up, the tech giant says it is pleased with the progress OpenAI has made with governance and considers its oversight role unnecessary.

     By

    OpenAI’s chief executive, Sam Altman, speaks with Microsoft’s chief technology officer, Kevin Scott, during Microsoft’s annual engineering and development conference in Seattle in May.
    OpenAI’s chief executive, Sam Altman, speaks with Microsoft’s chief technology officer, Kevin Scott, during Microsoft’s annual engineering and development conference in Seattle in May.
    CreditGrant Hindsley for The New York Times
  2. Amazon Says It Reached a Climate Goal Seven Years Early

    The company said it effectively got all of the electricity it used last year from sources that did not produce greenhouse gas emissions. Some experts have faulted the company’s calculations.

     By Ivan Penn and

    An Amazon-owned data center in Ashburn, Va. Data centers run by tech firms are expected to be one of the leading sources of growth in electricity demand for years to come.
    An Amazon-owned data center in Ashburn, Va. Data centers run by tech firms are expected to be one of the leading sources of growth in electricity demand for years to come.
    CreditNathan Howard for The New York Times

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Personal Technology

More in Personal Technology ›
  1. How to Clean Up Your Phone’s Photo Library to Free Up Space

    Deleting duplicates, bad shots and other unwanted files makes it easier to find the good pictures — and gives you room to take more.

     By

    It may take some time, but scrolling back through your photo library to get rid of similar, boring or blurry pictures can be a space saver.
    CreditApple
  2. What the Arrival of A.I. Phones and Computers Means for Our Data

    Apple, Microsoft and Google need more access to our data as they promote new phones and personal computers that are powered by artificial intelligence. Should we trust them?

     By

    CreditDerek Abella
  3. Welcome to the Era of the A.I. Smartphone

    Apple and Google are getting up close and personal with user data to craft memos, summarize documents and generate images.

     By

    CreditSisi Yu
  4. Finding Your Roots With Help From Your Phone

    Everyday tools and free apps on your mobile device can help you collect, translate and digitize new material for your family-tree files.

     By

    Although simply taking a picture of a picture might do a decent job of digitizing an image, Google’s PhotoScan app directs you to capture the picture in multiple shots before it combines everything together to remove glare and enhance the finished file. This can be especially useful for old tintypes like this one or faded photo prints.
    CreditGoogle
  5. The New ChatGPT Offers a Lesson in A.I. Hype

    OpenAI released GPT-4o, its latest chatbot technology, in a partly finished state. It has much to prove.

     By

    ChatGPT-4o trying to solve a geometry problem
    CreditArsenii Vaselenko for The New York Times
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  9. Japan Finally Phases Out Floppy Disks

    One of the world’s most technologically advanced nations has held on to some of the most outmoded devices.

    By John Yoon, Hisako Ueno and Kiuko Notoya

     
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  33. My First Trip to Norway, With A.I. as a Guide

    Can artificial intelligence devise a bucket-list vacation that checks all the boxes: culture, nature, hotels and transportation? Our reporter put three virtual assistants to the test.

    By Ceylan Yeğinsu

     
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  65. Apple Joins the A.I. Party, Elon’s Wild Week and HatGPT

    “They really sort of make you feel like it’s Christmas and Coachella at the same time.”

    By Kevin Roose, Casey Newton, Rachel Cohn, Whitney Jones, Jen Poyant, Dan Powell, Elisheba Ittoop, Marion Lozano, Rowan Niemisto and Corey Schreppel

     
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  74. Fake News Still Has a Home on Facebook

    Christopher Blair, a renowned “liberal troll” who posts falsehoods to Facebook, is having a banner year despite crackdowns by Facebook and growing competition from A.I.

    By Stuart A. Thompson

     
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  83. Grab Them. Then Stump Them.

    Word puzzles on LinkedIn. Logic challenges in The Washington Post. For news publishers and tech sites looking to both entice and engage users, games are serious business.

    By Mike Isaac

     
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  87. The Shift

    Can Apple Rescue the Vision Pro?

    The $3,500 “spatial computing” device has gathered dust on my shelf. Can tweaks and upgrades save it from obsolescence?

    By Kevin Roose

     
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