If you own a PC handheld that runs Windows 11, you'll want to install the newest version of SteamOS. Thank me later.
Follow along with the Gizmodo crew as we unpack everything Google announces at its annual developer conference in Mountain View, Calif.
We don't know anything for sure, but we know what it's likely not.
Fujifilm and Ricoh are making their high-end point-and-shoot cameras specifically for the Gen Z crowd.
Google has made something really impressive, but it's not exactly perfect—yet.
Google has its work cut out if it's going to make the smart glasses we've been waiting for.
Google says its video generation tools, Flow and Veo 3, are enough to turn you, a lowly human, into a filmmaker, but that's more than debatable.
Retailers like Best Buy and GameStop promise they'll have Nintendo Switch 2 in-store stock.
MSI's latest Claw A8 handheld PC already has us anticipating a hot year in handhelds beyond the Switch 2.
We’ll need to see if a 9060 XT can beat the RTX 5060 Ti, but what's more important is if it manages to maintain its price after launch.
I was promised 5 minutes with Google's AR glasses prototype, but only got 90 seconds to use them.
If you want the maximum amount of AI in your web search, Google's got your back.
Good news: Project Starline has a new name called Google Beam. Bad news: you won't have one in your home any time soon.
We're all going to become botters, apparently.
Everybody is gunning to beat Meta to true AR glasses.
One AI bundle to rule them all
Google's impressive real-time smart glasses UI is branching out.
Android XR glasses can record video and play audio, but you'll really want them for hands-free Google Maps.
If you want the thinnest Razer gaming laptop, you'll need to pay a little more.
After Holocaust denial and claims of white genocide, I don't think Grok is the AI model you want to associate with right now.
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