I remember, back in the day, when the browser wars had reached a fit of pique such that no one could believe. A big part of this was driven by profit and how so many websites seemed hellbent on ...
Does regulation get consumers what they want? The premise got an airing last week when a TV news reporter tweeted out a promo for her story noting that dog grooming is an uncontrolled Wild West.
Bogdan Onikiienko, an engineer at MacPaw, dropped that hard-hitting quote on me after using Dia, a new-age web browser that heavily relies on AI. He found it quite useful, but warned me that there are ...
Remember when web browsers were useful tools? Remember when you could follow sites you liked, check your email, and see your calendar, all without leaving the browser? Or, I should say, remember when ...
Arc is a buzzy web browser that sheds the traditional browser interface as we know it. Made by The Browser Company, Arc includes a sidebar, whiteboards, keyboard shortuts, and more. After trying it ...
A test of the app Dia illustrates that the humble web browser may be the path to making artificial intelligence more natural to use. By Brian X. Chen Brian X. Chen is The Times’s lead consumer ...
I've been using Firefox, on and off, for years. After all, it's been the default web browser for Linux for as long as I can remember. But I'm finally moving on from Firefox and all of its clones. Also ...
OpenAI’s recently launched Atlas browser is a fascinating inversion of what users may expect from a browser, centering AI answers above traditional web links. Every click in a regular browser is a ...
The Browser Company recently released an AI browser for iOS called Arc Search, and this is the quickest I have ever switched to a browser on my personal phone. I am not the biggest fan of forcing AI ...
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