Ars Technica

  1. Behind the wheel of CXC’s $600,000 off-road racing simulator

    CXC Simulations wanted to build something special for a cruise liner.

  2. “Forgotten” poem by C.S. Lewis published for the first time

    "Mód Þrýþe Ne Wæg" (1935) was among documents sold to the University of Leeds 10 years ago.

  3. Apple poaches AI experts from Google, creates secretive European AI lab

    At least 36 former Googlers now work on AI for Apple.

Latest Stories Continue >

  1. New space company seeks to solve orbital mobility with high delta-v spacecraft

    "If we’re going to have a true space economy, that means logistics and supply services."

  2. Tesla to lay off everyone working on Superchargers, new vehicles

    Tesla is also getting rid of its public policy team, despite robotaxi ambitions.

  3. NASA lays out how SpaceX will refuel Starships in low-Earth orbit

    "The fundamental flow mechanism is the pressure delta across the umbilical."

  4. Cats suffer H5N1 brain infections, blindness, death after drinking raw milk

    Mammal-to-mammal transmission raises new concerns about the virus's ability to spread.

  5. Roku OS home screen is getting video ads for the first time

    Meanwhile, Roku keeps making more money.

  6. Dead Boy Detectives turns Neil Gaiman’s ghostly duo into “Hardy Boys on acid”

    Supernatural horror detective series has witches, demons, and a charming Cat King.

  7. Critics question tech-heavy lineup of new Homeland Security AI safety board

    CEO-heavy board to tackle elusive AI safety concept and apply it to US infrastructure.

  8. Apple must open iPadOS to sideloading within 6 months, EU says

    iPads must comply with the same DMA regulations as the iPhone.

  9. FCC fines big three carriers $196M for selling users’ real-time location data

    FCC finalizes $196M penalties for location-data sales revealed in 2018.

Earlier Stories >

  1. UK outlaws awful default passwords on connected devices

    The law aims to prevent global-scale botnet attacks.

  2. Account compromise of “unprecedented scale” uses everyday home devices

    Credential-stuffing attack uses proxies to hide bad behavior.

  3. Customers say Meta’s ad-buying AI blows through budgets in a matter of hours

    Based on your point of view, the AI either doesn't work or works too well.

Earlier Stories Continue >

  1. Motherboard makers apparently to blame for high-end Intel Core i9 CPU failures

    Motherboard makers "disable thermal and power delivery safeguards" by default.

  2. Elon Musk loses at Supreme Court in case over “funding secured” tweets

    Musk can't kill SEC settlement that requires pre-approval of tweets about Tesla.

  3. Report suggests Switch 2 can play all original Switch games

    New Joy-con buttons, 1080p screen also feature in MobaPad's "first-hand information."

  4. Ford BlueCruise driver assist under federal scrutiny following 2 deaths

    NHTSA has opened an investigation after two separate fatal crashes at night.

  5. Meta to face EU probe for not doing enough to stop Russian disinformation

    Insufficient moderation of political ads risk undermining electoral process.

  6. Swimming and spinning aquatic spiders use slick survival strategies

    Some make nests inside seashells, others tote bubbles of air on their backs.

  1. Why Germany ditched nuclear before coal—and why it won’t go back

    The past year has seen record renewable power production nationwide.

  2. There’s never been a better time to get into Fallout 76

    Fallout 76 is good now. Actually, it’s always been good.

  3. NASA still doesn’t understand root cause of Orion heat shield issue

    “When we stitch it all together, we’ll either have flight rationale or we won’t."

  4. Putting Microsoft’s cratering Xbox console sales in context

    Why declining quarterly numbers might not be awful news for Microsoft's gaming business.

  5. Court upholds New York law that says ISPs must offer $15 broadband

    New York obtains significant win for states' ability to regulate broadband.

  6. Android TV has access to your entire account—but Google is changing that

    Should sideloading Chrome on an old smart TV really compromise your entire account?

  7. Hackers try to exploit WordPress plugin vulnerability that’s as severe as it gets

    WP Automatic plugin patched, but release notes don't mention the critical fix.