Black Forest Labs has long punched above its weight in the AI image generation space. Its next move? Powering physical AI.
General Tech
Take your smartphone videos to the next level with impressive audio quality in a tiny package.
The tractor maker is paying for its years as the central opponent of right-to-repair. Consumer advocates say it’s still not enough.
Yet another automaker cancels an EV for gasoline SUVs in America.
Officer created over 3,000 "deepfake" images.
Ohio man used more than 100 AI tools to make fake nudes of women and minors.
Study found shots cut urgent care and hospitalization by about 50% in healthy adults.
After the pivot to humanoid robots and AI, does Tesla want to be a car company again?
“The online right wasn’t supportive and there wasn’t anything that was going to change that,” says one person familiar with the Republican influencer pipeline.
A World War II-era policy is stopping old coal plants from closing.
Messages sent to the FBI by an investigator with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension went ignored for at least two days, per records obtained by WIRED.
Since the beginning of the Iran war, the group Explosive Media has released over a dozen viral videos mocking Trump and the US.
This bare-bones, no-nonsense wallet has continuously impressed me since I started using it.
In Seattle, activists inside tech giants are leaning into grassroots fundraising and peer support as petitions and protests draw little response from executives.
This tracker attaches to your pet’s collar to monitor location and activity, charting trends over time to better understand your pet’s health.
Brandon Riegg tells WIRED he empathizes with the struggle to find “quality men” and that Love Is Blind has no MAGA agenda.
This low-cost art display can’t compete with the Samsung Frame Pro.
Political candidates are purchasing more home alarms, bulletproof vests, and other protections amid rising fears of political violence.
Two former Apple Vision Pro developers made an AI wearable that only listens when you tap it. They hope to win where other AI gadgets have fumbled: privacy.
The moon gets hit by space debris all the time, but some of it is so large that the impact generates light that can be seen thousands of kilometers away.