While the original Garena Free Fire remains banned in India, its enhanced counterpart, Free Fire Max, continues to enjoy a massive following. The game has become a cultural phenomenon in the region, ...
You have reached your maximum number of saved items. Remove items from your saved list to add more. Political comedy is hard. Just ask Donald Trump, who recently posted a meme depicting former ...
In an exclusive interview, Ms Sarah Troutman, the US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State (DAS) for the Bureau of African Affairs, told Daily Monitor’s Ismail Musa Ladu why the Trump... The US and ...
Did our AI summary help? Anish Moonka has shared how artificial intelligence helped him turn a personal problem into a fully functional iOS app in just one week. Moonka said he wanted to read the ...
Anthropic is working on implementing a fix to bring Claude Code back online. Anthropic is working on implementing a fix to bring Claude Code back online. is a senior editor and author of Notepad, who ...
When it came to finding a composer for Charli xcx‘s mockumentary “The Moment,” no one made more sense than her longtime producer and friend A. G. Cook. Though he’d never scored a feature before, his ...
Microsoft has committed to invest up to $5B in Anthropic as it diversifies AI bets. Some software stocks have declined as AI coding tools like Claude Code threaten SaaS pricing power. Are you ahead, ...
Claude Code generates computer code when people type prompts, so those with no coding experience can create their own programs and apps. By Natallie Rocha Reporting from San Francisco Claude Code, an ...
Cowork is a user-friendly version of Anthropic’s Claude Code AI-powered tool that’s built for file management and basic computing tasks. Here’s what it's like to use it. This poor track record makes ...
On Monday, Anthropic announced a new tool called Cowork, designed as a more accessible version of Claude Code. Built into the Claude Desktop app, the new tool lets users designate a specific folder ...
The North Korean state-sponsored hacker group Kimsuki is using malicious QR codes in spearphishing campaigns that target U.S. organizations, the Federal Bureau of Investigation warns in a flash alert.