The patent shows a curved display smartphone with special mechanisms to enhance its durability and prevent leaks of sealing ...
Caitlin Cherry’s “Eigengrau” at ICA matches online imagery of Black femininity with the cold hardware of the digital world.
Last, but certainly not least, the company’s browser, Google Chrome, is what a staggering three billion people use to navigate the Internet. According to some estimates, Google holds nearly ...
“It would greatly alter (Google’s) business model,” said Syracuse University professor of advertising Beth Egan. Selling Chrome would also deprive Google of a rich source of information used to train ...
Welcome back to Week in Review. This week, we’re exploring the DOJ telling Google to sell off Chrome to break up its monopoly, OpenAI accidentally deleting potential evidence in The New York ...
If you don't settle for the default browser provided by your operating system, then the first thing you likely do when setting up a new device is to download Google Chrome. It's fast, it's free ...
If you're reading this article, there's a good chance you're using Chrome. That's because two-thirds of the world's web browsing is done on the Google application. It's not just popular among ...
OpenAI is working on a web browser that could compete with Google Chrome. As The Information reports, the ChatGPT-maker has reportedly hired ex-Google developers such as Ben Goodger and Darin ...
The United States’ Department of Justice (DoJ) and several states filed a proposal to remedy “Google’s unlawful monopolization” on Wednesday (November 20), suggesting, among other things, that the ...
"If there's no vermouth in there, I don't know how you can call it a cocktail." Combine liquid ingredients in a mixing glass half-filled with ice. Stir until chilled, about 15 seconds. Strain into ...
The Department of Justice asked a judge this week to break up Google. Chrome? Sell it off. Android? Same. Paying other companies to make Google Search the default? Cut that out. If the DOJ gets ...
Notably, the DOJ has proposed that Google sell off its Chrome web browser—which currently accounts for about two-thirds of the browser market—and stay out of that business for five years.