Step-by-step guide on designing and programming a custom I2C slave sensor device using Arduino..
A basic Arduino board adds creativity, flexibility, and interactivity to your home lab. It costs little but opens countless ...
Arduino announced it has collaborated with M5Stack to develop the new compact and powerful Nesso N1 IoT development kit. This ...
OpenAI's new ChatGPT Atlas browser is here, bringing the competiton in AI powered browser arena to the fore. The new brower also expands OpenAI's product lineup beyond ChatGPT and Sora, as it looks to ...
U.S. government officials said on Wednesday that federal networks are being targeted by an unidentified "nation-state cyber threat actor" that's trying to exploit vulnerabilities in products made by ...
This Diwali, Google's Gemini Nano Banana AI is revolutionizing festive greetings. Users can now transform selfies into stunning, hyper-realistic Bollywood-style couple portraits with just a few words.
Ledger, the French firm known for its crypto hardware wallets, has launched a sweeping update to its product line, positioning itself for what it calls a new “era of ownership.” The company unveiled ...
Takeaways From the AP Investigation Into ICE's Use of a Full-Body Restraint Device Known as the WRAP The full-body restraint device known as the WRAP has become a harrowing part of deportations for ...
Free software on your phone or tablet lets you scan, create, edit, annotate and even sign digitized documents on the go. By J. D. Biersdorfer I write the monthly Tech Tip column, which is devoted to ...
This photo provided by Safe Restraints Inc., in October 2025, shows a custom version of the WRAP restraining equipment made for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency. (Safe Restraints ...
Nano Banana, Google’s powerful tool in the Gemini app has been integrated into the AI mode within the Google Search app, as well as Google Lens. How do the new AI mode and Google Lens work It starts ...
Online safety charity, CyberSafeKids, is urging people to take a 24-hour break from technology today, as new research shows that 83 per cent of primary school children use devices in their bedrooms.