Windows on Arm finally has legs
Microsoft and Qualcomm have convinced software developers to lean into their latest Arm push.
The surprisingly not-so-doomed effort to force US drivers to stop speeding
People love to speed, but with traffic fatalities rising, would they accept new technology that would make it harder to drive recklessly?
All of Microsoft’s MacBook Air-beating benchmarks
Microsoft is confident it can beat the MacBook Air M3 on performance, price, and battery life.
Framework won’t be just a laptop company anymore
It started with notebooks, but that wasn’t the master plan.
The little smart home platform that could
How Home Assistant plans to transition from an enthusiast platform to a mainstream consumer product.
Discord is nuking Nintendo Switch emulator devs and their entire servers
And perhaps sidestepping its own policy in the process.
How a Windows shake-up could position Microsoft to capitalize on AI PCs
An inside look at Windows and Surface leadership changes that could have far-reaching effects.
Playtron: the startup hoping to Steam Deck-ify the world
What if Steam Deck, but not just Steam and not just Deck?
How Nintendo’s destruction of Yuzu is rocking the emulator world
Nintendo sued Yuzu into the ground. What happened next?
Former Kotaku writers are launching a new video game site — and they own it this time
They’ve started Aftermath, a new website about video games and culture.
The EV transition trips over its own cord
EV sales are skyrocketing, more than 100 models are on sale, and charging infrastructure is getting better. So why does everything seem so precarious all of a sudden?
Dough doesn’t pass the smell test
Eve, the monitor and tablet company that some accuse of walking away with their money, hasn’t fixed its reputation.
Why Thread is Matter’s biggest problem right now
The Thread protocol offers a robust mesh network designed to solve many of the smart home’s biggest problems. But only if everyone can agree on how to use it.
How Jsaux rode the Steam Deck to escape the Amazon wilderness
A Chinese accessory maker with an alphabet-soup name struck while the iron was hot. Now, it wants to be the next Anker.
AI is killing the old web, and the new web struggles to be born
The capacity of AI to generate content is overwhelming the web