Looking out from the harbor used to be an exercise in optimism.
Thanks to AI, people may no longer feel the need to learn a second language.
Better browsers made things worse.
What Kate Middleton proved about the internet
There’s a better approach to keeping users safe.
Against all odds, the government has created an actually good piece of technology.
https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2024/03/irs-direct-file/677818/?utm_source=feed
Is flying less safe? Or are we just paying closer attention?
The case for teaching coders to speak French
Transparency, or the appearance of it, is the technology’s new norm.
Just stop.
How is a company that sells canned water worth $1.4 billion?
America won’t miss TikTok.
The environment in which kids grow up today is hostile to human development.
Social-media companies define how billions of people experience the web. The rise of synthetic content only makes their role more important.
Nothing is true and everything is possible.
Their answers weren’t inspiring.
The long, torturous wait for cheap EVs isn’t ending in 2024.
Services such as iCloud and Google Photos are holding my memories hostage.
https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2024/03/icloud-storage-full/677682/?utm_source=feed
The head of Nvidia is becoming a legend in real time.
Applications such as ChatGPT and DALL-E have captured the world’s imagination—but AI companies are focused on something else.
Word search isn’t just for children anymore.
Four steps for getting over a very bad relationship
Here come the Jhana bros.
The tech giant’s new sports tool shows scores, betting odds, and little else.
The app is basically just broadcast TV now.