Microsoft Revamps Windows Insider Program
Microsoft is changing its Windows Insider Program to improve testing and address user complaints about Windows quality.

The latest tech news about hardware, apps, and more
Microsoft is changing its Windows Insider Program to improve testing and address user complaints about Windows quality.

Section 702 of FISA, which lets federal agents spy on Americans, is up for renewal, sparking debate over privacy and government power.

New research reveals more about how this non-Newtonian fluid behaves when droplets impact a surface.

Time's running out to save up to $500 on tickets for TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 in San Francisco.

A 20-year-old was arrested after allegedly throwing a Molotov cocktail at OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s house, and making threats at OpenAI's offices.

Fusion power, once a distant dream, is now attracting serious investment, with multiple startups raising over $100 million.

Meta's all-in on AI, but using their new app might broadcast your tech habits to everyone you know. Proceed with caution (and a sense of humor).

The Artemis II mission, pushing the boundaries of human space travel, culminates in a high-stakes return. Watch live as the Orion capsule braves atmospheric re-entry and splashes down near San Diego.

A fossil once believed to be the oldest octopus has been revealed as a misidentified nautiloid, thanks to modern imaging techniques. The discovery rewrites our understanding of cephalopod evolution.

France is charting a course toward digital independence by migrating government computers from Windows to the open-source Linux operating system.

Battery recycling startup Ascend Elements, backed by almost $900M in funding, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, signaling turbulence in the rapidly evolving battery materials sector.

The popular macOS network monitor Little Snitch has arrived on Linux, offering users a peek behind the curtain of their system's internet connections. But there's a twist: it's not considered a security tool.

Meta launched the Blayzer and Scriber, its first Ray-Ban smart glasses built for prescription wearers. Starting at $499, pre-order now, ships April 14.

Sony is raising PS5 prices globally starting April 2. The PS5 Pro jumps $150 to $900, the standard PS5 hits $650. Sony blames continued global economic pressures.

Apple confirms the Mac Pro is dead with no future models planned. The Mac Studio takes over as Apple's high-end desktop.

Apple announces MacBook Air with M5 chip, doubling base storage to 512GB and adding Wi-Fi 7 via the new N1 chip.

At GTC 2026, Jensen Huang said Nvidia expects $1 trillion in purchase orders through 2027 between Blackwell and Vera Rubin. He unveiled the full Vera Rubin platform, the Groq 3 LPU from its $20B acquisition, and teased the next-gen Feynman architecture for 2028.

Apple unveiled the MacBook Neo, a $599 laptop powered by the A18 Pro chip. It comes in four colors, runs full macOS, lasts 16 hours on a charge, and handles on-device AI workloads up to 3x faster than Intel-based PCs. The cheapest Mac ever made.

Meta is reportedly considering major layoffs affecting up to 20% of the company as AI infrastructure costs mount. The cuts would help offset aggressive spending on AI while critics call it another case of AI-washing.

Atlassian is laying off roughly 10% of its workforce and replacing its CTO as it pivots to AI and enterprise sales. The move follows similar cuts at Block and WiseTech, signaling a broader trend of enterprise software companies reshaping their orgs around AI.
