
How to Make macOS Consistently Bad: Performance Issues
Discover legitimate methods to intentionally degrade macOS performance for testing, development, and educational purposes. Learn how systems fail to build better applications.

Scientists have discovered that the sun's powerful magnetic field, which drives solar storms threatening Earth's technology, originates from a magnetic engine buried 16 Earths deep.

Mistral AI just dropped Voxtral TTS, a text-to-speech model it claims outperforms ElevenLabs. The twist? Companies can download and own it outright, running voice AI on their own servers.

Seafoam green control rooms were everywhere for decades. The color choice was not aesthetic preference but calculated human factors engineering based on eye strain, psychology, and technology.

Apple's first foldable iPhone won't arrive with the iPhone 18 Pro lineup this September. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reveals the iPhone Fold faces a delayed launch timeline.

Salvaged Tesla computers are giving tech enthusiasts unprecedented access to automotive AI systems. Discover how crashed car parts are powering desktop experiments.

Qualcomm's Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 specifications have leaked, revealing significant performance gains and cost implications for the premium smartphone market in 2027.

Phantom crane flies defy conventional flight by using their legs as aerodynamic controls. Scientists reveal how these insects adjust leg angles to manipulate drag and master the skies.

Wine 11 revolutionizes Linux gaming with a kernel-level rewrite that delivers massive performance gains, finally closing the gap with native Windows gaming performance.

LiteLLM versions 1.82.7 and 1.82.8 on PyPI were compromised in a supply chain attack. Discover how to check your dependencies, protect your credentials, and prevent future security breaches.

A supply-chain attack compromised the LiteLLM Python package, exposing developers to security risks. Discover what happened and how to protect your projects from similar threats.

In spring 2024, the moon gained a massive new crater as wide as two football fields. NASA's orbiter captured this rare event, expected only once per century, offering unprecedented insights.