Betteridge’s law applies, but with help and guidance by a human who knows his stuff, [Ready Z80] was able to get a ...
There are two UNIVAC 1219B computers that have survived since the 1960s and one of them is even operational. [Nathan Farlow] wanted to run a Minecraft server on it, so he did. After a lot of work, ...
You can run any ADB command on your phone without ever connecting it to a PC.
Anthropic has expanded Claude's desktop control to Windows in Cowork and Claude Code, adding a Dispatch feature that lets users assign tasks from their phone.
Blake has over a decade of experience writing for the web, with a focus on mobile phones, where he covered the smartphone boom of the 2010s and the broader tech scene. When he's not in front of a ...
Anthropic’s Claude is launching a wild new tool that lets you ask AI on your phone to remotely control your computer to execute tasks. A new feature in Claude Cowork and Claude Code will allow the AI ...
The research preview is currently limited to macOS devices. The research preview is currently limited to macOS devices. is a news writer focused on creative industries, computing, and internet ...
Anthropic is trialling a feature that lets users send prompts to Claude from a smartphone. Claude will complete the task on its own on a person's computer. Anthropic's product underscores its push ...
Anthropic announced today that its Claude Code and Claude Cowork tools are being updated to accomplish tasks using your computer. The latest update will see these AI resources become capable of ...
For many people, artificial intelligence still sounds futuristic—robots, advanced coding, or expensive equipment. But in reality, AI for computer use is already built into tools you use every day.
PCWorld explores the author’s six-week experiment building four apps using AI ‘vibe coding’ tools like Claude Code, Google’s Antigravity, and OpenAI’s Codex. The experience reveals that vague prompts ...
In the era of A.I. agents, many Silicon Valley programmers are now barely programming. Instead, what they’re doing is deeply, deeply weird. Credit...Illustration by Pablo Delcan and Danielle Del Plato ...