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Yesterday β€” 9 December 2025Main stream

4 hidden Chromebook features you’re not using (but should)

9 December 2025 at 16:30

It's easy to fall into the trap of thinking a Chromebook is "simple" and is only suitable for kids at school, not serious work. Yet, ChromeOS has grown into a rather mature operating system, and there are plenty of features that can supercharge your productivity or expand your options hidden under the surface of that user-friendly interface.

Why 8GB VRAM is finally dead for PC gaming in 2025

9 December 2025 at 14:30

As the price of memory continues to skyrocket, and games become more and more demanding, it's fair to ask how much the RAM on your GPU actually matters. What's the right quantity? What about speed and bandwidth? If you're wondering what to decide when it comes to your next GPU's RAM, it's time to have the talk.

The hidden costs of using a Chromebook as your only computer

9 December 2025 at 07:30

Chromebooks have come a long, long way since I first used one. It helps that so much of what we do every day happens in a browser, so, in a way, we've met Chromebooks halfway. Either way, it's entirely possible to use a Chromebook as your only computer. The question is, what are you giving up by doing so?

Before yesterdayMain stream

5 Chromebook privacy traps most people miss

6 December 2025 at 16:00

Chromebooks have a good reputation for being low-maintenance computers with solid security and privacy. By and large, this is true. It's why we trust them for use by children and college students, or why some companies like to issue them to employees who only need a basic computer.

If your power bank has this port, it's probably time for a replacement

4 December 2025 at 11:00

Power banks are the easiest gadget to neglect. You charge them, stick them in a drawer and then only pull them out when you need to travel or when the power's out. Which is why it's easy to miss when your power banks are outdated or no longer suitable to have your back when you need them most.

EVs made speed cheap, but they ruined the fun of driving

2 December 2025 at 09:00

Driving used to be something more than just a way to get from one place to another. Just taking a drive down to the store could be an exciting experience in the right car. The so-called "driver's car", which emphasizes feedback and responsiveness to your inputs was a great way to forget about your dull 9-5 life. For those who cared about such things, there were plenty of choices at every budget level. These days? I'm starting to doubt that a true driver's car even exists anymore in any form.

I don't use Linux for free anymore, and you shouldn't eitherβ€”here's why

30 November 2025 at 14:00

The first time I gave money to a Linux project felt weird. I'd been playing with one distro or another for a while, never quite figuring it out. Then Ubuntu Linux launched just as I started college, and because we all had bad internet, they sent me an installation disc for free.

Please stop calling your Crossover an SUVβ€”there is a difference

30 November 2025 at 08:30

SUVs and crossover vehicles might look like the same thing at first glance, but in most cases those similarities are only skin deep. Both SUVs and crossovers vehicles have become immensely popular, but you should make sure you're getting the vehicle type with the attributes you need.

4 New dark patterns added to Windows 11 in 2025

29 November 2025 at 18:00

Another year, another long list of changes to Windows that "nudge" you into making choices or adopting behaviors that aren't in your interest. At some point, it really feels like Windows stopped existing to make the actual users of PCs happier, and now serve a different master. I think these changes are the most worrying.

5 open-source projects that secretly power your favorite apps

29 November 2025 at 17:00

You've heard that the world's infrastructure runs on Linux, and how important Free and Open Source (FOSS) software is to just about all the technology we enjoy every day, but there are some (to bring out the old clichΓ©) unsung heroes of FOSS without which your stuff just wouldn't workβ€”and you should at least know their names.

Why do some phones use these weird fast-charging USB cables?

29 November 2025 at 16:00

For the longest time, smartphone battery life was a real issue. I remember my first few smartphones basically traveling with me from charger to charger. They would charge at my desk, charge in my car, and charge next to my couch. While phone battery life is now much better, the real revolution has come from fast-charging.

The weird world of Kindle page-turner remotes

29 November 2025 at 15:00

So you buy a Kindle and you think to yourself, "I sure would like to turn the pages from way over here, surely there's a solution for that?" Well, to my personal surprise, I have recently learned both that people who want to turn eReader pages at a distance exist (it makes sense when you think about it) and that Kindles in particular have no elegant way of achieving this goal. Hence, the existence of weird and wacky "Kindle page turners."

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