❌

Normal view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.
Today β€” 10 December 2025Main stream

Amazon changes how copyright protection is applied to Kindle Direct’s self-published e-books

10 December 2025 at 11:26
Amazon says it will allow authors to offer their DRM-free e-books in the EPUB and PDF formats through its self-publishing platform, Kindle Direct Publishing. Starting on January 20, 2026, authors who set their titles as DRM-free will see their books made available in these more open formats.

Exclusive eBook: Aging Clocks & Understanding Why We Age

10 December 2025 at 10:08

In this exclusive subscriber-only eBook, you’ll learn about a new method that scientists have uncovered to look at the ways our bodies are aging.

by Β Jessica Hamzelou October 14, 2025

Table of Contents:

  • Clocks kick off
  • Black-box clocks
  • How to be young again
  • Dogs and dolphins
  • When young meets old

Related Stories:

Access all subscriber-only eBooks:

Before yesterdayMain stream

Google’s latest swing at Chromebook gaming is a free year of GeForce Now

20 November 2025 at 12:49

Earlier this year, Google announced the end of its efforts to get Steam running on Chromebooks, but it’s not done trying to make these low-power laptops into gaming machines. Google has teamed up with Nvidia to offer a version of GeForce Now cloud streaming that is perplexingly limited in some ways and generous in others. Starting today, anyone who buys a Chromebook will get a free year of a new service called GeForce Now Fast Pass. There are no ads and less waiting for server slots, but you don’t get to play very long.

Back before Google killed its Stadia game streaming service, it would often throw in a few months of the Pro subscription with Chromebook purchases. In the absence of its own gaming platform, Google has turned to Nvidia to level up Chromebook gaming. GeForce Now (GFN), which has been around in one form or another for more than a decade, allows you to render games on a remote server and stream the video output to the device of your choice. It works on computers, phones, TVs, and yes, Chromebooks.

The new Chromebook feature is not the same GeForce Now subscription you can get from Nvidia. Fast Pass, which is exclusive to Chromebooks, includes a mishmash of limits and bonuses that make it a pretty strange offering. Fast Pass is based on the free tier of GeForce Now, but users will get priority access to server slots. So no queuing for five or 10 minutes to start playing. It also lacks the ads that Nvidia’s standard free tier includes. Fast Pass also uses the more powerful RTX servers, which are otherwise limited to the $10-per-month ($100 yearly) Performance tier.

Read full article

Comments

Β© Asus

❌
❌