Authored on

Authored by
Tech Insider

Body
Saks main floor
On the day it filed bankruptcy, Saks was nearly empty as sales associates waited to hear about the store's fate.
  • Late on Tuesday night, Saks Fifth Avenue's parent company filed for bankruptcy.
  • I visited its flagship earlier that day to see how the iconic department retailer was faring.
  • I found quiet floors, bored sales associates, and a store in need of new energy.

I come


Category



Authored on

Authored by
Tech Insider

Body
An aerial view of a data center
An aerial view of a 33 megawatt data center with a closed-loop cooling system on October 20, 2025, in Vernon, California.
  • Microsoft pledged to "pay its own way" for electricity as its data center footprint grows.
  • President Trump endorsed the plan in a post on Truth Social.
  • Other Big Tech companies are likely to follow suit.

Microsoft is promising to cover the costs of


Category



Authored on

Authored by
Engadget

Body

Netflix is continuing to double down on podcasts, with the streaming service's announcement that it has hired talent to host two original shows for its platform. The first show stars NFL Hall of Famer-turned-analyst Michael Irvin and the second is a talk show for former Saturday Night Live cast member Pete Davidson.

The White House with Michael Irvin premieres January 19. The abode in the title


Category



Authored on

Authored by
Mashable

Body
Anthropic logo displayed on a phone screen and AI sign displayed on a screen

Anthropic’s newest productivity experiment, Cowork, is notable not just for what it does, but for how it was made. Cowork is essentially a version of the AI coding tool Claude Code for non-developers. And according to the company, much of Cowork was built by Claude Code itself, turning the AI into both the product and a key part of the development process.

SEE ALSO: An



Authored on

Authored by
Mashable

Body
Verizon and T-Mobile stores side-by-side

Verizon is suffering from a massive outage today with cellular service down for many of Verizon's customers across the country.

How can it get any worse for Verizon? Well, what if one of their biggest competitors was spiking the football right now on social media, bragging about how their service is still working perfectly?

Because that's exactly what T-Mobile is doing.



Authored on

Authored by
Engadget

Body

Elon Musk isn't the only party at fault for Grok's nonconsensual intimate deepfakes of real people, including children. What about Apple and Google? The two (frequently virtue-signaling) companies have inexplicably allowed Grok and X to remain in their app stores — even as Musk's chatbot reportedly continues to produce the material. On Wednesday, a coalition of women's and progressive advocacy


Category