Gemini gets personal (provided you use Google apps)
AI services can now remember aspects of what you tell them, but Google’s latest approach aims to go a little deeper than that.
You can't have a phone these days without an app, which makes coverage on apps important. Find out the latest news and reviews of apps we're checking out right here.
AI services can now remember aspects of what you tell them, but Google’s latest approach aims to go a little deeper than that.
Messages between people on Instagram will lose the tightest encryption they once had, though other Meta apps will keep it around.
Australians won’t just have to deal with a social media ban. Now they’ll need to be the right age to get apps, it seems.
Owners of Samsung TVs could soon put that screen to another use beyond simply watching. They could learn an instrument alongside, as well.
Apple’s apps cover image, video, and audio, and can be paid for monthly or yearly. Or you can just skip the middleman and buy them outright, too.
Don’t like paying for Photoshop or Illustrator? You may not need to, as Australia’s Canva says its apps that do much the same are now free. Yep, you read that right.
Those videos shot on your phone don’t have to stay as short grabs of your life, and if you’re used to Adobe’s video editing app, you can now take it to go.
iPhone and iPad owners may soon be able to find apps somewhere other than Apple’s App Store.
Not everyone pays for a music service, and folks who prefer to shuffle their Spotify for free can now pick the odd selection or two.
The iPad was launched on April 3, 2010. Instagram launched a few months later on October 6, 2010. And yet only now has an iPad app launched.