Recent articles
March 29, 2026
Your Photos Are Probably Giving Away Your Location. Here’s How to Stop That
All your snaps come with metadata containing more information than you might realize.
www.wired.com
March 24, 2026
How to Use Apple’s Live Translation on Your AirPods
If you have a recent Apple device, you can translate live conversations. It’s impressive, and the new AirPods Pro Max just joined the party.
www.wired.com
March 22, 2026
Give Your Phone a Huge (and Free) Upgrade by Switching to Another Keyboard
Change up the default keyboard in Android and iOS and feel the benefit.
www.wired.com
March 19, 2026
Android Auto’s Secret Superpower Is a Customizable Shortcut Button
Put bespoke commands on the Android Auto home screen with this little-known feature.
www.wired.com
March 10, 2026
Use Microsoft PC Manager to Speed Up Your Windows 11 Computer
Can you really get a Windows PC running like new again? Using this free tool from Microsoft, you can get pretty close.
www.wired.com
March 7, 2026
How to Avoid Getting Locked Out of Your Google Account
Make a recovery plan now to avoid losing access to your account in the future.
www.wired.com
March 1, 2026
Make the Most of Chrome's Toolbar by Customizing It to Your Liking
There are plenty of ways to customize Chrome to make it easier to navigate the web, manage your tasks, and make your workflow more efficient.
www.wired.com
February 27, 2026
Huxe Will Give You a Personalized, Daily Audio Summary Powered by AI
The app reads your email inbox and your meeting calendar, then gives you a short audio summary. It can help you spend less time scrolling, but of course, there are privacy drawbacks to consider.
www.wired.com
February 20, 2026
Gmail Is Killing POP and Gmailify Access. Here's What It Means for You
If you have multiple email accounts, your Gmail setup may soon need some reorganizing.
www.wired.com
February 15, 2026
Google’s AI Overviews Can Scam You. Here’s How to Stay Safe
Beyond mistakes or nonsense, deliberately bad information being injected into AI search summaries is leading people down potentially harmful paths.
www.wired.com