A colorful thumbnail showing multiple iPhone screens displaying YouTube Shorts, including people dancing, swimming, painting, and doing makeup. The text in bold reads “Create YouTube Shorts on Your iPhone Using AI” in white and yellow font across the center. The background transitions from blue to purple, giving a vibrant, tech-tutorial vibe.

How To Create YouTube Shorts on iPhone: Premiere + Lightroom Culling

Tired of jumping between different apps to create standout content on your iPhone? Adobe is bringing two powerful, AI driven updates to its mobile apps that promise to streamline your workflow, whether you’re a video creator or a photographer. These new features are designed to feel right at home in your Apple ecosystem, saving you from the tedious parts of the creative process so you can focus on the fun. So, how can you create polished YouTube Shorts without ever leaving your iPhone? And is it finally possible to sort through hundreds of photos from a weekend trip in just minutes? Let’s dive in. Adobe Premiere on iPhone Gets a […]

A flat, colorful diagram showing the process of creating an AI app. From left to right: a shrugging person icon (representing an idea or problem), the ChatGPT logo (AI assistance), a glowing lightbulb (inspiration and solution), and a web app icon (final product). Below the icons is the bold title text: “Build Your First ChatGPT App! [Beginners Guide]” in black and yellow.

How to Build Your First ChatGPT App: The Beginner’s Guide

Have you ever had a brilliant idea for an app powered by AI but felt overwhelmed by the technical jargon? You’re not alone. Building with powerful tools like ChatGPT can seem complex, but it’s more accessible now than ever before. Whether you want to create a helpful tool that lives inside ChatGPT or build a standalone website with AI features, the path is clearer and simpler than you think. What are the two main ways to build a ChatGPT app, and which one is right for me? How can I build a simple app that runs directly inside the ChatGPT interface? What are the basic steps to create my own […]

Collage showing Adobe Photoshop’s 2025 AI update with model options Firefly, Gemini 2.5 Flash (Nano Banana), and FLUX Kontext Pro. Users edit portraits and creative photos using Generative Fill and Harmonize tools, with vibrant fashion scenes and a large text overlay reading “All About Photoshop AI.”

Photoshop AI Model Choice: Your Guide to Firefly, Gemini, and FLUX

Photoshop’s Generative Fill has already changed how we edit images on our Macs, making complex tasks feel like magic. But what if you could choose the brain behind that magic? Adobe has just rolled out a massive update, turning Generative Fill into a creative hub with multiple AI models, including Google’s powerful Gemini 2.5 Flash (Nano Banana) and FLUX.1 Kontext [pro] This means more control, more variety, and ultimately, better results tailored to your specific project, whether you’re a marketer creating ad variations or a student perfecting a presentation. So, how do you actually switch between these AI models? When should you use Firefly versus Gemini or the FLUX model? […]

A stylized web browser window on a purple gradient background displaying the Gemini logo in the center. Bold text below reads “How Google’s Gemini 2.5 Use Your Web Browser Explained” in white and yellow, representing an article about Google’s new Gemini 2.5 Computer Use model.

Gemini 2.5 ‘Computer Use’: Can This Model Automate Your Browser?

Imagine an AI that doesn’t just understand your words but can actually use your computer. An AI that sees your screen, understands your goal, and navigates complex websites to get things done for you. This is the promise of Google’s new Gemini 2.5 ‘Computer Use’ model, released in preview on October 7, 2025, a powerful new agent that’s-stepping out of the chat box and into your browser. But how does this technology actually work behind the scenes? What kinds of tasks can you realistically automate with it right now? And most importantly, what are the critical safety rails and limitations you need to understand before you start building? This article […]

Illustration of a developer sitting at a desk, focused on a laptop displaying lines of code. The background features dynamic flowing lines suggesting speed and data movement. Text overlay reads “Claude Haiku 4.5 Explained: Fast, Cheap, & Built for Coding.” The overall color scheme is blue with yellow and white typography, creating a modern tech aesthetic.

Haiku 4.5 on GitHub Copilot: Code Faster, Spend Less

Imagine your AI coding assistant responding the instant you finish typing. No more lag, no more waiting—just seamless, real-time help that feels like a natural extension of your thoughts. That’s the promise of Anthropic’s new Claude Haiku 4.5, now Generally Available (GA) in GitHub Copilot. It’s not just another update; it’s a fundamental shift in developer experience. Anthropic positions Claude Haiku 4.5 as delivering near-Sonnet 4 coding performance at one-third the price and more than twice the speed; a partner quote on Anthropic’s launch page cites ‘up to 4–5× faster than Sonnet 4.5.’ But is it powerful enough for your daily work? How much cheaper is it really inside Copilot? […]

A cinematic tropical travel planning scene featuring a map, notebook with handwritten trip notes, smartphone, sunglasses, and a glass of iced drink on a wooden desk lit by warm sunlight. The text reads “How To Plan Trips with Gemini AI: No Spreadsheets Needed!” — representing AI trip planning and a digital travel PA concept.

Turn Your iPhone into a Travel PA with Gemini + Maps & YouTube

Planning a trip shouldn’t feel like a second job. With the latest Gemini update on iPhone, you can ask in plain language (no more @commands). Gemini will quietly use Google Maps for places and routes and YouTube for video previews. Link your apps once, then say what you need. A step-free walking loop, cafés that aren’t packed at 3 p.m., or two videos that show what a Venice sleeper train is really like. When you’re ready to go, tap to open turn-by-turn in Google Maps. But how does it really work on an iPhone? Can it build a walking tour on the, find budget-friendly hotels, and show you what a […]

Thumbnail showing the ChatGPT Atlas logo on a blue-purple gradient background with the text “All About ChatGPT Atlas: Master the New AI Browser” and a yellow badge labeled “Beginner’s Guide.

ChatGPT Atlas: The Complete Guide to OpenAI’s Browser

A Chromium-based browser with ChatGPT built in Agent Mode, optional Browser memories, and privacy controls you can actually tune. The way we browse the web hasn’t fundamentally changed in decades. We open a browser, type in a search bar, and click through a list of blue links. But what if your browser could do the work for you? What if it could understand the content on a page, summarize it, and even take actions like booking a reservation or filling a shopping cart? OpenAI is betting on this future with its new release: ChatGPT Atlas. It’s not just another browser extension; it’s a complete web browser with a powerful AI […]

Elon Musk sitting in a dark blue suit against a cosmic background filled with stars, hands clasped in a thoughtful pose. Bold white and yellow text overlaid reads: “Elon Musk Launched Grokipedia – A Wikipedia Clone Built by AI.” The image visually connects Musk’s space-age aesthetic with his AI ambitions.

What Exactly Is Elon Musk’s Grokipedia & How Does It Compare to Wikipedia?

Today, October 27, Elon Musk’s xAI has officially launched Grokipedia, a new AI-powered encyclopedia that aims to challenge Wikipedia’s dominance by rethinking how online knowledge is written, fact-checked, and maintained. Grokipedia, with roughly 885,000 articles available at launch, wants to rebuild the internet’s reference layer from scratch with artificial intelligence at the center. Announced at the end of September 2025, the open-source encyclopedia is pitched as a “massive improvement over Wikipedia” and, in Musk’s words, a “necessary step toward xAI’s goal of understanding the universe.” At its core, Grokipedia aims to be an alternative to Wikipedia by explicitly tackling what Musk and supporters describe as “bias,” “propaganda,” and institutional or ideological slants in mainstream reference […]

A dramatic, cinematic depiction of a cathedral-like interior bathed in golden light. A glowing Apple logo floats above an ornate altar at the center, illuminating the surrounding crowd of shadowed figures who appear to be observing or worshipping it. Rays of sunlight stream through tall stained-glass windows, creating a reverent, almost divine atmosphere. The text overlay reads: “Apple Intelligence in 2025: What’s Really Happening.”

The State of Apple Intelligence & Siri in October 2025: Apple’s AI Vision vs. Reality

For over a decade, Siri has been Apple’s promise of an intelligent assistant that lives in your pocket. But in 2025, that promise feels closer to a punchline. While generative AI assistants like ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, and even Bixby are showing real-world progress, Siri remains fundamentally the same as it was at its introduction in 2011. Apple promised a smarter, more conversational Siri — one that understands context, sees what’s on your screen, and can take actions across apps. Some groundwork arrived with Apple Intelligence in late 2024 and early 2025. But the major upgrades, especially the “smarter Siri” experience, have been repeatedly delayed — and internal feedback hasn’t been glowing. This […]

Four smiling people stand together in a shopping mall holding branded shopping bags from stores like Chanel and Gucci. The text overlay reads: “AI Shopping Just Got Real: How To Use Walmart In ChatGPT.” The image represents the concept of AI-powered shopping and Walmart’s integration with ChatGPT for in-chat purchases.

Shopping Inside ChatGPT: The New Walmart’s Instant Checkout

Imagine you’re chatting with an AI to plan your weekly meals. You get a great list of recipes, and right there, you can buy the pantry items you pick one at a time without leaving the chat, with multi-item carts on the way. This isn’t science fiction anymore. Walmart announced on October 14, 2025, that it’s bringing a Walmart and Sam’s Club selection (including marketplace items), with fresh groceries excluded at launch, into ChatGPT, allowing you to shop and buy without ever leaving the conversation. But how does this really work? Can you trust an AI with your shopping? What can you actually buy, and is it as easy as […]