The Apple Watch is the perfect sidekick for daily life. It shows you all your notifications and messages, helps you track your workouts, and lets you answer calls and control media on your iPhone. It ...
What does it take to lead a meditation company without finding a moment’s peace? David Ko spent years as CEO of Calm, one of the world’s most recognized mental health and wellness apps, helping ...
Thanks to the new possibilities afforded by AI coding tools, the App Store is seeing a resurgence in new app submissions, even as Apple continues to take issue with some of the ways these apps are ...
Apple has updated its developer website this week to spotlight third-party apps using Liquid Glass to “create natural, responsive experiences across Apple platforms.” This is the second version of ...
Apple continues to develop a new feature for its Shortcuts app that will let users generate unique actions using Apple Intelligence models, based on backend code discovered by Nicolás Alvarez and ...
Imagine being asked to sit alone in a quiet room for 15 minutes with nothing to do – no phone, no music, no external distraction. In a well-known 2014 study, many participants found that task so ...
Dr. James McCaffrey presents a complete end-to-end demonstration of linear regression using JavaScript. Linear regression is the simplest machine learning technique to predict a single numeric value, ...
Jenny has over a decade of experience covering science and technology. In 2014, she started reviewing smart-home devices and kitchen appliances at Digital Trends. She also covered smart-home tech for ...
I attended a meditation class with Toryo Ito, a Japanese Zen monk who works with top companies. Turns out I had meditation all wrong, and that it can be a lot simpler than you'd think. More companies ...
Jade Lassalle is a writer for Android Police, based in Hamilton, Ontario. As a dedicated writer and student of technology, Jade offers insight to everyday Android users who are looking to optimize ...
If I wanted Liquid Glass, I’d buy an iPhone. It doesn’t belong on Android. And yet, I’m seeing more and more of Apple’s design language — or half-baked versions of it — pop up in apps on my Google ...