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You can turn Chrome's address bar into a notepad with one line of text
Create a browser notepad instantly.
Editor's take: Microsoft is having a tough time leaving Windows Notepad well enough alone. The classic text editor is effectively gone, replaced by a "new" version that keeps accumulating a growing ...
Thousands of users worldwide are encountering a “Something Went Wrong” error when attempting to access the homepage on both the app and desktop site. According to ...
PCWorld reports that YouTube is deliberately disabling core features like comments and descriptions for users with active ad blockers installed. These aggressive anti ...
Connecting the dots: The sudden rise of "This content isn't available, try again later" errors on YouTube isn't a random technical hiccup – it appears to be the newest front in the platform's ...
The suspect allegedly responsible for both the Brown University mass shooting and the killing of an MIT professor left four confessional videos on a device after he carried out the shootings. The FBI ...
YouTube's Indian-origin Chief Executive Officer Neal Mohan is now the 2025 CEO of the Year by TIME magazine. Neal Mohan, CEO of YouTube, arrives at The Sun Valley Resort for the Allen and Company Sun ...
YouTube is offering voluntary buyouts with severance for U.S.-based employees as it restructures its product organization to focus more on artificial intelligence. The move comes as Google CEO Sundar ...
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology publicly rejected an offer from the Trump administration Friday that would’ve granted the university preferential treatment for federal funding in exchange ...
YouTube is rolling out a feature for previously terminated channels to apply to create a new channel. Last week, YouTube agreed to pay $24.5 million to settle a lawsuit involving the suspension of ...
One of the highlights of my first three years as a literature professor at MIT—and indeed, of my 15-year career as an educator—has been the recent discovery that some of my students, past and present, ...
YouTube has updated its monetisation policy to allow creators to use strong profanity, including words like “fuck”, in the first seven seconds of their videos without facing automatic revenue cuts.
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