Author: News Room

Adobe Acrobat now lets you edit PDFs by chatting with its AI Assistant

Alongside new AI-powered features that turn PDFs into podcasts and presentations, Adobe’s latest Acrobat update introduces a handy conversational editing tool. Similar to the document editing capabilities Anthropic added to its Claude chatbot last year, Acrobat’s AI Assistant now lets users perform essential PDF tasks using natural-language prompts. Adobe says that the chat-based AI in Acrobat now offers a smarter and faster way to edit PDFs. Users can remove pages, text, comments, and images, add e-signatures and passwords, and handle other tasks simply by chatting with the AI. Instead of digging through menus or remembering where specific tools live, users…

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Vampire Survivors Spin-Off Vampire Crawlers Gets Gameplay Details, Demo In February

Vampire Survivors took the gaming world by storm in 2022, thanks to its extremely effective hook, absurdly approachable gameplay, and a ridiculously low cost of entry. Though many games have borrowed elements from Vampire Survivors to great effect, fans of the genre have been waiting for a Survivors developer Poncle’s next game. In November of last year, we learned of Vampire Crawlers, a spin-off title from Poncle that is a deck-building dungeon crawler. Today, we received more information about the anticipated spin-off title.Described by Poncle as a “turboturn deckbuilder,” Vampire Crawlers attempts to deliver turn-based combat without the trademark waiting.…

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Your iPhone 18 Pro could get a much smaller Dynamic Island

The iPhone 18 Pro Dynamic Island could soon look a lot less intrusive, if a new leak is on target. A post from reputable leaker Ice Universe says Apple has trimmed the cutout width on the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max from 20.76mm to 13.49mm, a drop of roughly 35%. That’s a meaningful design shift because it’s one of the few pieces of front hardware you notice dozens of times a day. Another rumor comparison post in your screenshots points in the same direction and frames it as a fresh look versus the iPhone 17 Pro. There…

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Buying a new Tesla? You might want to double-check if Autosteer is included

Just weeks after confirming plans to move Full Self-Driving (FSD) to a monthly subscription for new cars, Tesla now appears to have removed another key feature from all Model 3 and Model Y variants. The company’s lane-centering feature, dubbed Autosteer, is reportedly no longer available in the Model 3 and Model Y configurator on its website. Autosteer is one of the core features of Tesla’s Autopilot suite and helps vehicles maintain their position in the center of a lane. The feature, along with Traffic Aware Cruise Control (TACC), was previously included as standard on all trims, except for the affordable…

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A phone with a pop-up robot camera is launching soon

The robot camera phone launch date is now official. Honor says its Robot Phone will get a global reveal at MWC Barcelona 2026, landing on March 1 in Barcelona. That date comes from the company’s media invite, which places the announcement inside its “AI Device Ecosystem Era” showcase. Beyond the timing, Honor is keeping the rest locked down, including core specs, pricing, and which markets will get it first. The moving camera is the hook The defining feature is a pop-up AI camera assistant built into the rear camera setup. Instead of a fixed camera bump, the Robot Phone is…

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Your Fable reboot preview is here, open world Albion looks gloriously chaotic

Fable just got its clearest preview yet, and it finally narrows down when you’ll be heading back to Albion. The hook is familiar, your choices matter, people notice, and consequences linger. The difference is scale. This is a fully open world take, with townsfolk on routines who respond to what you do, even when you think no one’s watching. It’s still chasing that mix of heroics, petty crime, and dry British humor, only with modern action RPG muscle. The launch window is autumn 2026 for PS5, Xbox Series X and S, and PC. Xbox’s own listing also includes Xbox Cloud,…

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Your AI could copy our worst instincts, but there’s a fix for AI social bias

Chatbots can sound neutral, but a new study suggests some models still pick sides in a familiar way. When prompted about social groups, the systems tended to be warmer toward an ingroup and colder toward an outgroup. That pattern is a core marker of AI social bias. The research tested multiple big models, including GPT-4.1 and DeepSeek-3.1. It also found the effect can be pushed around by how you frame a request, which matters because everyday prompts often include identity labels, intentionally or not. There’s also a more constructive takeaway. The same team reports a mitigation method, ION (Ingroup-Outgroup Neutralization),…

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The mouse that makes your whole setup feel faster is 38% off

A good mouse is one of those upgrades you notice immediately. Your aim feels steadier, your clicks feel more intentional, and even basic work tasks get less annoying. The Razer Basilisk V3 Pro is on sale for $99.00, down from $159.99, a 38% discount. If you’ve been using a bargain mouse or an aging work mouse and you spend hours at your desk, this is the kind of deal that delivers real day-to-day payoff. What you’re getting The Basilisk line is built around a “do everything” shape. It’s designed for long sessions, with a comfortable right-handed ergonomic profile and lots…

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Key moment approaches for NASA’s crewed moon mission

After moving the massive SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft to the launchpad last weekend, NASA is now eyeing the next stage of its preparations for Artemis II, the first crewed lunar mission in more than five decades. Now firmly in place at Launch Pad 39B at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the rocket will be put through a so-called “wet dress rehearsal” this weekend. A wet dress rehearsal is the final full-scale test before a rocket launch, where the vehicle is loaded with cryogenic propellants such as liquid oxygen and hydrogen, and the countdown proceeds to just a few…

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Alder Lake is ending and here’s what it means for your current PC

It looks like the sun is finally setting on Intel’s 12th Gen Alder Lake series, signaling the end of the road for one of the most impactful processor families we have seen in years. In a set of Product Change Notifications released on January 6, 2026, Intel confirmed what many enthusiasts knew was coming: the company is officially discontinuing a wide range of tray and boxed Alder Lake CPUs – covering everything from the heavy-hitting Core chips down to the Pentium Gold and Celeron G-series – along with the trusty 600-series chipsets like the H670, B660, and Z690. Effectively, the…

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