Jim Rossman is a tech columnist for Tribune News Service. He may be reached at [email protected].
Lumo, Proton's privacy-focused chatbot, is getting a useful tool for organizing chats and keeping things in order.
Microsoft is still forcing you to back up your files to the cloud, but recent changes have made it easier to restore your local files. Too bad those changes aren't documented.
The secret sauce behind this phone is AphyOS, a custom operating system that severs the umbilical cord that typically tethers ...
OneDrive, Microsoft's built-in cloud storage platform, is deeply embedded in Windows and positioned as a central part of the company's cloud ecosystem. When Windows updates or ...
Microsoft wants your files in its cloud Software King of the World, Microsoft, has turned file storage into a mugging, and it starts the moment Windows decides you are using… ...
That photo you deleted last year? Still recoverable. Kim Komando reveals the cloud backup trap and factory reset failures ...
Digital Camera World on MSN
200 unpublished Sophia Loren portraits teach us the importance of trust between photographers and their subjects
A Life magazine photographer's decades-long access to the Hollywood icons offers lessons for today's image-saturated world ...
Viewers without a cable subscription can watch “RuPaul’s Drag Race” live and on demand for free via several streaming ...
Microsoft told Windows Latest that Microsoft Lens is now officially in the 'retired' phase, starting January 9, 2026, for iOS ...
Bringing an app back, also called restoring it, is just as easy. All you have to do is tap the app’s icon and choose Restore.
On a Windows PC, press Ctrl + Shift + Esc to open it instantly. If you see a very simple window, click More details at the ...
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