The annual Consumer Electronics Show has come and gone and The Verge spent another memorable week on the ground in Las Vegas covering the biggest announcements, press conferences, and surprises from ...
A couple of concurrent motorcycle trends converge in a delightful new motorcycle from Honda. One is the movement toward more approachable small to midsize adventure bikes, which have less power than ...
The U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM), working with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the General Services Administration (GSA), the White House Office of Science and Technology ...
Virginia Tech football head coach James Franklin continues to mold his coaching staff, including two more holdovers from the 2025 Hokies. As the college football regular season winds down, Franklin ...
After first rolling out its revolutionary E-Clutch technology on the CB650R and CBR650R last year, Honda hasn’t wasted any time implementing the feature across more models throughout its motorcycle ...
As Microsoft Unified Support costs continue to climb, many organizations struggle to determine whether they’re truly getting value for their support spend. With complex pricing models, formula-based ...
Earlier this year, BMW dropped the Concept F 450 GS. It was a very near-production concept, and it presaged bringing the entry-level G 310 GS more in line with the top-shelf R 1300 GS by giving it ...
Zendesk announced Wednesday at its AI summit a string of LLM-driven products meant to reshape the company’s reliance on human technicians. The center of the new features is an autonomous support agent ...
It has been an incredible offseason for the Texas Tech football program. Coming off a disappointing eight-win, five-loss season, head coach Joey McGuire knew he had to make drastic changes. So he did.
Honda’s e-clutch tech is a nifty piece of tech that was first introduced in 2023. While it already comes as standard on the current CBR650R and CB650R models in the US, Honda is set to bring the tech ...
In mid-June 2025, a claim spread online that the U.S. Army swore in tech executives as lieutenant colonels. Per the news release, these executives will serve in a new initiative called "Detachment 201 ...
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