Google Pixel 10 Pro Review: This A.I. Phone Can Save Time if You Surrender Your Data
The new artificially intelligent Pixel can help people streamline certain tasks. But that efficiency may not be worth the data you give up, our reviewer writes.
The new artificially intelligent Pixel can help people streamline certain tasks. But that efficiency may not be worth the data you give up, our reviewer writes.
The agency’s fall recommendations underscore the goals of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to limit access to the vaccines, which he has long opposed.
Iran halted cooperation with the agency last month, as experts warned that Tehran may revive efforts to build a nuclear bomb.
The president has made no secret of his distaste for wind and solar in America. Now he’s taking his fossil fuel agenda overseas.
After more than 9,000 performances as the shaman in the Broadway show, Tshidi Manye prepares to hang up her baboon costume.
Owen Monroe was born with a deadly heart defect. Thanks to a cutting-edge surgery, now he’s starting preschool.
A new study reveals some of the crucial molecular steps on the path to bipedalism.
The documentary series “American Experience” begins an abbreviated schedule this week. A victim of the federal funding take-back, it has suspended production and laid off its staff.
Australia has accused Iran of directing an attack on a Jewish restaurant in Sydney through a web of intermediaries. The operation on the ground, court records suggest, was messy.
The shooting was reported at Annunciation Catholic Church, which operates a school.
With President Trump’s trade moves, war in Ukraine and wildfires, it was a busy month for the European Union. But not in Brussels.
The conservative majority has been largely receptive to the administration’s claims of executive power.
The White House is not the president’s property. Neither is the Smithsonian. Nor Washington itself.
Businesses and policymakers are casting around for help from unlikely places, as the country’s exports to the United States are crushed by 50 percent tariffs.
It’s picture-perfect, of course.
It was a sharp rebuke to the prosecutors who are dealing with the fallout from President Trump’s move to send National Guard troops and federal agents into Washington.
The president’s Middle East envoy signaled that the war would be settled before the end of the year, but seemed to rule out a temporary truce.
Rescue workers pulled bodies from the debris after rain sent boulders and mud crashing down.
Protectionism, industrial policy and government ownership — all once conservative boogeymen — have become official doctrine.
It’s the latest twist in the Greenland drama. President Trump wants the island, but Denmark refuses to hand it over.
Its director says that the Amsterdam museum could close unless the culture ministry increases funding to pay for a refurbishment.
Plus, why men aren’t going to the doctor.
After criticizing the United Arab Emirates on social media, an Egyptian activist was extradited to the Gulf country, where he has been detained without trial for months.
In her return at the U.S. Open, Ms. Williams decided to highlight labels based in the United States. Her shearling racket bag was hard to miss.
The party is counting on a new type of leader to counteract Trump.
Joe Gebbia wants to make government services more “satisfying.” Some peers in the design industry are skeptical.
The trillions of dollars that tech companies are pouring into new data centers are starting to show up in economic growth. For now, at least.
We want to hear from you for a New York Times Magazine feature about how much of America’s family wealth is tied up in parents’ homes.
Built for a cooler climate, many homes need to be retrofitted for warming temperatures. It won’t be as simple as installing air-conditioning.