
OpenAI’s GPT-5 wins over enterprise despite user backlash
Corporates chase speed, cost, and brainpower
OpenAI might be taking flak for GPT-5’s "less intuitive" feel, but the enterprise crowd is lapping it up. The chatbot’s newly launched brainchild is already getting jammed into products across the coding and productivity world.

Nanya cashes in as DRAM giants throttle DDR4 output
Conservative chipmaker finds gold in dwindling supply
The DRAM world’s three big players have been quietly turning off the taps on DDR4 this year and it is finally sending prices skyward.

Wikipedia spammer tries to turn McVeigh composer into a global icon
Gamed the internet's biggest encyclopaedia for a decade
While Wackypedia editors did their best to make Fudzilla vanish, they were failing to spot someone carrying out a ten-year campaign to immortalise a nutty composer of odes to famous neo-nazis on the site.

PC gaming still offers better bang for your buck
Smart upgrades and game deals keep PCs ahead of consoles
Console fanboys might not want to hear it, but PC gaming still gives you more for your money if you know what you're doing.

Lenovo rides AI PC hype to record sales
Claims top spot in smart boxes while rivals scramble
Lenovo has kicked off its fiscal year by flogging more PCs than ever and is crowing about its AI leadership.

Streaming chaos driving piracy's comeback
Industry own goal
Streaming is in such a mess that piracy is starting to look like the grown-up option.

AMD thrashes server market
Record 41 per cent share
Chipzilla’s life just got a lot more miserable after AMD walked off with a record 41 per cent of server revenue in the second quarter of 2025, according to number crunchers from Mercury Research.

Musk's SpaceX throws tantrum over Virginia broadband plan
Wants $60 million for doing less than local providers
Elon Musk’s SpaceX is throwing its toys out of the pram again, this time over Virginia’s decision to fund proper broadband infrastructure instead of handing cash to his satellite internet sideshow.

US considers partial nationalisation of Intel
Socialism sneaks in the back door
Troubled Chipzilla might soon be partly owned by Uncle Sam if President Donald Trump gets his way.

Intel's job cuts gut Linux driver support
Intel’s restructuring leaves key open-source work without a home
Troubled Chipzilla’s decision to sack around 24,000 workers has not only left its product lines short-staffed, it has gutted some of the essential work keeping Linux support alive for Intel hardware.