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 PCWorld


How to quickly create professional presentations with AI

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. Try Adobe Acrobat Studio for free today! Communication is a central part of any business or creative endeavour. Whether its sharing information between colleagues or highlighting the advantages of new products and services to customers, getting the messaging right is an essential part of success. Traditionally, this could involve hours of painstaking work, preparing documents and then replicating their data into slides for presentations.


Save 90% on Microsoft Visual Studio Pro 2026

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. Visual Studio Professional 2026 brings AI-assisted coding, cross-platform development tools, and advanced collaboration features--and it's currently just $49.99. Modern development workflows move fast, and the tools developers use need to keep up . Microsoft Visual Studio Professional 2026 is designed exactly for that kind of environment, combining powerful coding tools, AI assistance, and cross-platform development support into one streamlined IDE. Built as a fully 64-bit IDE, Visual Studio 2026 is capable of handling larger projects and complex workloads more smoothly than earlier versions.


AMD wants you to buy a 2,000 'agent PC' just for AI

PCWorld

PCWorld reports AMD's new "agent PC" concept featuring Ryzen AI Max+ processors designed to run AI agents continuously as dedicated secondary machines. These $2,000+ systems offer 128GB memory capacity and local AI processing through OpenClaw platform, providing privacy advantages over cloud solutions. High component costs and complex installation processes currently limit consumer adoption, with alternatives like Raspberry Pi potentially more practical. You already have a laptop or desktop PC, but now AMD thinks you need another one--an "agent PC" to support your main machine. AMD has responded to the growing success of OpenClaw's AI agents with a new suggestion: customers should buy "agent PCs," which would take the power of the Ryzen AI Max+ processor (surprise!) and repurpose it to run an agent swarm.


Ditching ads on Amazon Prime Video will cost more soon

PCWorld

Amazon is replacing its $2.99 ad-free Prime Video add-on with'Prime Video Ultra' at $4.99 monthly, representing a 66% price increase for ad-free viewing. PCWorld reports that 4K streaming will become exclusive to Ultra subscribers starting April 10, 2025, while standard Prime members lose 4K but gain Dolby Vision support. The Ultra plan includes five concurrent 4K streams and 100 offline downloads, significantly raising costs for users wanting premium streaming features. It's been a little more than two years since Amazon started charging extra for ad-free Prime Video streaming, and now that we've gotten used to the extra fee, it's time for a price hike. Amazon just announced that its $2.99-a-month add-on for removing ads from Prime Video is morphing into a new plan called Prime Video Ultra, which will set you back $4.99 a month. That's a 66-percent price hike for monthly subscribers who formerly opted for the cheaper ad-free add-on. An annual subscription for Prime Video Ultra costs $45.99, a 23-percent discount compared to the new plan's monthly rate. Slated to arrive April 10, Prime Video Ultra will come with a few added benefits besides stripping away most ads (live sports and other programming will still have commercial breaks), including up to five concurrent 4K streams (up from the original limit of three) and up to 100 offline downloads (up from 25). At the same time, standard Prime members (who get Prime Video with ads included in their subscriptions, which cost $14.99 a month or $139 a year) will see some changes too, including added support for Dolby Vision HDR, an additional concurrent video stream (for a total of 4) and double the amount of offline downloads compared to the former 25-download limit.


Xbox Ally X gets smoother gameplay with AutoSR update

PCWorld

PCWorld reports that Microsoft's Automatic Super Resolution (AutoSR) technology is coming to Xbox Ally X handheld consoles to enhance gaming performance. AutoSR uses AI-powered upscaling to render games at lower resolutions then upscales them, allowing less powerful GPUs to achieve higher frame rates. A public preview of AutoSR for the AMD-powered Ally X is expected in April, promising smoother gameplay experiences for users. In a month, owners of Xbox Ally X handheld consoles will see their frame rates jump upwards, as Microsoft begins supporting the Automatic Super Resolution (AutoSR) tech on the console. Microsoft snuck in a reference to the technology as part of a presentation at the Game Developer Conference, where the company pitched features from its upcoming Project Helix console as well as AI enhancements coming to Microsoft's DirectX API . Essentially, AutoSR is an upscaling technology, originally designed for use with the Qualcomm Snapdragon X1 or X2 Elite processor, according to Microsoft.


OpenAI's Sora AI video generator is coming to ChatGPT soon

PCWorld

PCWorld reports that OpenAI plans to integrate its Sora video generator directly into ChatGPT, making AI video creation more accessible to users. This integration could lead to changes in ChatGPT's subscription plans and pricing structure due to the high costs of running video-based generative AI.


Ring's newest Wired Doorbell Pro just got its first big discount: 50 off

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. Ring's newest Wired Doorbell Pro just got its first big discount: $50 off The Ring Wired Doorbell Pro (newest model) just hit an all-time new lowest price. Get it now on Amazon before the deal expires! Ring's beautiful new video doorbell just got its very first discount and it's a big one! This means you can get super-crisp 4K doorbell footage for just $210 right now on Amazon, down from its original $250.


AI is changing PC graphics. Microsoft wants DirectX ready

PCWorld

PCWorld reports Microsoft is embedding AI into DirectX with new tools called DirectX Linear Algebra and DirectX Compute Graph Compiler to revolutionize game rendering. Major chip makers AMD, Intel, and Nvidia support these AI initiatives, potentially allowing integrated GPUs to compete with discrete graphics cards in gaming performance. These technologies enable dynamic shader creation, neural texture compression, and advanced upscaling that could democratize high-end graphics features like path tracing across different hardware. Games are increasingly being rendered using AI, so Microsoft is bringing AI into the way future graphics chips will render games. Microsoft introduced DirectX Linear Algebra as well as the DirectX Compute Graph Compiler into its DirectX programming interface on Thursday, with previews of each technology due later this year.


Compare top AI models with this 79 lifetime license

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. ChatPlayground AI lets you run a single prompt across multiple top AI models and compare the results instantly--now just $79 for lifetime access. Using AI tools can feel a bit like a juggling act. One model might be great for brainstorming, another for writing code, and another for summarizing documents. Before long, you're bouncing between platforms just to compare results.


Now Copilot wants to check your vitals, too

PCWorld

PCWorld reports Microsoft's Copilot Health is a new AI tool that organizes personal medical data from wearables like Apple Watch and hospital records. Currently available in the U.S. for users 18+ via waitlist, it aims to help prepare for doctor visits while emphasizing it's not a doctor replacement. The tool features encrypted, isolated data storage with user control, though concerns exist about AI accuracy in medical advice per Nature Medicine studies. Ready to let AI pore over your medical records? Claude and ChatGPT are already doing it, and now Microsoft's Copilot is ready to review your chart.