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This subscription-free 30 Microsoft Office offer ends after 5/31

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. Microsoft Office Professional 2021 gives Windows users lifetime access to the essential Microsoft apps for $29.97 through May 31. No subscription reminders or realizing you've somehow spent hundreds of dollars over time just to keep using Word and Excel. That's what makes this Microsoft Office Professional 2021 deal feel like the kind of practical internet find people brag about later. For a one-time $29.97 payment through May 31, you get lifetime access to the Microsoft apps most people actually use: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, OneNote, Teams, Publisher, and Access.


The EU Is Going Through a Trump-Fueled Breakup With Big Tech

WIRED

France is already moving on from Zoom and Microsoft Teams in favor of homegrown alternatives. Other countries are quickly following suit. As tensions between President Donald Trump and Europe continue to simmer, the continent is accelerating its moves to reduce its addiction to US technology . Cities and governments are ditching Microsoft Office for open-source alternatives, shifting to European cloud hosting for local AI, and moving defense data to systems without American involvement . Nowhere has this been more clear than in France.


I tried Google's AI glasses. They're what Google Glass always wanted to be

PCWorld

PCWorld reports Google's new Gemini-powered smart glasses prototype represents a refined approach to smart eyewear, manufactured by Samsung with discreet camera and touch controls. The lightweight glasses integrate Google's AI assistant for real-world navigation, search functions, and phone replacement capabilities while maintaining a normal sunglasses appearance. Despite improved public acceptance and seamless design, limitations include basic heads-up display, battery concerns, and sometimes forced AI features. A decade after Google launched Google Glass to spectacular failure, it's trying again. And I think that the world (and I) will be more receptive to what Google's online AI interpreter, Gemini, can do when plugged into your ear.


This retractable 100W USB-C cable is just 12 and fits in your pocket

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. Ugreen has an awesomely unique USB-C cable with a twist: a retractable design that skirts whatever damage your cables might normally suffer when they're shoved into your pockets or bags. This Ugreen Nexode cable is on sale for $12 at Amazon, down from its usual $17 and matching the lowest price it's ever been. The retractable design is its standout feature, with a 2.4-inch shell that acts as a protective case when fully retracted and able to extend to four preset lengths from 14 to 39 inches. It does all this without sacrificing power--it's rated for 100 watts of throughput, meaning it's just as capable of fast-charging as any 100W cable.


Google's Android XR smart glasses hope to succeed where AI-first wearables have failed

Popular Science

Gear Wearables Google's Android XR smart glasses hope to succeed where AI-first wearables have failed The audio-only frames pair with Android and iOS so a Gemini agent can run errands on your phone while you stay heads-up. More information Adding us as a Preferred Source in Google by using this link indicates that you would like to see more of our content in Google News results. We may earn revenue from the products available on this page and participate in affiliate programs. Google put AI on people's faces more than a decade ago with its Google Glass wearable. It was designed to put a computer directly on your face, but the world (and to some extent, the hardware) wasn't quite ready for that yet.


Everything Announced at Google I/O 2026: Gemini, Search, Smart Glasses

WIRED

Google is sprucing up its Gemini models, revamping search, and enabling AI agents in everything. There are also some spiffy new smart glasses coming this fall. Google just wrapped its keynote address at its annual I/O developer event . The company showed off a swath of new agentic AI features and some demos of its upcoming Android-powered smart glasses. As it has in the past few years, the spectacle largely revolved around Google's perpetual stream of AI efforts.


Meta Employees Are Scrambling to Use Up Benefits Ahead of Layoffs

WIRED

On the eve of about 8,000 jobs being cut, employees are cashing in on headphone stipends and other perks while they still can. Ahead of Meta's latest round of mass layoffs tomorrow, some employees are deserting offices, abandoning their work, and loading up on perks they might soon lose, several people at the company tell WIRED. Two employees describe a widespread rush to use up an annual $2,000 flexible benefit, which can cover a variety of expenses including health and wellness activities. A separate triennial credit of $200 toward the purchase of audio gear has led to a scramble to purchase Apple AirPods and other headphones. Another source says Meta offices have been largely empty this week, as people prioritize polishing their résumés and gather offsite to commiserate with friends for what may be their final time as colleagues.


Everything announced at Google I/O 2026

Engadget

Eyes in the tech world have turned toward Mountain View, California this week. The San Francisco Bay Area city is where Google's headquarters is located, making it a logical place to hold the company's annual developer conference. That's right, gang, Google I/O 2026 kicked off on Tuesday with the usual opening keynote, which is where the company reveals what's arguably the event's most relevant info for consumers. Google made a ton of Android announcements last week, so its mobile ecosystem wasn't really on the agenda. But what else could the onus possibly have been on if not AI? We heard the word Gemini more times than I could possibly care to count, and the company had many updates to share on that front. Search, Google's longtime bread and butter, was a big focus of the event. The company talked up a new Ask YouTube feature as well as changes to AI subscription pricing and Workspace features like Docs and Gmail.


Meta is rapidly reorganizing its workers' jobs around AI: 'Transfers aren't optional'

The Guardian

Meta is rapidly reorganizing its workers' jobs around AI: 'Transfers aren't optional' As Meta races to recenter itself around artificial intelligence, the tech giant is mandating that more than 7,000 workers must move to new teams, and it's radically changing some employees' jobs. The Guardian has also learned that some of these reassigned employees will shift to two new teams: one building AI cloud infrastructure and another that's building an internal AI agent codenamed Hatch. Late last week, Meta employees received a notice that engineers had been "selected" for reassignment and would begin reporting to the cloud infrastructure and Hatch teams by the end of this week. Meta made a similar move last month when it reshuffled at least 1,000 engineers on to a new data labeling team called Applied AI, or AAI - at first giving them the option to volunteer, but later telling workers: "Transfers aren't optional." "Our work, infrastructure and our products are fundamentally changing as a result of the continued acceleration of AI," wrote Peter Hoose, vice-president of production engineering at Meta, in an internal post about the two new teams viewed by the Guardian. "The pace of what we are building is unprecedented, and these are exactly the kind of challenges that define what we do best."


Project Genie adds Google Street View integration and goes live for global AI Ultra users

Engadget

Project Genie is rolling out today for all adult Google AI Ultra subscribers across the globe, following its debut in the United States this January. The service is also getting a new Street View capability that can generate interactive landscapes based on real-world locations found on Google Maps, starting with places in the US. Project Genie is Google's AI-powered system for creating explorable snow-globe environments from written prompts, with creations lasting 60 seconds at 720p and 24 fps. Users are able to create contained worlds in whatever style they'd like, complete with a character of their own description, and then move a camera around that space. The fresh Street View functionality allows users to base their AI worlds on location photos pulled from Google Maps, grounding their creations in a snapshot of reality.