The pocket-sized AI computer, which Guinness World Records says is the smallest, debuted at CES. Soon, you'll be able to buy ...
Kickstarter starts at $1,399 for the Tiiny AI device with 1TB storage, helping you run custom LLMs and images offline.
Before smartphones with touchscreen displays began to dominate the mobile computing space, device makers tried out a number of different form factors to see what would stick. There were stylus-driven ...
The Sharp PC-G801 was an impressive little pocket computer when it debuted in 1988. However, in the year 2025, a Z80-compatible machine with just 8 kB of RAM is hardly much to get excited about.
During CES, Tiiny AI positioned Pocket Lab as a dedicated personal AI engine designed to work alongside existing laptops and desktops, rather than replace them. The device connects via plug-and-play ...
Zotac has been selling pocket-sized computers under the ZBOX Pico brand for nearly a decade, but the new ZBOX Pico PI430AJ is the most powerful to date, thanks to an Intel Core i3-N300 octa-core ...
One of the more interesting reveals to come out of CES 2024 so far has been the Rabbit R1. Coming from the rabbit company, this is a simple and cost-effective AI-powered pocket computer that is built ...
Here is a pocket computer designed by none other than Peter Barker, who we have seen design several innovative devices earlier. The CL-32, his latest creation, features an E Ink display powered by an ...
[Robert’s Retro] is one of those great YouTube channels that shows us the ins and outs of old and obscure computers. [Robert] likes going a step beyond the traditional teardown though, repairing and ...
Showing a mock-up to attendees, Poehler said the new device will come equipped with an lntel low-power processor that powers a fully functional operating system. "This will be a computer in your ...
Most of us know that phones are small computers, but we don't of them that way. Thing is, a smartphone can do almost anything a laptop can do—so it makes sense to use them for similar work. We speak ...