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#zdnet — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #zdnet, aggregated by home.social.

  1. je suis passé de mon OnePlus au nouveau Samsung ...
    🗞️ ZDNET - 🕐 10/05 15:11
    Le Galaxy A37 de Samsung est le dernier smartphone de milieu de gamme de la marque et le successeur direct de l'A36.
    Recevez une sélection des derniers produits logiciels et matériels à destination des professionnels chaque semaine dans votre boîte m... [8102 chars]
    🔗 zdnet.fr/guide-achat/test-gala
    #actu #news #presse #zdnet

  2. Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it – ZDNET

    Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it

    Powered by GPT-5.2, Prism helps you draft papers, source contextualized references, and more – just don’t delegate your research to it.

    Written by Radhika Rajkumar, Editor, Jan. 27, 2026 at 10:01 a.m. PT

    Table of Contents

    How Prism works Limitations The AI workspace future How to access

    ZDNET’s key takeaways 

    • Prism is a free, collaborative AI workspace for research.
    • It’s meant to support, not replace, human-led science. 
    • AI-enabled workspaces aim to unite disparate tools.

    This fall, OpenAI deepened its investment in AI for science as the technology’s next frontier, citing advancements in GPT-5 as proof of its viability as a research tool — and eventual scientific automation system. As a first step to that end, OpenAI has launched Prism, a new collaborative workspace for scientists.

    “In 2025, AI changed software development forever,” OpenAI said in the announcement. “In 2026, we expect a comparable shift in science.”

    Also: Inside Google’s vision to make Gmail your personal AI agent command center

    Prism is powered by GPT-5.2, the company’s newest model, which was released last month. At the time, OpenAI said GPT-5.2 performs “at or above human expert level,” but the company doesn’t advise you to let it automate your research — here’s why. 

    (Disclosure: Ziff Davis, ZDNET’s parent company, filed an April 2025 lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)

    How Prism works

    OpenAI has invested heavily in demonstrating scientific use cases for its models, releasing papers on its prowess in mathematical discoverycell analysis, and biology experiments. But the tools scientists currently use, OpenAI argued in the announcement, constrain “how research is done day to day.” Enter Prism.

    Geared toward science writing and report compilation, which requires collaboration amongst several participants, Prism “brings drafting, revision, collaboration, and preparation for publication into a single, cloud-based, LaTeX-native workspace,” OpenAI said, referring to the LaTeX scientific typesetting standard

    Also: 10 ways AI can inflict unprecedented damage in 2026

    Prism puts GPT-5.2 inside a scientific project, ideally for a more seamless experience. According to OpenAI, it’s based on Crixet, a platform the company purchased and folded into this new release. 

    In a demo, OpenAI developers walked through Prism’s interface: a chat window on the left and an in-process research paper on the right. Prism lets scientists access multiple chat agents simultaneously, each executing different commands. These can include adding sources from arXiv and other platforms, creating lecture notes based on a topic, complete with citations, or perfecting equations and figures. Users can also test hypotheses with GPT-5.2 Thinking as a copilot, LaTeX-format diagrams, and edit several documents within one project. 

    Similarly to Claude’s just-released Slack, Asana, and Figma integrations and comparable features in ChatGPT, the goal of Prism and tools like it is to centralize systems for ease of use. 

    “Much of the everyday work of research — drafting papers, revising arguments, managing equations and citations, and coordinating with collaborators — remains fragmented,” OpenAI said. “Researchers often move between editors, PDFs, LaTeX compilers, reference managers, and separate chat interfaces, losing context and interrupting focus.” 

    Also: OpenAI says it’s working toward catastrophe or utopia – just not sure which

    OpenAI said reasoning models are less likely to hallucinate citations — a primary issue in using AI for research, law, and other academic contexts — because their extended thinking process forces them to review material more closely. 

    Editor’s Note: Featured image at top from WP AI.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it | ZDNET

    Tags: AI Tools, Crixet, Fragmented Work, Free, GPT 5.2, OpenAI, Platforms, Research, Science, Scientists, Try It, ZDNET
    #AITools #Crixet #FragmentedWork #Free #GPT52 #OpenAI #Platforms #Research #Science #Scientists #TryIt #ZDNET
  3. Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it – ZDNET

    Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it

    Powered by GPT-5.2, Prism helps you draft papers, source contextualized references, and more – just don’t delegate your research to it.

    Written by Radhika Rajkumar, Editor, Jan. 27, 2026 at 10:01 a.m. PT

    Table of Contents

    How Prism works Limitations The AI workspace future How to access

    ZDNET’s key takeaways 

    • Prism is a free, collaborative AI workspace for research.
    • It’s meant to support, not replace, human-led science. 
    • AI-enabled workspaces aim to unite disparate tools.

    This fall, OpenAI deepened its investment in AI for science as the technology’s next frontier, citing advancements in GPT-5 as proof of its viability as a research tool — and eventual scientific automation system. As a first step to that end, OpenAI has launched Prism, a new collaborative workspace for scientists.

    “In 2025, AI changed software development forever,” OpenAI said in the announcement. “In 2026, we expect a comparable shift in science.”

    Also: Inside Google’s vision to make Gmail your personal AI agent command center

    Prism is powered by GPT-5.2, the company’s newest model, which was released last month. At the time, OpenAI said GPT-5.2 performs “at or above human expert level,” but the company doesn’t advise you to let it automate your research — here’s why. 

    (Disclosure: Ziff Davis, ZDNET’s parent company, filed an April 2025 lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)

    How Prism works

    OpenAI has invested heavily in demonstrating scientific use cases for its models, releasing papers on its prowess in mathematical discoverycell analysis, and biology experiments. But the tools scientists currently use, OpenAI argued in the announcement, constrain “how research is done day to day.” Enter Prism.

    Geared toward science writing and report compilation, which requires collaboration amongst several participants, Prism “brings drafting, revision, collaboration, and preparation for publication into a single, cloud-based, LaTeX-native workspace,” OpenAI said, referring to the LaTeX scientific typesetting standard

    Also: 10 ways AI can inflict unprecedented damage in 2026

    Prism puts GPT-5.2 inside a scientific project, ideally for a more seamless experience. According to OpenAI, it’s based on Crixet, a platform the company purchased and folded into this new release. 

    In a demo, OpenAI developers walked through Prism’s interface: a chat window on the left and an in-process research paper on the right. Prism lets scientists access multiple chat agents simultaneously, each executing different commands. These can include adding sources from arXiv and other platforms, creating lecture notes based on a topic, complete with citations, or perfecting equations and figures. Users can also test hypotheses with GPT-5.2 Thinking as a copilot, LaTeX-format diagrams, and edit several documents within one project. 

    Similarly to Claude’s just-released Slack, Asana, and Figma integrations and comparable features in ChatGPT, the goal of Prism and tools like it is to centralize systems for ease of use. 

    “Much of the everyday work of research — drafting papers, revising arguments, managing equations and citations, and coordinating with collaborators — remains fragmented,” OpenAI said. “Researchers often move between editors, PDFs, LaTeX compilers, reference managers, and separate chat interfaces, losing context and interrupting focus.” 

    Also: OpenAI says it’s working toward catastrophe or utopia – just not sure which

    OpenAI said reasoning models are less likely to hallucinate citations — a primary issue in using AI for research, law, and other academic contexts — because their extended thinking process forces them to review material more closely. 

    Editor’s Note: Featured image at top from WP AI.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it | ZDNET

    #AITools #Crixet #FragmentedWork #Free #GPT52 #OpenAI #Platforms #Research #Science #Scientists #TryIt #ZDNET
  4. Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it – ZDNET

    Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it

    Powered by GPT-5.2, Prism helps you draft papers, source contextualized references, and more – just don’t delegate your research to it.

    Written by Radhika Rajkumar, Editor, Jan. 27, 2026 at 10:01 a.m. PT

    Table of Contents

    How Prism works Limitations The AI workspace future How to access

    ZDNET’s key takeaways 

    • Prism is a free, collaborative AI workspace for research.
    • It’s meant to support, not replace, human-led science. 
    • AI-enabled workspaces aim to unite disparate tools.

    This fall, OpenAI deepened its investment in AI for science as the technology’s next frontier, citing advancements in GPT-5 as proof of its viability as a research tool — and eventual scientific automation system. As a first step to that end, OpenAI has launched Prism, a new collaborative workspace for scientists.

    “In 2025, AI changed software development forever,” OpenAI said in the announcement. “In 2026, we expect a comparable shift in science.”

    Also: Inside Google’s vision to make Gmail your personal AI agent command center

    Prism is powered by GPT-5.2, the company’s newest model, which was released last month. At the time, OpenAI said GPT-5.2 performs “at or above human expert level,” but the company doesn’t advise you to let it automate your research — here’s why. 

    (Disclosure: Ziff Davis, ZDNET’s parent company, filed an April 2025 lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)

    How Prism works

    OpenAI has invested heavily in demonstrating scientific use cases for its models, releasing papers on its prowess in mathematical discoverycell analysis, and biology experiments. But the tools scientists currently use, OpenAI argued in the announcement, constrain “how research is done day to day.” Enter Prism.

    Geared toward science writing and report compilation, which requires collaboration amongst several participants, Prism “brings drafting, revision, collaboration, and preparation for publication into a single, cloud-based, LaTeX-native workspace,” OpenAI said, referring to the LaTeX scientific typesetting standard

    Also: 10 ways AI can inflict unprecedented damage in 2026

    Prism puts GPT-5.2 inside a scientific project, ideally for a more seamless experience. According to OpenAI, it’s based on Crixet, a platform the company purchased and folded into this new release. 

    In a demo, OpenAI developers walked through Prism’s interface: a chat window on the left and an in-process research paper on the right. Prism lets scientists access multiple chat agents simultaneously, each executing different commands. These can include adding sources from arXiv and other platforms, creating lecture notes based on a topic, complete with citations, or perfecting equations and figures. Users can also test hypotheses with GPT-5.2 Thinking as a copilot, LaTeX-format diagrams, and edit several documents within one project. 

    Similarly to Claude’s just-released Slack, Asana, and Figma integrations and comparable features in ChatGPT, the goal of Prism and tools like it is to centralize systems for ease of use. 

    “Much of the everyday work of research — drafting papers, revising arguments, managing equations and citations, and coordinating with collaborators — remains fragmented,” OpenAI said. “Researchers often move between editors, PDFs, LaTeX compilers, reference managers, and separate chat interfaces, losing context and interrupting focus.” 

    Also: OpenAI says it’s working toward catastrophe or utopia – just not sure which

    OpenAI said reasoning models are less likely to hallucinate citations — a primary issue in using AI for research, law, and other academic contexts — because their extended thinking process forces them to review material more closely. 

    Editor’s Note: Featured image at top from WP AI.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it | ZDNET

    Tags: AI Tools, Crixet, Fragmented Work, Free, GPT 5.2, OpenAI, Platforms, Research, Science, Scientists, Try It, ZDNET
    #AITools #Crixet #FragmentedWork #Free #GPT52 #OpenAI #Platforms #Research #Science #Scientists #TryIt #ZDNET
  5. Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it – ZDNET

    Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it

    Powered by GPT-5.2, Prism helps you draft papers, source contextualized references, and more – just don’t delegate your research to it.

    Written by Radhika Rajkumar, Editor, Jan. 27, 2026 at 10:01 a.m. PT

    Table of Contents

    How Prism works Limitations The AI workspace future How to access

    ZDNET’s key takeaways 

    • Prism is a free, collaborative AI workspace for research.
    • It’s meant to support, not replace, human-led science. 
    • AI-enabled workspaces aim to unite disparate tools.

    This fall, OpenAI deepened its investment in AI for science as the technology’s next frontier, citing advancements in GPT-5 as proof of its viability as a research tool — and eventual scientific automation system. As a first step to that end, OpenAI has launched Prism, a new collaborative workspace for scientists.

    “In 2025, AI changed software development forever,” OpenAI said in the announcement. “In 2026, we expect a comparable shift in science.”

    Also: Inside Google’s vision to make Gmail your personal AI agent command center

    Prism is powered by GPT-5.2, the company’s newest model, which was released last month. At the time, OpenAI said GPT-5.2 performs “at or above human expert level,” but the company doesn’t advise you to let it automate your research — here’s why. 

    (Disclosure: Ziff Davis, ZDNET’s parent company, filed an April 2025 lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)

    How Prism works

    OpenAI has invested heavily in demonstrating scientific use cases for its models, releasing papers on its prowess in mathematical discoverycell analysis, and biology experiments. But the tools scientists currently use, OpenAI argued in the announcement, constrain “how research is done day to day.” Enter Prism.

    Geared toward science writing and report compilation, which requires collaboration amongst several participants, Prism “brings drafting, revision, collaboration, and preparation for publication into a single, cloud-based, LaTeX-native workspace,” OpenAI said, referring to the LaTeX scientific typesetting standard

    Also: 10 ways AI can inflict unprecedented damage in 2026

    Prism puts GPT-5.2 inside a scientific project, ideally for a more seamless experience. According to OpenAI, it’s based on Crixet, a platform the company purchased and folded into this new release. 

    In a demo, OpenAI developers walked through Prism’s interface: a chat window on the left and an in-process research paper on the right. Prism lets scientists access multiple chat agents simultaneously, each executing different commands. These can include adding sources from arXiv and other platforms, creating lecture notes based on a topic, complete with citations, or perfecting equations and figures. Users can also test hypotheses with GPT-5.2 Thinking as a copilot, LaTeX-format diagrams, and edit several documents within one project. 

    Similarly to Claude’s just-released Slack, Asana, and Figma integrations and comparable features in ChatGPT, the goal of Prism and tools like it is to centralize systems for ease of use. 

    “Much of the everyday work of research — drafting papers, revising arguments, managing equations and citations, and coordinating with collaborators — remains fragmented,” OpenAI said. “Researchers often move between editors, PDFs, LaTeX compilers, reference managers, and separate chat interfaces, losing context and interrupting focus.” 

    Also: OpenAI says it’s working toward catastrophe or utopia – just not sure which

    OpenAI said reasoning models are less likely to hallucinate citations — a primary issue in using AI for research, law, and other academic contexts — because their extended thinking process forces them to review material more closely. 

    Editor’s Note: Featured image at top from WP AI.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it | ZDNET

    #AITools #Crixet #FragmentedWork #Free #GPT52 #OpenAI #Platforms #Research #Science #Scientists #TryIt #ZDNET
  6. Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it – ZDNET

    Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it

    Powered by GPT-5.2, Prism helps you draft papers, source contextualized references, and more – just don’t delegate your research to it.

    Written by Radhika Rajkumar, Editor, Jan. 27, 2026 at 10:01 a.m. PT

    Table of Contents

    How Prism works Limitations The AI workspace future How to access

    ZDNET’s key takeaways 

    • Prism is a free, collaborative AI workspace for research.
    • It’s meant to support, not replace, human-led science. 
    • AI-enabled workspaces aim to unite disparate tools.

    This fall, OpenAI deepened its investment in AI for science as the technology’s next frontier, citing advancements in GPT-5 as proof of its viability as a research tool — and eventual scientific automation system. As a first step to that end, OpenAI has launched Prism, a new collaborative workspace for scientists.

    “In 2025, AI changed software development forever,” OpenAI said in the announcement. “In 2026, we expect a comparable shift in science.”

    Also: Inside Google’s vision to make Gmail your personal AI agent command center

    Prism is powered by GPT-5.2, the company’s newest model, which was released last month. At the time, OpenAI said GPT-5.2 performs “at or above human expert level,” but the company doesn’t advise you to let it automate your research — here’s why. 

    (Disclosure: Ziff Davis, ZDNET’s parent company, filed an April 2025 lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)

    How Prism works

    OpenAI has invested heavily in demonstrating scientific use cases for its models, releasing papers on its prowess in mathematical discoverycell analysis, and biology experiments. But the tools scientists currently use, OpenAI argued in the announcement, constrain “how research is done day to day.” Enter Prism.

    Geared toward science writing and report compilation, which requires collaboration amongst several participants, Prism “brings drafting, revision, collaboration, and preparation for publication into a single, cloud-based, LaTeX-native workspace,” OpenAI said, referring to the LaTeX scientific typesetting standard

    Also: 10 ways AI can inflict unprecedented damage in 2026

    Prism puts GPT-5.2 inside a scientific project, ideally for a more seamless experience. According to OpenAI, it’s based on Crixet, a platform the company purchased and folded into this new release. 

    In a demo, OpenAI developers walked through Prism’s interface: a chat window on the left and an in-process research paper on the right. Prism lets scientists access multiple chat agents simultaneously, each executing different commands. These can include adding sources from arXiv and other platforms, creating lecture notes based on a topic, complete with citations, or perfecting equations and figures. Users can also test hypotheses with GPT-5.2 Thinking as a copilot, LaTeX-format diagrams, and edit several documents within one project. 

    Similarly to Claude’s just-released Slack, Asana, and Figma integrations and comparable features in ChatGPT, the goal of Prism and tools like it is to centralize systems for ease of use. 

    “Much of the everyday work of research — drafting papers, revising arguments, managing equations and citations, and coordinating with collaborators — remains fragmented,” OpenAI said. “Researchers often move between editors, PDFs, LaTeX compilers, reference managers, and separate chat interfaces, losing context and interrupting focus.” 

    Also: OpenAI says it’s working toward catastrophe or utopia – just not sure which

    OpenAI said reasoning models are less likely to hallucinate citations — a primary issue in using AI for research, law, and other academic contexts — because their extended thinking process forces them to review material more closely. 

    Editor’s Note: Featured image at top from WP AI.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Meet Prism, OpenAI’s free research workspace for scientists – how to try it | ZDNET

    Tags: AI Tools, Crixet, Fragmented Work, Free, GPT 5.2, OpenAI, Platforms, Research, Science, Scientists, Try It, ZDNET
    #AITools #Crixet #FragmentedWork #Free #GPT52 #OpenAI #Platforms #Research #Science #Scientists #TryIt #ZDNET
  7. و مترجم آخر ل
    #Steam Frame
    باش يخلّيها ناجحة أكثر هو
    #FEX
    المترجم متاع ال
    #ARM
    theverge.com/report/820656/val
    معناها
    Steam
    عندو 3 طبقات ترجمة، كيمة واحد يتكلّم لغات الدّنيا الكلّ، حاجة تضمن النّجاح توّ و في المستقبل القريب و البعيد
    و كخبر آخر:
    #ZDNet
    تشوف راهو مستعملي
    Linux
    يمثّلوا 11٪ من مستعملي الحاسوب العادي في العالم
    zdnet.com/article/why-people-k
    ال
    Linux #Kernel 6.18
    خرج
    omgubuntu.co.uk/2025/11/linux-

  8. Naver's healthcare page has a neat feature where you just take a picture of your prescription medicine bag, and using OCR & AI it notes your medications, doses, etc for tracking. #Naver #네이버 #헬스케어 #ZDNet zdnet.co.kr/view/?no=202511141

  9. @sjvn what is this ??? The internet is not what it was supposed to be :angrymsn:

  10. A tweaked #OpenBox based #Arch distribution. Probably best for the intermediate Arch #Linux type

    #MaboxLinux is a throwback to old-school #Linux with a new-school look and feel | #ZDNET

    If you're looking for an Arch-based Linux distribution that is easy to install and offers a different UI than the tried and true GNOME, KDE, or Xfce, Mabox Linux might be just what you want.

    zdnet.com/article/mabox-linux-

  11. In Francia, Google dovrà modificare i contratti dell'app store nella sconfitta della causa francese.
    Il tribunale commerciale di Parigi ha ritenuto che #Google non offrisse agli sviluppatori l'opportunità di negoziare efficacemente le loro condizioni per essere sul #PlayStore.
    Di Campbell #Kwan su #ZDnet
    zdnet.com/article/google-must-

  12. Un'altra doccia fredda per i corifei del #VotoElettronico...
    La Commissione elettorale australiana pensava che il sistema di voto elettronico dell'ACT sarebbe stato sicuro fintanto che la sua chiave di crittografia fosse rimasta privata, ma un ricercatore ha scoperto che non è così.
    Di Campbell #Kwan su #ZDnet
    zdnet.com/article/tampering-wi

  13. Gartner prevede modifiche alla legge sulla #privacy, consolidamento dei servizi di #cybersecurity e leggi sui #ransomware per i prossimi 4 anni Gli analisti di #Gartner pensano anche che la tecnologia operativa armata provocherà vittime umane entro il 2025.
    Di Jonathan #Greig su #ZDnet
    zdnet.com/article/gartner-pred

  14. Occhio al malware: questa backdoor personalizzata consente agli aggressori di rubare in remoto token e certificati dalla piattaforma di identità di Microsoft. poliverso.org/display/0477a01e

  15. #OpenSource: e se invece di “incoraggiare” l'uso del software libero, l'amministrazione lo utilizzasse sistematicamente? Il rapporto #Latombe propone che l'uso di soluzioni proprietarie diventi "un'eccezione".
    Di Thierry #Noisette su #ZDnet zdnet.fr/blogs/l-esprit-libre/

  16. Three billion phishing emails sent each day make #DMARC critical for today's mail servers, says #ZDNet -- that's right, and thanks to an early grant from Euro-NGO #NLnet it's long been available via #OpenDMARC zdnet.com/article/three-billio

  17. #ZDNet reports: "Nintendo say 160 000 users impacted in recent account hacks":
    zdnet.com/article/nintendo-say

    #Nintendo confirmed that "unauthorized access to around 160,000 user accounts since the start of the month [has been gained]"

    "a #credentialStuffing attack isn't the source of its recent troubles. Instead, the gaming company says hackers abused its #NNID [#NintendoNetworkID] integration."

    NNID login support is being deprecated, and password resets are being issued.

    #security #securityBreach

  18. #ZDNet reports: "Nintendo say 160 000 users impacted in recent account hacks":
    zdnet.com/article/nintendo-say

    #Nintendo confirmed that "unauthorized access to around 160,000 user accounts since the start of the month [has been gained]"

    "a #credentialStuffing attack isn't the source of its recent troubles. Instead, the gaming company says hackers abused its #NNID [#NintendoNetworkID] integration."

    NNID login support is being deprecated, and password resets are being issued.

    #security #securityBreach