Reviewer, Laptops
Joanna Nelius reviews laptops for The Verge. Previously, she reviewed all sorts of computing devices and gaming hardware for USA Today, Gizmodo, PC Gamer, and Maximum PC, while reporting on issues related to technology and education. When she’s not eyeballs-deep in benchmark data, she’s teaching interactive fiction to teenagers or working on her short story collection and memoir.
7
Verge Score
Samsung Galaxy Book4 Edge review: beauty before brawn
Samsung’s first Copilot Plus PC is everything a thin and light laptop should be — but its performance is limited.
8
Verge Score
Asus Zenbook S 16 review: AMD stays in the game
AMD stands up to Qualcomm with its new Ryzen AI chips, showing it’s nowhere near out of this race.
Unlike a regular ebook, these AI-enabled digital textbooks will supposedly assess students’ reading level and change the content based on the reader. South Korea expects to be the first country in the world to use these books starting in 2025.
The company’s restructure mostly affects sales and managerial staff. Some outlets have reported, based on sources, that the layoffs will cut more than 10,000 jobs, but an analyst told SiliconAngle a number that high seems unlikely.
Dell isn’t the only tech company handing out pink-slips; Intel announced last week it’s laying off over 15,000 employees.
In his latest book, Microsoft software developer turned literature professor Dennis Yi Tenen takes us all the way back to 17th-century apps for a deep dive into computer science and literature’s intertwined history — and, as Tenen says, why it’s important our understanding of AI “become more grounded in the history of the humanities.”
Here’s how Qualcomm’s new laptop chips really stack up to Apple, Intel, and AMD
We tested every Snapdragon X chip against the Intel Core Ultra, AMD Ryzen 8000, and Apple M3.