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Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Jan. 10.
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In today's unaffordable housing market, are 7% rates here to stay?
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Strange things are afoot at CES, where we threw some unusual items at TSA's in-development airport scanner to see what it would detect.
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From robot vacuums that pick up laundry and climb stairs to talking plants and a cooling cat, CES 2025 had some of the best home tech innovations we've seen in years.
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Here are some hints -- and the answers -- for the Jan. 10 Strands puzzle, No. 313.
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Here are some hints — and the answers — for Connections: Sports Edition No. 109 for Jan. 10.
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David McAfee, AMD's corporate vice president and general manager of its Client Channel Business, and Frank Azor, the chief architect of gaming solutions and gaming marketing at AMD, sat down with reporters to give their answer: Intel's competing Arrow Lake chip simply stunk.
In PCWorld's review of the 9800X3D, we said that the chip obliterated Intel's best. At the same time, supplies of the part — a single chip, mind you — promptly sold out. And now AMD has added the 9950X3D, an even more powerful chip, to the lineup.
Put simply, AMD simply didn't anticipate the disparity between its own product and Intel's. "Put it this way," AMD's Azor said. "We knew we built a great part. We didn't know the competitor had built such a horrible
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