
Auto-updated from Ars Technica โ Latest. Refreshed daily. Data for March 14, 2026.
Curated by our tech editors. Practical, hands-on reviews weighted by community vote โ updated as the field evolves.

Staff at xAI are leaking that the company is flailing due to constant upheaval, painting a picture of disorganization behind its high-profile AI ambitions.

NASA officials dodged direct questions about Artemis II risks, and the analysis leans into why that stonewalling might signal real, unmanaged hazards.

A woman sneezed out maggots after fly larvae got trapped in her deviated septum, a medical horror story that is as bizarre as it is rare.

Slay the Spire 2 is getting dinged for feeling too familiar, a warning that sequels can coast on nostalgia without fresh mechanics.

AI researchers are figuring out why AIs get flummoxed by some games, drilling into the odd failure modes that expose limits of machine cognition.

Google Fiber is being sold to a private equity firm and will merge with a cable company, marking the end of an era for the ambitious, city-owned fiber project.

A supply-chain attack using invisible code has hit GitHub and other repositories, threatening to silently infect software dependencies at scale.

Adobe settled a DOJ cancellation fee lawsuit and will pay a $75 million penalty, a costly admission that its subscription practices trapped customers.

Doubling the voltage to 800 V architecture changes what EVs can do, and the article explains why higher voltage matters for charging speed and efficiency.

Another AT&T FirstNet user got a shocking $6,200 bill at $2 per megabyte, a brutal reminder that public-safety networks can still hit consumers with data-roaming nightmares.
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Tech dominates the top 10, with six entries covering AI flailing, cybersecurity breaches, Googleโs internet retreat, and EV engineering details. An unexpected but telling outlier is the medical grotesquerie of a woman sneezing out maggotsโproof that bizarre human-interest stories still punch through serious coverage. Another surprise: a game-review headline for Slay the Spire 2, suggesting that the game review beats remain a reliable draw for Ars Technicaโs readership. The list reveals a public appetite for under-the-hood failures rather than triumphant launches: staff complaints at xAI outrank any AI product news, and AT&Tโs billing horror story keeps telecom greed in the spotlight. No politics or sports cracked the top ten, reinforcing the tech-nerd bias of the source. Forward-looking: expect the invisible-code supply-chain attack to spiral into a major cybersecurity incident next week.
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Staff at xAI are leaking that the company is flailing due to constant upheaval, painting a picture of disorganization behind its high-profile AI ambitions.

NASA officials dodged direct questions about Artemis II risks, and the analysis leans into why that stonewalling might signal real, unmanaged hazards.

A woman sneezed out maggots after fly larvae got trapped in her deviated septum, a medical horror story that is as bizarre as it is rare.

Slay the Spire 2 is getting dinged for feeling too familiar, a warning that sequels can coast on nostalgia without fresh mechanics.

AI researchers are figuring out why AIs get flummoxed by some games, drilling into the odd failure modes that expose limits of machine cognition.

Google Fiber is being sold to a private equity firm and will merge with a cable company, marking the end of an era for the ambitious, city-owned fiber project.

A supply-chain attack using invisible code has hit GitHub and other repositories, threatening to silently infect software dependencies at scale.

Adobe settled a DOJ cancellation fee lawsuit and will pay a $75 million penalty, a costly admission that its subscription practices trapped customers.

Doubling the voltage to 800 V architecture changes what EVs can do, and the article explains why higher voltage matters for charging speed and efficiency.

Another AT&T FirstNet user got a shocking $6,200 bill at $2 per megabyte, a brutal reminder that public-safety networks can still hit consumers with data-roaming nightmares.
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