Engadget favicon

Engadget

Analyzed: 2026-04-23
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
13
/ 100
Known but Invisible

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
77
/ 100
Product-Strong

What the model believes about Engadget without web search.

LLM Authority?
2
/ 100
Absent

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
14
/ 100
Weak-Recall

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Engadget from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
77/100
Product-Strong
Quality?
0.63
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.80
Top associations for Engadget
technology news 3 consumer electronics coverage 3 clickbaity headlines 3 hands-on product reviews 2 not deeply technical 2 gadget reviews 2 product launches 2 gadget reviews 2 gadget reviews 2 product launch coverage 2 less distinctive than competitors 2 tech industry coverage 1 reviews lacking critical edge 1 consumer electronics reporting 1 startup coverage 1
Control prompt (category baseline)
scientific discoveries 2 technology news coverage 2 industry analysis 1 emerging trend explainers 1 innovations reporting 1 product reviews 1 science news coverage 1 latest technology developments 1 tech and science outlet 1 complex topics simplified 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Engadget is firmly in the model's "tech & science outlet" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Engadget known for?
Engadget is known as a technology news and reviews site, covering consumer electronics, gadgets, and tech industry updates.
Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Engadget known for?
Engadget is known for technology news, gadget reviews, product launches, and coverage of consumer electronics and digital culture.
Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
2/100
Absent
Recall mode (no web)?
1

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
3

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best tech and science outlets for startup founders? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which tech and science publications are best for product managers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best science and tech outlets for engineers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which tech news sites are good for AI and machine learning updates? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best outlets for gadget reviews and tech analysis? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which publications cover consumer tech in depth? #5 #2
discovery What are the best tech and science newsletters for busy professionals? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which outlets are best for science reporting with strong explanations? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best publications for tech policy and regulation coverage? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which tech and science outlets are best for founders and investors? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the top sources for space and astronomy news? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which digital magazines are best for emerging technology trends? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best outlets for science stories in plain English? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which tech outlets are good for deep dives and explainers? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best outlets for startup funding and business news? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which tech and science publications are best for students? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best newsletters for science and innovation news? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which outlets are good for hardware and gadget enthusiasts? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best tech and science outlets for professionals who want daily updates? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which publications are best for a mix of tech business and science coverage? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to the leading tech news outlet? #3 #4
comparison Which tech and science outlets are better than the biggest general tech publication? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a subscription tech magazine? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which science journalism sites are better than mainstream news coverage? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a newsletter-first tech outlet? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which outlets are better for in-depth reporting than quick tech headlines? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a gadget-focused publication? #2 #1
comparison Which tech and science outlets are better for independent analysis than corporate media? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to a paywalled science publication? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which outlets are better for startup coverage than general business news sites? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find trustworthy tech and science news outlets? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I choose a tech outlet that is not just clickbait? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I stay up to date on science and technology without reading too much? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find a tech publication with both news and analysis? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get better startup and innovation coverage in one place? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I find a science outlet that explains complex topics simply? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I keep up with gadget launches and reviews? #2 not mentioned
problem How do I find an outlet with a good daily newsletter on tech? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I avoid missing important AI and software news? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I get reliable science reporting for non-experts? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What do tech and science outlets cost on average? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there free tech and science newsletters worth subscribing to? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which tech and science publications have a free tier? #8 not mentioned
transactional How much is a premium tech news subscription? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which science publications offer student discounts? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are tech and science outlet subscriptions worth it? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is the best value tech and science subscription? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Which outlets have monthly subscriptions instead of annual plans? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Do tech and science newsletters have paid plans? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional What is included in a premium science news membership? not mentioned not mentioned
Sample responses
Prompt: Which publications cover consumer tech in depth? · discovery · recall mode
For in-depth consumer tech coverage, these are strong picks: - **The Verge** — broad consumer tech, reviews, explainers, and industry context. - **CNET** — product reviews, buying guides, and practical consumer advice. - **Ars Technica** — more technical depth; great for serious analysis. - **Wired** — consumer tech plus trends, privacy, and culture. - **Engadget** — gadget launches, reviews, and news. - **TechCrunch** — better for startups and tech business, but still useful. - **PCMag** — lots of hands-on reviews and comparisons. - **Tom’s Guide** — strong buying advice for phones, laptops, TVs, and more. - **Notebookcheck** — especially good for laptops, phones, and detailed testing. - **Android Authority** / **iMore** — deep coverage if you want Android or Apple specifically. If you want, I can also rank these by **best reviews**, **best analysis**, or **best for smartphones/laptops**.
Prompt: Which publications cover consumer tech in depth? · discovery · retrieval mode
Good consumer-tech depth picks: - **Ars Technica** — strong for detailed analysis and long-form reporting on consumer gadgets, hardware, and OSes. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Engadget** — big on hands-on reviews, buying guides, and frequent in-depth product testing. ([engadget.com](https://www.engadget.com/how-we-test-and-ethics-statement-213125639.html/?utm_source=openai)) - **RTINGS** — best if you want rigorous, lab-style comparisons for TVs, headphones, monitors, and other gear. ([rtings.com](https://www.rtings.com/company/about-us?utm_source=openai)) - **Tom’s Guide** — broad consumer-tech coverage with heavy review/testing focus across phones, laptops, TVs, wearables, and more. ([tomsguide.com](https://www.tomsguide.com//?utm_source=openai)) - **The Verge** — good for consumer-tech news plus reviews and feature journalism with a broader culture angle. ([theverge.zendesk.com](https://theverge.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/35590386007315-About-The-Verge?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED** — more trend/industry oriented, but still useful for consumer tech when you want context around how products affect daily life. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to: 1. **best for reviews**, 2. **best for deep analysis**, or 3. **best free sites**.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
14/100
Weak-Recall
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best tech and science news outlets? 0 2/5 6, 5
Which tech and science publications are most respected? 0 0/5
What are the top tech and science outlets for readers? 0 3/5 6, 5, 5
Which digital publications cover both technology and science well? 10 0/5
What are the most popular tech and science magazines online? 0 5/5 6, 5, 8, 6, 9
What are the best tech news sites with science reporting? 0 0/5
Which outlets are good for startup and technology news? 0 0/5
What are the most recommended science and tech newsletters? 0 0/5
What are the best subscription tech and science publications? 0 0/5
Which tech and science outlets are worth paying for? 0 0/5
What are the top independent tech and science publications? 0 0/5
Which tech and science outlets are best for enthusiasts? 0 0/5
What are the best science journalism sites for general readers? 0 0/5
What are the leading tech media outlets online? 0 5/5 5, 5, 6, 6, 5
Which tech and science outlets have the best newsletters? 0 0/5
Sample recall responses
Prompt: What are the best tech and science news outlets? (no web search)
Here are some of the best **tech + science news outlets**, depending on what you want: ### Tech news - **The Verge** — best all-around consumer tech coverage - **Ars Technica** — deep, detailed, highly technical - **TechCrunch** — startups, VC, product launches - **Wired** — broader tech + culture + future trends - **404 Media** — sharp reporting on internet/platform issues - **Engadget** — good consumer gadget/news coverage ### Science news - **Nature News** — top-tier science reporting from a major journal publisher - **Science** / **AAAS** — strong coverage of major research developments - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent for math, physics, CS, and deep science stories - **MIT Technology Review** — great intersection of science, AI, and emerging tech - **STAT** — especially strong for health, medicine, biotech - **Smithsonian Magazine** — accessible science and discovery coverage ### Best for quick, broad updates - **Axios Future** - **BBC News: Science & Environment** - **Reuters Tech / Science** ### Best newsletters/podcasts - **The Download** (MIT Technology Review) - **Signals and Threads** (The Verge) - **Daily Briefing** (Nature) If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free outlets only**, 2. the **most reliable/least hype**, or 3. a **top 5 list** for daily reading.
Iteration: 3 of 5
Prompt: What are the best tech and science news outlets? (no web search)
Here are the best tech and science news outlets, by category: ## Tech news - **The Verge** — best all-around tech coverage, consumer gadgets, and policy - **Wired** — deeper reporting on tech culture, AI, cybersecurity, and society - **Ars Technica** — best for serious, detailed tech and science coverage - **TechCrunch** — startups, venture capital, and product launches - **Engadget** — good for gadget news and reviews - **Bloomberg Technology** — strong for business-side tech and AI - **Rest of World** — excellent for global tech stories outside the US ## Science news - **Nature News** — top-tier science reporting tied to major research - **Science / AAAS** — strong general science news and analysis - **Science News** — accessible, high-quality science journalism - **STAT** — great for biotech, medicine, and health science - **New Scientist** — broad, readable science coverage - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent for math, physics, and theoretical science ## Best “one-stop” picks - **Ars Technica** for tech + science - **Nature News** for science - **The Verge** for mainstream tech - **Wired** for smart longform If you want, I can also give you the **best free outlets only**, or the **best newsletters/RSS feeds** from these.
Iteration: 4 of 5

What to do next Recommendations for Engadget

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Close the gap on broad category queries

Your TOM is solid on specialty queries but weaker on broad category questions. Seed content that frames your brand in the exact phrasing users use in broad queries, not just your specialty sub-category.

+5 to +15 on TOM

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM: (LBA × Authority × TOM)^(1/3). Geometric mean is used so that any single weak metric pulls the overall score down, rather than being masked by strength elsewhere.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 23, 2026 at 6:03 AM

All 210 AI responses for Engadget

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (7 prompts)

On a scale of 1-10, rate your familiarity with the brand "Engadget" in the tech & science outlet category. 1 = I've never heard of this brand 4 = I'm aware of the name but know little specific 7 = I know the brand well including its main products 10 = Deep, confident knowledge including specific features, differentiators, pricing tier, competitor positioning Return JSON: { "familiarity": <1-10 integer>, "justification": "<one sentence>" }
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":8,"justification":"I know Engadget well as a long-running tech news and gadget review outlet, including its editorial focus and general positioning versus similar publications, though not every current detail."}
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 8, "justification": "I know Engadget well as a long-running tech news and reviews outlet, including its editorial focus, typical content, and general position among similar publications." }
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":8,"justification":"I know Engadget well as a long-running tech news and gadget review outlet, including its editorial focus and general market positioning, though not exhaustive current specifics."}
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
{"familiarity":8,"justification":"I know Engadget well as a long-running tech news and reviews outlet, including its editorial focus, audience, and general positioning among consumer tech media, though not every current detail."}
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
{ "familiarity": 8, "justification": "Engadget is a well-known tech and science news/review outlet, and I’m familiar with its coverage style, editorial focus, and role in the broader tech media landscape." }
What is Engadget known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget is known as a technology news and reviews site, covering consumer electronics, gadgets, and tech industry updates.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget is known for technology news, gadget reviews, product launches, and coverage of consumer electronics and digital culture.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget is known for technology news, gadget reviews, product launches, and coverage of consumer electronics and the tech industry.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget is known as a technology news and reviews website, covering consumer electronics, gadgets, startups, and major tech industry announcements.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget is known for technology news, product reviews, gadget coverage, and consumer electronics reporting.
What are Engadget's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget’s main strengths are its fast tech-news coverage, broad consumer-technology focus, and accessible writing that makes complex products easy to follow. It’s also known for hands-on reviews, event reporting, and strong brand recognition in the tech media space. Its main weaknesses are that the volume-driven news style can sometimes feel less in-depth than more analytical outlets, and its review tone has occasionally been seen as inconsistent over time. Like many ad-supported tech publications, it can also feel somewhat mainstream and less specialized for niche technical audiences.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget’s main strengths are timely tech news, strong gadget/event coverage, and generally accessible writing that makes complex consumer tech easy to follow. It’s also known for hands-on reviews and a broad mix of news, opinion, and product coverage. Its weaknesses are that reviews can feel inconsistent compared with more specialized outlets, and the site has sometimes been criticized for leaning too heavily on headline-driven news and sponsored/aggregated content. Some readers also find the tone less deep or analytical than the best tech publications.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget’s main strengths are its fast tech-news coverage, broad consumer-tech focus, and accessible writing style. It’s especially good for timely product news, hands-on impressions, and making complex tech feel readable for a general audience. Its main weaknesses are that it can feel less deep or analytical than some competitors, with occasional inconsistency in review rigor and less value for readers who want highly specialized or enterprise-focused coverage. Like many high-volume tech outlets, it may prioritize speed and breadth over in-depth reporting.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget’s main strengths are its strong tech-news coverage, quick breaking-news reporting, clear consumer-friendly explanations, and a long-standing reputation in gadgets/reviews. Its weaknesses are that it can feel less distinctive than newer tech outlets, sometimes prioritize broad coverage over deep analysis, and its review tone can be seen as more mainstream than highly specialized.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget’s main strengths are its broad consumer-tech coverage, fast news reporting, and accessible, reader-friendly writing. It’s good for product launches, gadget news, and straightforward explainers. Its weaknesses are that it can sometimes feel more news-driven than deeply analytical, with reviews and long-form insight that may be less exhaustive than some specialist outlets. Like many tech media brands, it can also be influenced by the pace of the news cycle, which may make coverage feel uneven at times.
Who should use Engadget? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Use Engadget if you want tech news, gadget reviews, product launches, and quick summaries of consumer electronics and digital trends. It’s a good fit for readers who like staying current on mainstream tech. Avoid it if you want highly technical, deeply analytical, or hands-on professional reviews; if you prefer long-form investigative reporting; or if you’re not interested in consumer gadgets and tech news.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Use Engadget if you want fast, broad consumer-tech news, product launches, gadget reviews, and general tech trend coverage in an easy-to-scan format. It’s good for casual readers, shoppers comparing devices, and people who like staying current. Avoid it if you want deep technical analysis, highly specialized industry reporting, or long-form investigative journalism. It may also feel too general or ad/product-focused for readers who prefer niche, expert-level tech coverage.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Use Engadget if you want fast, readable coverage of consumer tech news, product launches, gadget reviews, and big industry updates. It’s good for casual readers, tech enthusiasts, and people comparing phones, laptops, smart home gear, and other consumer devices. Avoid it if you want deeply technical analysis, highly specialized enterprise/engineering coverage, or long-form investigative reporting. It may also not be ideal if you prefer very measured, low-opinion, or ultra-academic tech journalism.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget is best for people who want quick, mainstream tech news, gadget reviews, product announcements, and consumer electronics coverage. It suits casual to moderately tech-savvy readers, shoppers comparing devices, and anyone who likes updates on phones, laptops, wearables, gaming, and startups. People who should avoid it are those looking for deep technical analysis, highly specialized enterprise/engineering coverage, or very neutral long-form reporting. If you want minimal opinion, academic-level detail, or niche professional IT content, Engadget may feel too consumer-focused and commentary-heavy.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Use Engadget if you want quick, approachable tech news, gadget reviews, product launches, and consumer-focused buying guidance. It’s a good fit for general readers, shoppers, and people who like staying current without overly technical depth. Avoid it if you want deep technical analysis, highly specialized engineering coverage, or very rigorous long-form investigative reporting on every topic. Hardcore enthusiasts and professionals may prefer more niche or technical outlets.
How does Engadget compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget is generally seen as a fast, consumer-friendly tech news site: quicker and lighter than Ars Technica, less opinionated and design-heavy than The Verge, and usually less buying-guide focused than CNET or Tom’s Guide. Its strength is broad coverage of gadgets, launches, and product news in an accessible style. Compared with competitors, it tends to feel more mainstream and immediate, but often less deep in technical analysis than Ars Technica and less distinct in editorial voice than The Verge or Wired.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget is generally seen as a mainstream, consumer-friendly tech news and reviews brand. Compared with its main competitors: - The Verge: more design-forward, opinionated, and culture-heavy; often feels more polished and editorially distinctive. - CNET: broader and more utility-focused, with lots of how-to and product advice; generally more search-driven. - TechCrunch: much stronger on startups, VC, and Silicon Valley business news; less consumer gadget focus. - Wired: more long-form, analytical, and trend/culture oriented; less immediate gadget-news oriented. - Ars Technica: more technical, in-depth, and enthusiast/IT focused; less mainstream and less flashy. Engadget’s strengths are quick coverage, accessible writing, and broad consumer tech appeal. Its weaknesses versus top rivals are that it can feel less distinctive than The Verge, less deeply technical than Ars Technica, and less business/startup focused than TechCrunch.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget is generally seen as a top-tier consumer tech news site, but it differs from its main competitors in style and focus. Compared with The Verge, Engadget is usually less opinionated and more straightforward, while The Verge tends to have stronger design, deeper feature stories, and a more distinct editorial voice. Compared with TechCrunch, Engadget is much more consumer-electronics oriented, while TechCrunch focuses more on startups, funding, and the tech business side. Compared with CNET, Engadget is often perceived as more news-driven and enthusiast-friendly, while CNET leans more toward broader consumer advice, reviews, and service journalism. Overall, Engadget’s strength is fast, accessible gadget and tech coverage; its weakness is that it can feel less distinctive or less deep than some rivals in long-form analysis and broader industry reporting.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget is generally seen as a mainstream consumer-tech news site: faster and more accessible than deeply analytical outlets, but less distinctive than some top competitors. Compared with The Verge: Engadget is usually more straightforward and product-focused, while The Verge has stronger opinion, design, and culture coverage. Compared with CNET: both cover consumer tech broadly, but Engadget tends to feel more newsy and gadget-centric, while CNET is broader and more service/review oriented. Compared with TechCrunch: Engadget focuses on consumer electronics and tech news; TechCrunch is stronger on startups, funding, and the tech business side. Compared with Ars Technica: Engadget is lighter and more consumer-friendly, while Ars Technica is deeper, more technical, and more rigorous for enthusiast readers. Compared with Wired: Engadget is more immediate and product-driven, while Wired is more narrative and trend/culture oriented. Overall: Engadget’s strength is broad, fast coverage of gadgets and consumer tech; its weakness is that it can be less authoritative or differentiated than the strongest niche competitors.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Engadget is a well-known consumer tech news and reviews site, but compared with its main competitors it tends to sit in the middle on influence and depth. - Versus The Verge: The Verge usually has stronger editorial voice, more ambitious feature reporting, and a more distinctive brand. Engadget is often more straightforward and product-focused. - Versus CNET: CNET is broader and heavily review/SEO-driven. Engadget can feel more conversational and newsy, but CNET often has the edge in volume and buying-guide content. - Versus TechCrunch: TechCrunch is much more startup/VC focused. Engadget is better for consumer gadgets and mainstream tech coverage. - Versus Gizmodo: Gizmodo is more opinionated and culture-heavy; Engadget is generally cleaner and less snarky. Overall, Engadget is solid for gadget news, launches, and practical tech coverage, but it’s usually not seen as the most authoritative or most distinctive outlet in the space.
What do people typically complain about with Engadget?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
People often complain that Engadget can feel clickbaity, overly ad-heavy, and sometimes more opinionated than deeply analytical. Some also say its reviews and news coverage can be inconsistent, with a bias toward certain big brands or consumer-tech trends.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
People often complain that Engadget can feel clickbaity or sensationalized, with headlines that overstate the news. Others mention ad-heavy pages, shallow or rushed reviews, and occasional bias toward certain products or stories.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
People typically complain that Engadget has too many ads and sponsored posts, headlines can feel clickbaity, reviews may seem inconsistent or biased, and the site can be cluttered or slow to navigate.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
People often complain that Engadget can feel too ad-heavy, overly clickbait-y at times, and more focused on short news coverage than deep analysis. Some also say its reviews and opinions can be inconsistent or biased, and that it sometimes publishes articles that feel rushed or superficial.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
People commonly complain that Engadget has become more clicky and less in-depth than it used to be, with occasional bias in reviews, repetitive coverage of the same tech news, and too much emphasis on hype or sponsored-style content. Some also say the site’s writing can feel inconsistent and that reviews aren’t always as detailed or critical as they’d like.
What is a typical tech & science outlet known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical tech & science outlet is known for covering technology news, scientific discoveries, product launches, gadgets, startups, research breakthroughs, and expert analysis on how new developments affect everyday life.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical tech & science outlet is known for covering technology news, product launches, scientific discoveries, research breakthroughs, gadget reviews, industry trends, and explanations of complex topics in a more accessible way.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical tech & science outlet is known for covering the latest developments in technology, science news, product reviews, innovations, and explainers on emerging trends.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
It typically covers news, reviews, and explainers about technology, science, gadgets, software, AI, startups, and major research or industry developments.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
A typical tech & science outlet is known for reporting on new gadgets, software, startups, AI, space, health, and scientific discoveries, often with analysis of how they affect everyday life and industry.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best tech and science outlets for startup founders? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For startup founders, the best mix is usually **tech news + deep science + startup/business**: ### Top picks - **TechCrunch** — best for startup fundraising, product launches, VC news. - **The Information** — excellent for serious tech industry and company analysis. - **Wired** — strong on emerging tech, product trends, and future-facing science. - **MIT Technology Review** — great for AI, climate, biotech, and breakthrough tech. - **Nature** / **Science** — best if your startup touches hard science, biotech, or deep tech. - **IEEE Spectrum** — strong engineering-focused coverage, especially robotics, AI, hardware. - **Axios Pro Rata / Axios Tech Policy** — useful for quick, founder-relevant tech policy and market updates. - **Stratechery** — one of the best for strategy and platform/business model thinking. - **VentureBeat** — especially good for AI and enterprise tech. - **Semafor** / **The Verge** — good broader tech context and industry narratives. ### If you want the shortest “must-follow” list: 1. **TechCrunch** 2. **The Information** 3. **MIT Technology Review** 4. **Wired** 5. **Stratechery** ### Best newsletter stack for founders - **TLDR** - **Morning Brew Tech** - **Benedict Evans** - **Stratechery** - **Term Sheet (Fortune)** If you want, I can also give you a **“best by category” list** for AI, biotech, climate, hardware, or SaaS founders.
retrieval Not mentioned
For startup founders, I’d use this mix: - **TechCrunch** — best all-around startup outlet: founders, fundraising, and what’s happening in the startup ecosystem. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/about-techcrunch/?utm_source=openai)) - **Techmeme** — best daily “what matters right now” aggregator for tech leaders; it pulls from thousands of sources and highlights the earliest/most important coverage. ([techmeme.com](https://techmeme.com/about?utm_source=openai)) - **MIT Technology Review** — best for emerging tech with business impact, especially AI and frontier tech. ([forms.technologyreview.com](https://forms.technologyreview.com/subscribers-only/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ars Technica** — best for deeper technical reporting and strong analysis on tech trends and science adjacent to product/building. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/about-us?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED** — best for broad tech/culture/business context and founder stories. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/video/watch/startup-founders-share-their-biggest-mistakes-wired-smarter?utm_source=openai)) - **The Verge** — best for consumer tech, platform shifts, and a fast read on what tech people are talking about. ([theverge.zendesk.com](https://theverge.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/35590386007315-About-The-Verge?utm_source=openai)) - **Quanta Magazine** — best for rigorous, readable science coverage if your startup touches AI, math, biotech, or deep tech. ([quantamagazine.org](https://www.quantamagazine.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nature** and **Science** — best for frontier science and research signals; useful if you’re in biotech, materials, climate, or hard tech. ([shop-amers.nature.com](https://shop-amers.nature.com/pages/about-us?utm_source=openai)) **If you only want 3:** TechCrunch, Techmeme, and MIT Technology Review. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/about-techcrunch/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **“daily read stack”** or a **biotech/AI/climate-specific list**.
Which tech and science publications are best for product managers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For product managers, the best reads are the ones that combine **tech trends, user behavior, business strategy, and enough science/engineering depth to stay credible**. ### Best overall - **Stratechery** — best for platform strategy, AI, and tech business models. - **Lenny’s Newsletter** — very practical for product, growth, and management. - **The Pragmatic Engineer** — great for how engineering teams actually work. - **a16z** — strong on tech trends, AI, and startup strategy. - **Harvard Business Review** — still one of the best for product leadership and org strategy. ### Best tech publications - **MIT Technology Review** — best mix of deep tech and accessibility. - **The Information** — strong for tech industry reporting if you want high-signal business news. - **TechCrunch** — useful for startup and product launches. - **Wired** — good for broader tech/culture coverage. - **The Verge** — good for consumer tech and product direction. ### Best science publications - **Nature** — best for serious science coverage. - **Science** — another top-tier source for research and discovery. - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent if you want deep but readable science/math/AI articles. - **Scientific American** — broader and easier to digest. - **Nautilus** — thoughtful long-form science and systems thinking. ### Best if you want a lighter daily read - **Morning Brew** — quick business/tech updates. - **Axios Pro Rata / Axios AI+** — concise and useful. - **Product Hunt Newsletter** — good for product discovery and trends. ### My short recommendation If you only subscribe to 5: 1. **Stratechery** 2. **Lenny’s Newsletter** 3. **MIT Technology Review** 4. **The Pragmatic Engineer** 5. **Nature** or **Quanta Magazine** If you want, I can also give you: - a **free-only list** - a **subscription budget list** - or a **daily reading stack for PMs**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For most product managers, the best mix is: - **TechCrunch** — best for startups, funding, product launches, and market moves. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED** — best for broader tech, consumer behavior, AI, privacy, and the “what does this mean for the future?” layer. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/about/wired-staff/?utm_source=openai)) - **MIT Technology Review** — best for emerging tech with a more analytical, decision-oriented lens. ([forms.technologyreview.com](https://forms.technologyreview.com/leadership-summit/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nature** — best for serious science coverage and major breakthroughs that may become future products/platforms. ([nature.com](https://www.nature.com/nature/journal-information?utm_source=openai)) - **Science** — best for high-level scientific research and policy trends; AAAS describes it as a premier global science weekly. ([aaas.org](https://www.aaas.org/journals?utm_source=openai)) - **Scientific American** — best for accessible science + technology coverage when you want strong context without heavy academic jargon. ([scientificamerican.com](https://www.scientificamerican.com/page/about-scientific-american/?utm_source=openai)) If you want a lean PM stack, I’d pick **TechCrunch + MIT Technology Review + Nature**. If you want broader strategic context, add **WIRED** and **Scientific American**. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also turn this into a **“best free newsletters for PMs”** list.
What are the best science and tech outlets for engineers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best science/tech outlets for engineers, depending on what you want: - **IEEE Spectrum** — Best all-around engineering tech coverage; solid depth on robotics, AI, hardware, energy, and emerging tech. - **MIT Technology Review** — Great for big-picture tech trends, AI, biotech, and commercialization. - **Ars Technica** — Strong technical reporting on computing, hardware, space, and policy. - **Hackaday** — Excellent for makers, embedded systems, electronics, and clever projects. - **IEEE Signal Processing / Communications / Spectrum blogs** — Good if you want more specialized, technical reads. - **The Register** — Very good for enterprise tech, chips, cloud, and a more skeptical tone. - **Semafor Tech / TechCrunch** — Better for industry and startups than deep engineering, but useful for market context. - **Nature / Science** — Best for core science breakthroughs that may become future engineering products. - **NVIDIA, Qualcomm, and ARM blogs** — Useful for hardware/AI platform updates straight from the source. If you want newsletters/podcasts: - **The Download (MIT Technology Review)** - **The Gradient** — especially for AI engineering - **Acquired** — not technical, but great for understanding tech companies and systems If you want, I can also give you a **top 10 list specifically for software engineers**, **hardware engineers**, or **AI/ML engineers**.
retrieval Not mentioned
For engineers, my top picks are: - **IEEE Spectrum** — best overall for engineering-first coverage of AI, power, semiconductors, telecom, aerospace, and hardware. It’s the IEEE’s flagship publication and is explicitly aimed at engineering and applied science readers. ([spectrum.ieee.org](https://spectrum.ieee.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nature News** — best for high-end science context and research trends across disciplines. Nature says its news covers essential science news and developments affecting research communities. ([springernature.com](https://www.springernature.com/gp/librarians/products/journals/nature-research-journals/nature-science-journalism?utm_source=openai)) - **Science** — best for major research breakthroughs and science policy. AAAS publishes *Science* as its flagship journal, which is a strong signal if you want research-heavy coverage. ([aaas.org](https://www.aaas.org/news/get-ready-fresh-perspective-introducing-newly-redesigned-science-print-edition?utm_source=openai)) - **Quanta Magazine** — best for deep, well-explained math, physics, CS, and biology stories. Quanta emphasizes scientific accuracy and independent editorial control. ([quantamagazine.org](https://www.quantamagazine.org/about?utm_source=openai)) - **Scientific American** — best broad science/tech read for engineers who want accessible but serious explanations of new tech and research. ([scientific-american.com](https://scientific-american.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ars Technica** — best for computing, hardware, software, security, and space with more technical depth than most general tech outlets. ([en.wikipedia.org](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ars_Technica?utm_source=openai)) - **Science News** — best for quick, high-quality science updates without too much fluff. It’s a long-running science magazine/news outlet from the Society for Science. ([sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **American Scientist** — best if you want readable science/engineering coverage with a more classic magazine feel. It describes itself as a magazine about science, engineering, and technology. ([americanscientist.org](https://www.americanscientist.org/node/2165?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **free-only list**, 2. a **newsletter/RSS list**, or 3. the **best outlets by engineering field** (software, EE, mech, civil, aero, biotech).
Which tech news sites are good for AI and machine learning updates? discovery 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good ones for AI/ML updates: - **The Batch by deeplearning.ai** — excellent AI-focused weekly newsletter/news. - **TechCrunch AI** — startup/product and industry news. - **VentureBeat (AI section)** — strong on enterprise AI and ML trends. - **MIT Technology Review** — thoughtful coverage, less hype. - **Ars Technica** — good technical reporting and analysis. - **The Verge (AI section)** — broader tech news with AI coverage. - **Wired** — useful for AI policy, culture, and big developments. - **MarkTechPost** — very ML/research-heavy. - **Synced** — solid AI research and industry updates. - **Hugging Face blog** — great for practical ML/LLM tooling and open-source news. If you want, I can also give you: - **best newsletters** - **best research-focused sites** - **best sites for AI product/startup news**
retrieval Not mentioned
Good picks: - **TechCrunch** — strong for startup, product, and funding news; their AI section explicitly covers generative AI, LLMs, speech, and ethics. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/category/artificial-intelligence/?utm_source=openai)) - **VentureBeat** — good for AI/ML plus enterprise and developer angles; they have a dedicated “AI, ML and Deep Learning” section. ([venturebeat.org](https://venturebeat.org/category/ai-ml-and-deep-learning/?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED** — solid for broader AI coverage and big-picture analysis; they have a dedicated AI tag and staff who cover artificial intelligence. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/tag/ai/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ars Technica** — good if you want more technical, policy, and engineering-focused AI coverage. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/ai/2025/03/compression-conjures-apparent-intelligence-in-new-puzzle-solving-ai-approach/?utm_source=openai)) - **MIT Technology Review** — one of the better sources for thoughtful AI reporting and industry analysis; MIT Tech Review runs AI-focused events and newsletters. ([event.technologyreview.com](https://event.technologyreview.com/emtech-ai-2026/home?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. **best free sites only**, 2. **best newsletters**, or 3. **best sites for research papers / ML engineering**.
What are the best outlets for gadget reviews and tech analysis? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best outlets for gadget reviews and tech analysis: - **The Verge** — strong for mainstream gadget reviews, product comparisons, and consumer tech analysis. - **Ars Technica** — excellent for deeper technical analysis, especially hardware, software, and industry context. - **Wired** — good mix of gadget coverage, trends, and broader tech culture. - **CNET** — very useful for practical reviews and buyer-focused recommendations. - **Tom’s Guide / Tom’s Hardware** — strong for product testing, performance benchmarks, and buying advice. - **Notebookcheck** — especially good for laptops, phones, and detailed display/battery testing. - **PCMag** — broad consumer tech reviews with consistent scoring and comparisons. - **TechRadar** — solid for quick-to-read reviews and best-of lists. - **AnandTech** — historically one of the best for in-depth hardware analysis and benchmarks. - **MKBHD (Marques Brownlee)** — one of the best YouTube sources for polished gadget reviews and consumer perspective. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best outlets by category** (phones, laptops, audio, home tech), or 2. a **ranked top 10** based on depth vs. readability.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want the best mix of **hands-on gadget reviews + serious tech analysis**, I’d start with these: - **RTINGS** — best for highly standardized, compare-across-products testing; especially strong for TVs, monitors, headphones, and similar gear. They say they buy and test products themselves and publish public methodology. ([rtings.com](https://www.rtings.com/company/about-us?utm_source=openai)) - **Ars Technica** — best for deeper analysis, policy/repairability/software-support context, and thoughtful gadget reporting. Their tech staff explicitly covers consumer gadgets, reviews, and analysis. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/11/smart-gadgets-failure-to-commit-to-software-support-could-be-illegal-ftc-warns/?utm_source=openai)) - **Wirecutter** — best for “what should I buy?” recommendations across consumer tech and everyday gear. It’s part of The New York Times and focuses on product testing and buying guidance. ([bloomberg.com](https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-09-13/new-york-times-rebrands-wirecutter-as-product-review-sales-grow?utm_source=openai)) - **Tom’s Hardware** — best for PC hardware, components, and benchmark-heavy analysis. Their testing pages say decisions are editorial and cover CPUs, GPUs, motherboards, SSDs, and more. ([tomshardware.com](https://www.tomshardware.com/news/how-we-test?utm_source=openai)) - **Notebookcheck** — best for laptops, smartphones, and detailed spec-heavy reviews/comparisons. Their about page emphasizes technical descriptions, analysis, guides, and comparisons. ([notebookcheck.net](https://www.notebookcheck.net/About-Notebookcheck.56700.0.html?utm_source=openai)) - **Tom’s Guide** — best for mainstream consumer-tech buying guides and testing across phones, laptops, TVs, and accessories. Their testing pages show they do category-specific hands-on testing. ([tomsguide.com](https://www.tomsguide.com/reference/how-we-test?utm_source=openai)) - **TechRadar** — good for broad consumer-tech coverage and lots of product reviews, with heavy testing emphasis. ([extracity.be](https://extracity.be/app/webroot/files/file/c91ea5fa-238c-4958-8524-a5cb2ec41ca0.pdf?utm_source=openai)) **Quick rule of thumb:** - For **objective-ish comparisons**: RTINGS, Tom’s Hardware - For **deep analysis/context**: Ars Technica, Notebookcheck - For **best-buy recommendations**: Wirecutter, Tom’s Guide, TechRadar If you want, I can also give you the **best outlets by category** (phones, laptops, TVs, audio, smart home, PC parts).
Which publications cover consumer tech in depth? discovery 10/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
For in-depth consumer tech coverage, these are strong picks: - **The Verge** — broad consumer tech, reviews, explainers, and industry context. - **CNET** — product reviews, buying guides, and practical consumer advice. - **Ars Technica** — more technical depth; great for serious analysis. - **Wired** — consumer tech plus trends, privacy, and culture. - **Engadget** — gadget launches, reviews, and news. - **TechCrunch** — better for startups and tech business, but still useful. - **PCMag** — lots of hands-on reviews and comparisons. - **Tom’s Guide** — strong buying advice for phones, laptops, TVs, and more. - **Notebookcheck** — especially good for laptops, phones, and detailed testing. - **Android Authority** / **iMore** — deep coverage if you want Android or Apple specifically. If you want, I can also rank these by **best reviews**, **best analysis**, or **best for smartphones/laptops**.
retrieval Mentioned
Good consumer-tech depth picks: - **Ars Technica** — strong for detailed analysis and long-form reporting on consumer gadgets, hardware, and OSes. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Engadget** — big on hands-on reviews, buying guides, and frequent in-depth product testing. ([engadget.com](https://www.engadget.com/how-we-test-and-ethics-statement-213125639.html/?utm_source=openai)) - **RTINGS** — best if you want rigorous, lab-style comparisons for TVs, headphones, monitors, and other gear. ([rtings.com](https://www.rtings.com/company/about-us?utm_source=openai)) - **Tom’s Guide** — broad consumer-tech coverage with heavy review/testing focus across phones, laptops, TVs, wearables, and more. ([tomsguide.com](https://www.tomsguide.com//?utm_source=openai)) - **The Verge** — good for consumer-tech news plus reviews and feature journalism with a broader culture angle. ([theverge.zendesk.com](https://theverge.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/35590386007315-About-The-Verge?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED** — more trend/industry oriented, but still useful for consumer tech when you want context around how products affect daily life. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow this to: 1. **best for reviews**, 2. **best for deep analysis**, or 3. **best free sites**.
What are the best tech and science newsletters for busy professionals? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best tech + science newsletters for busy professionals: ### Broad tech - **Stratechery** — Best for sharp analysis of tech strategy, business models, and platforms. - **The Information** — Deep reporting on tech/business; pricier, but very high signal. - **Morning Brew Tech** — Fast daily recap of major tech news in an easy format. - **TLDR** — Short, skimmable summaries of the biggest dev/tech stories. ### Science / research - **The Batch (deeplearning.ai)** — Excellent AI-focused science/industry newsletter. - **Quanta Magazine** — Best science writing if you want smart, readable coverage of math, physics, bio, and CS. - **Nature Briefing** — Strong roundup of major scientific developments. - **STAT** — Great for medicine, biotech, and health science. ### AI / emerging tech - **Import AI (Jack Clark)** — One of the best for AI policy, research, and industry trends. - **Ben’s Bites** — Very useful if you want the latest AI tools and product launches. - **The Algorithm (MIT Technology Review)** — Good mix of AI news and thoughtful analysis. ### Best “one or two only” picks - **Stratechery** for tech strategy - **Quanta Magazine** for science - **The Batch** if you care about AI If you want, I can also give you a **top 5 by role** (exec, engineer, founder, investor, scientist).
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the best picks I’d start with for a busy professional: **Tech** - **Stratechery** — best for strategic analysis of tech/media and why it matters; weekly articles are free, with three paid Daily Updates a week. ([stratechery.com](https://stratechery.com/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **Benedict’s Newsletter** — sharp weekly tech context with long-term perspective; free and premium versions are available. ([ben-evans.com](https://www.ben-evans.com/newsletter/?utm_source=openai)) - **Axios Tech** — very scan-friendly, with short daily coverage of technology and related business forces. ([pages.axios.com](https://pages.axios.com/technology?utm_source=openai)) - **The Information newsletters** — strongest if you want deeper insider reporting on AI, startups, deals, and infra; some newsletters are subscriber-only. ([theinformation.com](https://www.theinformation.com/newsletter?utm_source=openai)) - **Morning Brew Tech** — the easiest “daily skim” newsletter for tech news in plain English. ([morningbrew.com](https://www.morningbrew.com/daily/subscribe/technews?utm_source=openai)) **Science** - **Nature Briefing** — probably the best all-around daily science roundup for professionals who want the important stuff fast. ([nature.com](https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-01394-w?utm_source=openai)) - **Scientific American newsletters** — good mix of science, tech, health, and environment; “Today in Science” is daily, while “The Week in Science” is weekly. ([scientificamerican.com](https://www.scientificamerican.com/newsletters/?utm_source=openai)) - **Quanta Magazine newsletter** — excellent for deeper, high-quality coverage of math, physics, biology, and computer science. ([quantamagazine.org](https://www.quantamagazine.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **Science (AAAS) newsletters** — the Science newsletter ecosystem includes daily news plus topic-specific alerts like Science Focus. ([advertising.science.org](https://advertising.science.org/products-services/email-marketing?utm_source=openai)) - **New Scientist newsletters** — broad science coverage with daily/weekly options, good if you want a lighter but still substantive read. ([ui.newscientist.com](https://ui.newscientist.com/newsletters-panel/?utm_source=openai)) **My short list** 1. **Stratechery** 2. **Nature Briefing** 3. **Benedict’s Newsletter** 4. **Quanta Newsletter** 5. **Axios Tech** for quick daily scanning. ([stratechery.com](https://stratechery.com/about/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also make a **“best free only”** list or a **“best 10-minute-per-day”** list.
Which outlets are best for science reporting with strong explanations? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Some of the best science-reporting outlets with clear explanations are: - **Quanta Magazine** — probably the best for deep, well-explained coverage of physics, math, biology, and CS. - **Science News** — strong at concise, accurate reporting with good context. - **Nature News** — excellent for breaking research, though more technical. - **Science** / **AAAS** — solid, especially for major developments. - **STAT** — very good for biomedical and health science. - **The Conversation** — often very readable because experts write the pieces. - **NPR Science** — usually clear, balanced, and accessible. - **The New York Times Science section** — strong storytelling and broad accessibility. - **BBC Future** — good for explanatory science features. - **Ars Technica** — especially strong for tech, space, computing, and some science. If you want the best mix of **accuracy + explanation**, I’d start with **Quanta Magazine, Science News, and The Conversation**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best bets for **science reporting with strong explanations**: - **Quanta Magazine** — probably the best single pick for deep, carefully explained pieces on math, physics, CS, and basic life science. It explicitly says its mission is to illuminate basic science and math, and it won the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting. ([quantamagazine.org](https://www.quantamagazine.org/about?utm_source=openai)) - **Science News** — very strong for clear, context-rich reporting on new research; its standards emphasize caveats, context, and fact-checking. ([sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/about-science-news/journalism-standards-practices?utm_source=openai)) - **Scientific American** — good for broader science + tech + environment coverage, with lots of in-depth features, expert commentary, podcasts, and explainers. ([scientificamerican.com](https://www.scientificamerican.com/page/about-scientific-american/?utm_source=openai)) - **NPR Science / Short Wave** — good if you like approachable, conversational explanations of science news. NPR’s science section regularly frames stories around “why” and “how” questions. ([www-cf.npr.org](https://www-cf.npr.org/sections/science/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Conversation** — best when you want expert-written explainers that translate research into plain English; its model is to connect the public to experts and make sense of the news. ([cdn.theconversation.com](https://cdn.theconversation.com/static_files/files/1043/TCUS-Rita_Allen-Press_Release_5-18-2020.pdf?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free-only options**, 2. the **best newsletters/podcasts**, or 3. a **ranked list by topic** (space, medicine, climate, AI, etc.).
What are the best publications for tech policy and regulation coverage? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best publications for tech policy and regulation coverage: - **The Information** — strong on Big Tech, antitrust, AI policy, and insider reporting - **Politico Tech** — excellent for U.S. and EU tech regulation, lobbying, and policy fights - **Bloomberg Technology / Bloomberg Law** — very good on antitrust, privacy, semiconductors, and regulatory developments - **Axios Pro: Tech Policy** — concise, policy-focused coverage of Washington tech issues - **TechCrunch** — broader tech news, but useful for startup regulation, platform policy, and AI rules - **Wired** — strong on the societal and regulatory angle of emerging tech, especially AI and surveillance - **Financial Times (FT)** — top-tier coverage of global tech regulation, competition policy, and chip geopolitics - **The Wall Street Journal** — solid on U.S. regulation, antitrust, and industry-government conflicts - **Protocol** (archived but still valuable) — had strong tech policy coverage; older reporting still useful - **MLex** — one of the best if you want deep, specialized coverage of antitrust, privacy, and regulatory enforcement If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free** ones, 2. the **best paid/professional** ones, or 3. a list focused on **AI policy**, **privacy**, or **antitrust**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want the best mix, I’d start with these: - **Axios Pro: Tech Policy** — best for fast, Washington-focused tech policy reporting and newsletter-style briefs. ([axios.com](https://www.axios.com/pro/tech-policy?utm_source=openai)) - **Bloomberg Law: Tech & Telecom / Tech Policy** — strongest for legal/regulatory developments, agency action, and court-driven tech policy. ([news.bloomberglaw.com](https://news.bloomberglaw.com/tech-and-telecom-law/bidens-ai-order-taps-cold-war-crisis-powers-for-tech-oversight?utm_source=openai)) - **Law360 Technology** — very good for litigation, agency enforcement, antitrust, privacy, and policy developments around tech. ([law360.com](https://www.law360.com/about/technology?utm_source=openai)) - **The Information** — best if you want high-end tech business coverage with regular policy/regulation angles, especially AI. ([theinformation.com](https://www.theinformation.com/articles/the-information-is-looking-for-senior-editors?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED** — best for accessible, smart reporting and analysis on tech policy debates, especially AI and platform regulation. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/story/how-tech-companies-shaping-rules-governing-ai/?utm_source=openai)) - **Techdirt** — best for sharp opinionated coverage of internet regulation, platform policy, and free-speech issues. ([techdirt.com](https://www.techdirt.com/2020/08/11/silver-lining-internet-regulation-regulatory-impact-assessment/?utm_source=openai)) - **Brookings (Technology Policy & Regulation)** — best for research-heavy analysis and policy essays rather than daily news. ([brookings.edu](https://www.brookings.edu/topics/technology-policy-and-regulation/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by: 1. **best free sources** 2. **best for AI regulation** 3. **best for U.S. policy** 4. **best for EU/digital regulation**
Which tech and science outlets are best for founders and investors? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For founders and investors, the best mix is: ### Must-read tech/business - **The Information** — best for serious tech and startup coverage; strong on companies, funding, and power dynamics. - **Bloomberg Technology** — excellent for markets + tech; good for investors. - **TechCrunch** — broad startup/funding coverage; good for deal flow and new companies. - **Semafor** — strong macro + tech business context. - **Financial Times (Tech)** — great for global tech, policy, and capital markets. - **WSJ (Tech / Venture Capital)** — solid on big-company moves and industry shifts. ### Founder-focused - **YC’s Startup Library / Hacker News** — practical, founder-relevant signal. - **First Round Review** — high-quality operator advice. - **Stratechery** — strategy-heavy, especially for product/market/platform thinking. - **a16z** — useful essays and market views, though clearly investor-biased. ### Science / deep tech - **Nature** — best overall science outlet. - **Science** — top-tier research news and analysis. - **STAT** — strong biotech, health, and life sciences. - **Endpoints News** — excellent biotech/pharma business coverage. - **IEEE Spectrum** — strong for robotics, AI, chips, and applied engineering. - **Ars Technica** — good for technical depth in computing and science. ### Best newsletters for your use case - **Dense Discovery** — broad, high-quality tech curation. - **Not Boring** — startups, tech, and emerging industries. - **TLDR** — fast daily tech summary. - **Term Sheet (Fortune)** — venture and startup deal flow. If you want, I can narrow this to: 1. **best free outlets**, 2. **best paid subscriptions**, or 3. **a daily reading stack for founders/investors**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If I had to pick a **founder/investor stack**, I’d use: - **TechCrunch** — best for startup funding, launches, and venture gossip; it explicitly brands itself around startups/tech and has products like *StrictlyVC* and *Equity* aimed at the startup/VC crowd. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Information** — best for deep, high-signal reporting on tech and business; it says it breaks important tech/business news first and digs into VC deal terms and company strategy. ([theinformation.com](https://www.theinformation.com/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bloomberg Technology** — best for market-moving tech news and public-company/investor context; Bloomberg describes it as focused on breaking news and analysis of global technology companies. ([bloomberg.com](https://www.bloomberg.com/series/bloomberg-technology?utm_source=openai)) - **Axios** — best for fast scanning; Axios leans into short, efficient “Smart Brevity” coverage and newsletters. ([axios.com](https://www.axios.com/2020/02/06/new-axios-website-google-amp?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED** — best for broader tech + science + culture context, especially if you want big-picture trend spotting. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/wired/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ars Technica** — best for technically literate coverage, especially if you care about software, hardware, policy, and the science behind the hype. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/about-us?utm_source=openai)) For **science**, my top picks are: - **Nature News** — strongest for serious science readers who want rigorous, high-authority coverage tied to research. ([media.nature.com](https://media.nature.com/original/magazine-assets/d41586-025-01545-7/d41586-025-01545-7.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Science** — another top-tier source for peer-reviewed science coverage and commentary. ([advertising.science.org](https://advertising.science.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Sci24-Science-Focus-SS.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **Quanta Magazine** — best for deep explanatory pieces on math, physics, CS, and basic science; it’s explicitly about illuminating basic science and math research. ([quantamagazine.org](https://www.quantamagazine.org/about?utm_source=openai)) - **STAT** — best if your founders/investing focus touches biotech, health tech, pharma, or medtech. ([statnews.com](https://www.statnews.com/about/?utm_source=openai)) **If you want just 3:** **TechCrunch + The Information + Quanta** is a very strong founder/investor combo. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **free-only list**, 2. a **paid premium list**, or 3. a **daily reading order** for founders vs investors.
What are the top sources for space and astronomy news? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best sources for space and astronomy news: - **NASA** — best for official mission updates, discoveries, and images - Website: **nasa.gov** - **ESA (European Space Agency)** — great for European missions and science news - Website: **esa.int** - **Space.com** — broad, fast-moving coverage of spaceflight and astronomy - **Universe Today** — very readable, frequent astronomy/space news and explainers - **Ars Technica (Space section)** — excellent for deeper, more technical coverage - **Sky & Telescope** — one of the best for amateur astronomy and observing news - **Astronomy Magazine** — strong mix of news, observing tips, and sky events - **SpaceNews** — best for industry, policy, and commercial space news - **The Planetary Society** — good science-focused updates and analysis If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best sources for beginners**, 2. the **best science-first sources**, or 3. a **short list of newsletters/podcasts**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Good starting points: - **NASA Science / NASA missions** — best for first-party mission updates and discoveries. ([nasa.gov](https://www.nasa.gov/headquarters/library/find/journals/?utm_source=openai)) - **ESA (European Space Agency)** — great for European mission news and astronomy imagery. ([assets.science.nasa.gov](https://assets.science.nasa.gov/content/dam/science/cds/creative/calendars/2026/2026%20NASA%20Science%20Planning%20Guide%20%28low%20resolution%2C%20508%20compliant%29.pdf?emrc=69e0986a9227b&utm_source=openai)) - **Space.com** — broad, fast-moving coverage of spaceflight and astronomy news. ([space.com](https://www.space.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Astronomy Magazine** — strong mainstream astronomy coverage plus observing guides. ([astronomy.com](https://www.astronomy.com/issues/2026/?utm_source=openai)) - **Sky & Telescope** — especially good for deeper astronomy reporting and observing-focused news. ([skyandtelescope.org](https://skyandtelescope.org/all-astronomy-news-categories/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Planetary Society** — excellent for space-policy + exploration news, with a nonprofit perspective. ([planetary.org](https://www.planetary.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nature Astronomy** — best if you want research-level astronomy and astrophysics papers/news. ([media.nature.com](https://media.nature.com/original/magazine-assets/d41586-025-03587-3/d41586-025-03587-3.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **arXiv astro-ph** — for very recent preprints before formal journal publication. ([arxiv.org](https://arxiv.org/abs/1611.02232?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best X/Twitter/Bluesky accounts**, or 2. a **“best for beginners” vs “best for researchers”** shortlist.
Which digital magazines are best for emerging technology trends? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best digital magazines/publications for emerging technology trends: - **MIT Technology Review** — Best overall for credible coverage of AI, biotech, robotics, and future tech. - **Wired** — Best for accessible, trend-driven reporting on consumer tech, startups, and digital culture. - **Fast Company** — Strong on innovation, startups, and how new tech affects business. - **IEEE Spectrum** — Great for deeper engineering-focused coverage of robotics, computing, and telecom. - **The Verge** — Best for product trends, gadgets, AI, and how tech is shaping everyday life. - **TechCrunch** — Best for startup funding, AI companies, and new product launches. - **Singularity Hub** — Focuses on exponential tech, AI, automation, and future-facing ideas. - **Financial Times: Tech/FT Tech Tonic** — Good if you want the business and market side of emerging tech. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free options**, 2. the **best paid subscriptions**, or 3. the **best magazines by topic** like AI, robotics, or biotech.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want the **best digital magazines for emerging tech trends**, I’d start with these: 1. **MIT Technology Review** — best for serious emerging-tech coverage, especially AI, biotech, climate, and computing. ([forms.technologyreview.com](https://forms.technologyreview.com/mittechnologyreview-app/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **IEEE Spectrum** — best for engineering-first analysis and credible coverage of what’s actually technically feasible. ([spectrum.ieee.org](https://spectrum.ieee.org/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **WIRED** — best for a broader, more readable take on how new tech affects business, culture, and daily life. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/about/wired-summer-program-2026/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Fast Company** — best if you want innovation, startups, and how emerging tech is changing companies and work. ([fastcompany.com](https://www.fastcompany.com/about-us/?utm_source=openai)) **My pick:** - **Best overall:** MIT Technology Review - **Best technical depth:** IEEE Spectrum - **Best trendspotting / cultural angle:** WIRED ([forms.technologyreview.com](https://forms.technologyreview.com/mittechnologyreview-app/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this down by **AI**, **startup/business**, or **deep tech/engineering**.
What are the best outlets for science stories in plain English? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Some of the best outlets for science stories in plain English: - **Scientific American** — strong reporting, generally readable - **National Geographic** — vivid, accessible science journalism - **Smithsonian Magazine** — broad science/history/nature coverage - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent for math, physics, AI, and deep science explained clearly - **BBC Future** — short, polished explainers on science and health - **NPR Science Desk** — very clear, human-centered science reporting - **The Conversation** — expert-written articles edited for general readers - **New Scientist** — newsy and approachable, though sometimes technical - **Popular Science** — straightforward, consumer-friendly science coverage - **Science News** — concise, reliable, easy to follow If you want the very best “plain English” mix, I’d start with **NPR**, **Quanta Magazine**, **BBC Future**, and **The Conversation**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **science stories in plain English**, my best picks are: - **Science News Explores** — the most straightforward option; it publishes recent research and current STEM news, and is aimed at readers “of any age.” ([snexplores.org](https://www.snexplores.org/how-to-use?utm_source=openai)) - **Knowable Magazine** — excellent for clear, deeper explainers; it says its goal is to make scientific knowledge accessible to all. ([knowablemagazine.org](https://knowablemagazine.org/about-knowable-magazine?utm_source=openai)) - **BBC Science Focus** — good for general readers who want short, readable pieces on science, nature, tech, and Q&As. ([sciencefocus.com](https://www.sciencefocus.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Live Science** — a strong “daily science news” site; its editors say they aim to explain stories with clarity, authority, and humor. ([livescience.com](https://www.livescience.com/about-live-science?utm_source=openai)) - **Science Friday / Short Wave** — best if you like audio; both are designed to make science understandable for broad audiences. ([sciencefriday.com](https://www.sciencefriday.com/about-science-friday/?utm_source=openai)) **If you want just one to start with:** - **Easiest reading:** Science News Explores. ([snexplores.org](https://www.snexplores.org/how-to-use?utm_source=openai)) - **Best long-form explainers:** Knowable. ([knowablemagazine.org](https://knowablemagazine.org/about-knowable-magazine?utm_source=openai)) - **Best podcast:** Short Wave or Science Friday. ([partners.npr.org](https://partners.npr.org/podcasts/510351/short-wave/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **best-by-topic list** (space, health, climate, tech, biology).
Which tech outlets are good for deep dives and explainers? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good ones for **deep dives + explainers**: - **Ars Technica** — best for detailed, technically solid breakdowns - **Wired** — good long-form explainers on tech, culture, and policy - **MIT Technology Review** — strong on emerging tech and why it matters - **IEEE Spectrum** — excellent for engineering-heavy explainers - **The Verge** — accessible explainers and feature stories - **404 Media** — sharp investigative tech reporting - **Rest of World** — great for global tech stories with context - **Stratechery** — very good if you want business/strategy analysis of tech companies If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free ones**, 2. the **most technical ones**, or 3. the **best newsletters/podcasts** for deep dives.
retrieval Not mentioned
Good picks for **deep dives + explainers**: - **Ars Technica** — best for technically rigorous breakdowns, especially on software, security, policy, and hardware. It explicitly says it specializes in analysis and “in-depth explainers.” ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/about-us?utm_source=openai)) - **IEEE Spectrum** — great for engineering-oriented explainers. Its explainer section is built around showing how key technologies work, and it’s the flagship magazine of IEEE. ([spectrum.ieee.org](https://spectrum.ieee.org/about?utm_source=openai)) - **MIT Technology Review** — strong for big-picture emerging-tech coverage and thoughtful analysis. Its mission is to equip readers with trusted journalism and expert insights on breakthrough innovation. ([forms.technologyreview.com](https://forms.technologyreview.com/mittechnologyreview-app/?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED** — good for accessible, well-reported tech culture and policy explainers, especially when tech intersects with power, security, and society. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/about/wired-on-background-policy/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free-only ones**, 2. the **most technical ones**, or 3. a **“top 5 by topic”** list.
What are the best outlets for startup funding and business news? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best outlets to follow for **startup funding** and **business news**: ### Startup funding - **Crunchbase News** — great for funding rounds, investor activity, and startup profiles. - **TechCrunch** — strong on venture deals and startup launches. - **PitchBook** — best for deeper private-market and VC data. - **CB Insights** — solid market maps, trends, and funding analysis. - **The Information** — very strong for high-quality startup/VC reporting. - **Axios Pro Rata** — quick daily VC/funding updates. ### Business news - **Reuters** — best all-around for fast, reliable business coverage. - **Bloomberg** — excellent for markets, finance, and company news. - **The Wall Street Journal** — strong for business, policy, and companies. - **Financial Times** — excellent global business coverage. - **CNBC** — good for market-moving business headlines. ### Best combo if you want only a few - **Reuters** - **Crunchbase News** - **TechCrunch** - **Bloomberg** - **WSJ** If you want, I can also give you the **best newsletters, podcasts, or paid tools** for startup funding intel.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want a strong mix, I’d split it like this: **Best for startup funding** - **Crunchbase News** — best for funding rounds, investor activity, and trend-driven startup coverage; it says it covers “private markets, startups, founders and investors.” ([news.crunchbase.com](https://news.crunchbase.com/about-news/?utm_source=openai)) - **TechCrunch** — best for early-stage startup news and VC deal coverage; its venture section focuses on VCs, VC-backed startups, and investment trends. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/category/startups/venture/?utm_source=openai)) - **PitchBook** — best for serious private-market research and data; it describes itself as private market data/research/tools for private capital professionals. ([pitchbook.com](https://pitchbook.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **CB Insights** — best for venture and market research reports; its venture research pages track funding, deal counts, and sector trends. ([cbinsights.com](https://www.cbinsights.com/research/report/venture-trends-2025/?utm_source=openai)) **Best for business news** - **Reuters** — best for fast, broad, global business/financial coverage; Reuters says it supplies business, financial, national, and international news. ([thomsonreuters.com](https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en/press-releases/2020/february/unifeed-the-united-nations-broadcast-quality-video-news-platform-joins-reuters-connect?utm_source=openai)) - **Financial Times** — best for deep business analysis and global markets coverage; Bloomberg’s company profile describes it as a publisher of business news, and FT materials describe it as one of the world’s leading business news organizations. ([bloomberg.com](https://www.bloomberg.com/profile/company/1359546Z%3AUS?utm_source=openai)) - **The Wall Street Journal** — best for U.S. business and markets; WSJ materials say it provides award-winning journalism and breaking news that moves markets and impacts business. ([wsj-news.com](https://wsj-news.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Bloomberg** — best if you want markets + business + company/news lookup in one place; its help center and company pages emphasize company news and market context. ([bloomberg.com](https://www.bloomberg.com/help/question/find-news-company/?utm_source=openai)) **My short list** - **Free/fast:** Reuters, TechCrunch, Crunchbase News. ([thomsonreuters.com](https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en/press-releases/2020/february/unifeed-the-united-nations-broadcast-quality-video-news-platform-joins-reuters-connect?utm_source=openai)) - **Best paid/pro-level:** PitchBook, FT, WSJ, Bloomberg. ([pitchbook.com](https://pitchbook.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can turn this into a **“best free vs best paid”** list or a **startup-founder-specific news stack**.
Which tech and science publications are best for students? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For students, the best picks are: - **Science News Explores** — best for middle school to early high school; clear, short, and very student-friendly. - **National Geographic Kids / National Geographic** — great for younger students and broad science/environment topics. - **Scientific American** — best all-around serious science reading for high school and college students. - **New Scientist** — very readable, good mix of tech, science, and current discoveries. - **MIT Technology Review** — best for students interested in AI, computing, and emerging tech. - **Wired** — best for tech culture, gadgets, and big-picture trends. - **Ars Technica** — best for more technical students who want deeper coverage of computing, science, and engineering. If you want just 3 to start: 1. **Science News Explores** 2. **Scientific American** 3. **MIT Technology Review** If you want, I can also give you the **best free options** or the **best ones by age group**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best picks by level: - **Middle school / early high school:** **Science News Explores** — free, age-appropriate STEM articles for grades 5+ from Science News. ([sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/learning?utm_source=openai)) - **High school / intro college:** **Science News** — award-winning science journalism aimed at readers grades 9 and up, with lesson plans and classroom resources. ([sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/learning?utm_source=openai)) - **General science + writing that’s easy to read:** **Scientific American** — covers science, health, technology, the environment, and society with in-depth features and news. ([scientificamerican.com](https://www.scientificamerican.com/page/about-scientific-american/?utm_source=openai)) - **Tech/science with a more approachable style:** **Popular Science** — explicitly aims to be engaging, approachable, and inclusive, and covers both science and technology. ([popsci.com](https://www.popsci.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Tech/news/culture with a faster pace:** **WIRED** — covers technology, science, culture, and business. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want the **single best all-around choice for students**, I’d pick **Science News**; if they’re younger or newer to science reading, start with **Science News Explores**. ([sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/learning?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also make a **free-only list** or a **best-for-college list**.
What are the best newsletters for science and innovation news? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best science and innovation newsletters: - **The Vergecast / The Verge’s Command Line** — great for tech + science + innovation trends. - **MIT Technology Review: The Download** — one of the best overall for emerging tech, AI, and scientific breakthroughs. - **Nature Briefing** — strong for serious science news and research updates. - **STAT Morning Rounds** — excellent if you want biotech, health innovation, and medicine. - **Axios Future** — concise coverage of major tech, science, and policy shifts. - **Singularity Hub Newsletter** — focused on AI, robotics, biotech, and future-oriented innovation. - **Undark** — thoughtful science journalism with more depth and context. - **Quantum Computing Report** — best if you want cutting-edge quantum computing news. If you want just 3 to start with, I’d pick: 1. **MIT Technology Review: The Download** 2. **Nature Briefing** 3. **Axios Future** If you want, I can also give you the **best newsletters by category** (AI, biotech, climate, space, etc.).
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are my best picks: - **Nature Briefing** — best if you want a polished, high-signal daily science roundup with editor-picked stories from Nature and elsewhere. ([nature.com](https://www.nature.com/briefing/briefing)) - **Scientific American: Today in Science** — great all-around daily science newsletter; they also have **The Week in Science** for a Friday recap and a **Technology** newsletter for AI/robotics/BCI/misinformation. ([scientificamerican.com](https://www.scientificamerican.com/newsletters/)) - **Science News newsletter** — strong for trustworthy, concise coverage of the latest science, medicine, and tech; they say the newsletter summarizes the week’s breakthroughs every Thursday. ([sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/)) - **MIT Technology Review: The Download** — best for innovation and emerging tech; it’s a weekday newsletter focused on what’s happening now and what’s coming next. ([forms.technologyreview.com](https://forms.technologyreview.com/newsletters/briefing-the-download/)) - **Fast Company newsletters** — best if you want the innovation/business/design angle; **FC TopTech** is the main tech roundup, and **PluggedIn** covers tech insights, news, and trends. ([fastcompany.com](https://www.fastcompany.com/newsletters/)) - **Axios newsletters** — good for fast, businesslike coverage of tech-adjacent innovation; their newsletter lineup includes AI policy and future-of-energy/mobility coverage. ([axios.com](https://www.axios.com/newsletters/axios-ai-govt-ccce7c80-8e69-11f0-b60a-d3b3689909a8?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. **the best free-only newsletters**, or 2. **a shortlist by topic** (AI, biotech, climate, space, general science).
Which outlets are good for hardware and gadget enthusiasts? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Good options for hardware/gadget enthusiasts: - **Micro Center** — best all-around for PC parts, tools, and electronics. - **B&H Photo Video** — great for gadgets, cameras, audio, and creator gear. - **Adafruit** — excellent for DIY electronics, microcontrollers, and maker projects. - **SparkFun** — strong for sensors, dev boards, and prototyping parts. - **Digi-Key** / **Mouser** — ideal for serious components and hard-to-find parts. - **Harbor Freight** — cheap tools and garage hardware. - **Home Depot** / **Lowe’s** — solid for practical hardware, storage, and hand tools. - **Fry’s** used to be a favorite, but it’s mostly gone now. If you want, I can also list the **best online outlets by category**: tools, PC hardware, electronics parts, or maker gear.
retrieval Not mentioned
Good picks for hardware/gadget enthusiasts: - **Tom’s Hardware** — best for PC parts, GPUs, CPUs, cooling, and deep benchmark-heavy reviews. ([tomshardware.com](https://www.tomshardware.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **AnandTech** — great for serious hardware analysis and silicon/platform reviews. ([anandtech.com](https://www.anandtech.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Trusted Reviews** — strong for consumer gadgets like phones, wearables, drones, smart home gear, and accessories. ([trustedreviews.com](https://www.trustedreviews.com/reviews/gadgets/?utm_source=openai)) - **RTINGS** — excellent for data-driven product testing, especially TVs, monitors, headphones, and home tech. ([rtings.com](https://www.rtings.com/home?utm_source=openai)) - **Ars Technica** — good for broader tech coverage with solid hardware/industry context. ([forums.tomshardware.com](https://forums.tomshardware.com/threads/any-list-of-reliable-review-websites.3481326/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Verge** — better for gadget culture, launches, and hands-on coverage than hardcore component testing. ([platform.theverge.com](https://platform.theverge.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/12599893/The_Internet_of_Garbage.0.pdf?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also narrow this to **best YouTube channels**, **best forums**, or **best sites for PC building specifically**.
What are the best tech and science outlets for professionals who want daily updates? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Here are some of the best daily-update outlets for professionals: ### Tech - **The Verge** — strong mix of product news, platform shifts, and industry context. - **TechCrunch** — best for startups, funding, AI, and venture news. - **Wired** — more analysis than headlines; good for broader tech implications. - **Ars Technica** — excellent for deeper technical reporting and policy. - **Bloomberg Technology** — very useful if you want business + tech in one feed. - **MIT Technology Review** — strong on emerging tech, AI, and research translation. ### Science - **Nature News** — top-tier for major research and science policy. - **Science** — reliable, high-quality updates from the AAAS. - **The Scientist** — good for life sciences and research trends. - **STAT** — especially strong for biotech, medicine, and health science. - **Phys.org** — fast daily coverage across many science fields. - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent for math, physics, and deep explanatory pieces. ### Best all-around for busy professionals - **Axios** — very concise daily tech/business/science-adjacent updates. - **BBC Future** — accessible, broad science and tech coverage. - **Morning Brew / Tech Brew** — quick daily reads, especially business-tech focused. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best 5-only shortlist**, or 2. a **newsletter/RSS setup** for these outlets.
retrieval Not mentioned
For professionals who want **daily** tech/science updates, my best picks are: - **Reuters Technology & Science** — best for fast, broad, business-relevant coverage; Reuters says its tech/science coverage spans AI, cybercrime, regulation, product innovation, space, and breakthroughs, with curated daily top stories. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/content/coverage-expertise/technology/?utm_source=openai)) - **MIT Technology Review / The Download** — best for sharp emerging-tech analysis; its daily weekday newsletter is explicitly “your daily dose” of emerging technology. ([forms.technologyreview.com](https://forms.technologyreview.com/newsletters/briefing-the-download/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nature Briefing** — best daily science roundup for serious researchers; Nature offers a free daily inbox briefing. ([nature.com](https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-00751-1?utm_source=openai)) - **Science / ScienceAdviser** — strong daily science news and commentary from AAAS; Science describes its free daily newsletter as delivering exclusive reporting, analysis, and the latest science news. ([advertising.science.org](https://advertising.science.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/Japan-Highlights_July2025.pdf?utm_source=openai)) - **IEEE Spectrum** — best for engineering/technical professionals; it’s the flagship IEEE publication and focuses on technology, engineering, and science. ([spectrum.ieee.org](https://spectrum.ieee.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED Daily** — good if you want a more industry/culture-facing tech digest; WIRED’s daily newsletter says it delivers the biggest stories each day plus breaking alerts. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/newsletter/daily?utm_source=openai)) - **STAT** — especially good for biotech, health policy, and life science professionals; STAT offers weekday newsletters and a Morning Rounds newsletter for daily updates. ([statnews.com](https://www.statnews.com/signup/?utm_source=openai)) **If you only want 3:** Reuters, MIT Technology Review, and Nature Briefing. ([reutersagency.com](https://reutersagency.com/content/coverage-expertise/technology/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you a **“best by specialty” list** (AI, biotech, engineering, climate, pharma, etc.).
Which publications are best for a mix of tech business and science coverage? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best bets for a mix of tech business + science coverage: - **MIT Technology Review** — Probably the best single pick. Strong on AI, biotech, climate tech, startups, and the business/impact side of science. - **The Economist** — Great if you want tech, business, policy, and some science in one place. Less technical, very good big-picture analysis. - **Wired** — Best for tech culture plus startup/business trends, with some science. More accessible and trend-driven. - **Nature Briefing / Nature** — Best for serious science, with increasing coverage of biotech, AI, and research commercialization. - **Scientific American** — Strong science journalism with occasional business/tech crossover; broad and readable. - **Bloomberg Technology** — Best for the business side of tech; pair it with a science outlet for balance. - **The Verge** — Good for consumer tech and industry news, but lighter on science than the others. If you want just **3 subscriptions**, I’d pick: 1. **MIT Technology Review** 2. **The Economist** 3. **Nature** or **Scientific American** for deeper science If you tell me whether you want **more startup/business**, **more science**, or **more readable/general-audience**, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want a strong **mix of tech, business, and science**, I’d start with these: - **MIT Technology Review** — probably the best single pick for emerging tech plus commercial impact. ([mediakit.technologyreview.com](https://mediakit.technologyreview.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Economist** — best for broad business/economics coverage with solid tech and science context. ([impact.economist.com](https://impact.economist.com/new-globalisation/new-era-smart-business/how-technology-companies-are-tackling-the-digital-divide/?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED** — great for technology, business, and science in a more readable, trend-driven style. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Scientific American** — strongest if you want science first, but it also covers technology and the innovation economy. ([scientificamerican.com](https://www.scientificamerican.com/page/about-scientific-american/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nature** — best for high-end science coverage, with occasional strong pieces on tech and the science-business interface. ([nature.com](https://www.nature.com/nature/volumes/621/issues/7980?utm_source=openai)) **Best overall mix:** 1) MIT Technology Review 2) The Economist 3) WIRED If you want, I can also rank them by **best for AI**, **best for startups/investing**, or **best for serious science**.
What are the best alternatives to the leading tech news outlet? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you mean **The Verge**-style tech coverage, the best alternatives are: - **Ars Technica** — best for deep, technical reporting - **TechCrunch** — best for startups, funding, and Silicon Valley news - **Engadget** — strong gadget reviews and consumer tech coverage - **Wired** — good for broader tech, culture, and future trends - **Tom’s Hardware** — best for PC parts, benchmarks, and hardware news - **AnandTech** — excellent technical hardware analysis - **CNET** — broad consumer tech news and product reviews - **9to5Mac** / **9to5Google** — best if you want Apple or Google ecosystem news - **Slashdot** — community-driven, more niche and nerdy - **IEEE Spectrum** — great for serious engineering and emerging tech If you want, I can also break these into: 1. **best for unbiased news**, 2. **best for reviews**, or 3. **best for startup/AI coverage**.
retrieval Mentioned
If you mean **The Verge**, the best alternatives are: - **Ars Technica** — best for deep analysis and smarter long-form coverage of tech, science, and policy. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/staff/2022/04/ars-frontiers-lands-in-washington-dc-space-science-ai-and-more/?utm_source=openai)) - **TechCrunch** — best for startups, VC, product launches, and Silicon Valley business news. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Engadget** — best for consumer-tech news plus hands-on reviews and buying advice. ([engadget.com](https://www.engadget.com/about/editors/engadget/?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED** — best for the broader tech/culture/business intersection and big-picture reporting. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **9to5Mac** — best if you mainly care about Apple news, rumors, and ecosystem coverage. ([9to5mac.com](https://9to5mac.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Register** — best for sharper, more cynical enterprise and IT industry coverage. ([en.wikipedia.org](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Register?utm_source=openai)) - **Techmeme** — best as a fast aggregator if you want the day’s tech headlines from many outlets in one place. ([techmeme.com](https://techmeme.com/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by **depth**, **speed**, or **bias/style**.
Which tech and science outlets are better than the biggest general tech publication? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you mean **The Verge** (the biggest general tech outlet), the ones that often beat it in specific areas are: - **Ars Technica** — best for deep, accurate tech reporting and analysis - **Wired** — stronger on science/AI/culture-adjacent tech features - **MIT Technology Review** — best for serious science + emerging tech - **IEEE Spectrum** — excellent for engineering and technical depth - **Nature News** — best for real science coverage - **Science** / **Science News** — strong mainstream science reporting - **TechCrunch** — better for startups, funding, and Silicon Valley business news - **The Information** — best for premium tech industry reporting - **404 Media** — great for internet/tech accountability journalism - **Rest of World** — better on global tech outside the US - **MacRumors** / **9to5Mac** — better if you care about Apple specifically - **Android Police** / **9to5Google** — better for Android/Google ecosystem news If you want the **single best all-around upgrade from a general tech site**, I’d pick **Ars Technica**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If by “the biggest general tech publication” you mean **The Verge**, these are often **better picks depending on what you want**: - **Ars Technica** — best for deep, technically literate tech reporting and analysis. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/about-us?utm_source=openai)) - **IEEE Spectrum** — best for engineering-focused coverage with strong technical context. ([spectrum.ieee.org](https://spectrum.ieee.org/?utm_source=openai)) - **MIT Technology Review** — best for thoughtful analysis of emerging tech and its commercial/social impact. ([linkedin.com](https://www.linkedin.com/company/mit-technology-review?utm_source=openai)) - **Nature News / Nature** — best for high-end science coverage and research context. ([nature.com](https://www.nature.com/nature-portfolio/about/nature-and-nature-branded-research-journals?utm_source=openai)) - **Science News** — best for reliable, readable science journalism across medicine, physics, earth, etc. ([sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/?utm_source=openai)) Quick rule of thumb: - **Tech depth:** Ars Technica - **Engineering:** IEEE Spectrum - **Future tech / policy:** MIT Technology Review - **Science prestige:** Nature - **General science:** Science News If you want, I can also give you a **“best 5 outlets by category”** list for tech, science, and AI specifically.
What are the best alternatives to a subscription tech magazine? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best alternatives to a subscription tech magazine: - **Tech news sites:** **Ars Technica**, **The Verge**, **Wired**, **TechCrunch** - **Curated newsletters:** **Morning Brew Tech**, **TLDR**, **The Browser**, **Stratechery** (paid, but excellent) - **Podcasts:** **The Daily Byte**, **Waveform**, **Reply All** (archive), **Pivot** - **YouTube channels:** **Marques Brownlee (MKBHD)**, **LTT (Linus Tech Tips)**, **iJustine** - **RSS/news aggregators:** **Feedly**, **Flipboard**, **Inoreader** - **Library access:** Many libraries offer **PressReader** or **Libby/OverDrive** for magazine access - **Free research/docs:** **IEEE Spectrum**, **MIT Technology Review** (some free articles), **ACM TechNews** If you want the closest replacement to a magazine, I’d pick: 1. **Feedly + Ars Technica/Wired** 2. **Morning Brew Tech** 3. **IEEE Spectrum** for deeper, more serious tech coverage If you want, I can also suggest the best option by your style: **news-heavy, opinionated, or deep technical**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want something that feels like a tech magazine without a print subscription, these are the best swaps: - **Ars Technica newsletters** — best for serious, technical coverage and a clean daily digest. They also have topic newsletters like space and gadget reviews. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/newsletters/?utm_source=openai)) - **TechCrunch newsletters** — best for startups, venture capital, AI, crypto, transport, and weekly tech roundups. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/newsletters?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED newsletters** — best for broad “tech + culture + business” coverage; WIRED offers a daily digest, a weekly best-of, and gear/reviews newsletters. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/newsletter?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED Podcasts** — best if you prefer listening; WIRED says its audio covers how technology affects culture, business, science, and design. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/podcasts/?utm_source=openai)) **My quick recommendation:** - **Most like a magazine:** WIRED newsletters - **Most analytical:** Ars Technica - **Most startup/industry-focused:** TechCrunch If you want, I can also give you a **free-only list** or a **best paid alternatives list**.
Which science journalism sites are better than mainstream news coverage? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want science coverage that’s usually better than mainstream news, try these: - **Nature News** — top-tier reporting, strong sourcing, less hype - **Science Magazine / AAAS** — excellent for research context and credibility - **STAT** — especially good for medicine, biotech, and health policy - **The Conversation** — articles by researchers, usually clear and well-explained - **Quanta Magazine** — outstanding for math, physics, and theoretical science - **Nautilus** — deeper, more essay-like science writing - **Ars Technica (Science/Tech)** — very solid on tech, space, and computing - **Smithsonian Magazine (Science)** — accessible and often better researched than general news - **Science News** — concise, reliable summaries of new studies - **Undark** — strong investigative science journalism If you want the best single starting points, I’d pick: 1. **Nature News** 2. **Science Magazine** 3. **STAT** 4. **The Conversation** If you want, I can also give you: - the **best free ones only** - the **best for health/medicine** - the **best for space/physics** - or a **“better than CNN/BBC/NPR” shortlist** based on topic.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **deeper, less breathless science coverage than most general-news outlets**, these are usually the best bets: - **Quanta Magazine** — best for rigorous, long-form coverage of math, physics, and basic science. It says its work is “meticulously researched, reported, edited, copy-edited and fact-checked,” and it won the 2022 Pulitzer for explanatory reporting. ([quantamagazine.org](https://www.quantamagazine.org/about?utm_source=openai)) - **Science News** — strong all-around science reporting with clear editorial standards, fact-checking, and a long nonprofit history. ([sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/about-science-news?utm_source=openai)) - **Undark** — excellent for science-and-society reporting, especially investigations and ethics. It’s nonprofit, editorially independent, and has won major journalism awards. ([undark.org](https://undark.org/who-is-undark/?utm_source=openai)) - **STAT** — best if you care about health, medicine, biotech, and the business of science; it focuses on “trusted, tough-minded journalism” in those areas. ([statnews.com](https://www.statnews.com/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **Nature News / Nature journalism** — very strong for high-end science, policy, and analysis; Nature says its journalism is editorially independent and covers important developments in science and science policy. ([nature.com](https://www.nature.com/nature/journalistic-principles?utm_source=openai)) - **Ars Technica (Science)** — surprisingly good for technically detailed science stories, especially when the topic overlaps with tech, computing, or policy. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/staff/2015/12/ars-science-qa-how-we-pick-our-stories/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Conversation** — useful when you want academic experts explaining research in plain English, sourced directly from the research community. ([jobs.theconversation.com](https://jobs.theconversation.com/pages/21153-about?utm_source=openai)) **Best quick picks:** - **Most rigorous:** Quanta - **Best general science desk:** Science News - **Best investigative / science-society:** Undark - **Best health/biomed:** STAT If you want, I can also give you a **“top 10 science sites ranked by trust + depth”** list.
What are the best alternatives to a newsletter-first tech outlet? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **newsletter-first tech coverage** beyond the usual suspects, the best alternatives are: - **Platformer** — great for Big Tech + policy; sharp, readable analysis. - **Command Line** — strong Silicon Valley/newsletter vibe; good for founder/VC angle. - **Stratechery** — the best for strategy-heavy tech and business model analysis. - **404 Media** — excellent for tech culture, privacy, and internet weirdness. - **The Verge’s Command Line / Vergecast newsletter ecosystem** — more mainstream, good reporting. - **Business Insider Tech newsletter(s)** — faster-moving, startup/Big Tech gossip and deals. - **Semafor Tech** — polished, broad tech/business coverage. - **Techmeme Ride Home** — best daily audio/news digest if you want speed over depth. - **Morning Brew: Tech Brew** — lighter, easy-to-skim industry recap. - **Benedict Evans** — more essay-style, but top-tier tech thinking. If you mean **closest replacements for a premium, insider-y tech newsletter outlet**, start with: 1. **Platformer** 2. **Stratechery** 3. **Semafor Tech** 4. **404 Media** If you want, I can also rank these by **startup news, AI, Big Tech, or VC**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want a **newsletter-first tech outlet**, the best alternatives are usually: - **Techmeme** — best for a fast, daily “what matters in tech right now” briefing. It’s an industry aggregator with a newsletter and shared context. ([news.techmeme.com](https://news.techmeme.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Axios Tech** — best for short, high-signal tech business updates in newsletter form. ([pages.axios.com](https://pages.axios.com/technology?utm_source=openai)) - **TechCrunch newsletters** — best for startups, funding, and sector-specific coverage like AI, fintech, crypto, space, and mobility. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/%20newsletters/?utm_source=openai)) - **Platformer** — best for platform policy, social media, and tech + democracy reporting in a pure newsletter model. ([platformer.news](https://www.platformer.news/welcome-to-platformer/?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED newsletters** — best for broader tech, science, and future-of-business coverage, with both daily and weekly digests. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/newsletter/subscribe?utm_source=openai)) - **Ars Technica** — best for deeper reporting on tech, software, hardware, and policy; it also offers newsletter options. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/staff/2016/03/sign-up-for-the-ars-technica-uk-weekly-newsletter/?utm_source=openai)) If you want the **closest substitute to a newsletter-native tech outlet**, I’d start with **Techmeme + Platformer + Axios Tech**. If you want, I can narrow this to **free only**, **paid only**, or **best for AI/startups**.
Which outlets are better for in-depth reporting than quick tech headlines? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For deeper tech reporting, these are usually better than quick news hits: - **The Verge** — strong explainers and feature reporting - **Wired** — often good for long-form tech, policy, and industry stories - **The Information** — very in-depth, especially on startups and big tech - **Ars Technica** — detailed analysis, especially on hardware, software, and policy - **TechCrunch** — more startup/news-heavy, but some solid deeper pieces - **Rest of World** — excellent for global tech coverage beyond Silicon Valley - **Financial Times** / **The Wall Street Journal** — strong for business-side tech reporting - **MIT Technology Review** — best for thoughtful, research-driven coverage If you want, I can also sort these by **best for AI**, **best for startups**, or **best for policy/antitrust**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **in-depth tech reporting** rather than fast-hit headlines, I’d start with: - **The Information** — probably the strongest for exclusive, deeply reported stories on tech and business. ([theinformation.com](https://www.theinformation.com/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **Ars Technica** — especially good for detailed analysis on policy, security, science, and the technical side of tech news. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/02/china-responds-to-tariffs-with-antitrust-investigations-of-google-nvidia/?utm_source=openai)) - **MIT Technology Review** — best for long-form reporting and thoughtful analysis on AI, biotech, climate, and emerging tech. ([forms.technologyreview.com](https://forms.technologyreview.com/premium-product/?utm_source=openai)) - **Rest of World** — excellent for global tech reporting with a human, investigative angle, especially outside Silicon Valley and the West. ([restofworld.org](https://restofworld.org/about/hiring/features-director/?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED** — a good mix of features, analysis, and magazine-style long reads on tech, culture, and business. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/story/contact-us/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank them by **best free options**, **best paid options**, or **best for AI coverage specifically**.
What are the best alternatives to a gadget-focused publication? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned
If you mean **alternatives to a gadget-heavy tech publication** like Gizmodo, the best picks are: - **The Verge** — best for polished gadget news, reviews, and explainers - **Engadget** — strong for consumer tech and hands-on product coverage - **CNET** — better if you want buying guides and practical reviews - **TechCrunch** — more startup and industry news than gadgets - **Ars Technica** — deeper, more technical reporting - **Tom’s Guide** — useful for product roundups and recommendations - **WIRED** — broader tech/culture coverage with some gadget content If you want, I can also rank these by **best for reviews**, **news**, or **minimal gadget hype**.
retrieval Mentioned
If you mean a **gadgets-first tech publication**, good alternatives are: - **Engadget** — best for gadget news + reviews + buying guides. ([engadget.com](https://www.engadget.com/about/editors/engadget/)) - **Tom’s Guide** — best for “what should I buy?” advice and testing-heavy product guides. ([tomsguide.com](https://www.tomsguide.com/reference/about-us)) - **RTINGS** — best for data-driven, transparent product testing. ([rtings.com](https://www.rtings.com/)) - **IEEE Spectrum** — best for deeper tech/engineering coverage, less shopping-focused. ([spectrum.ieee.org](https://spectrum.ieee.org/st/about)) - **TechRadar** — best for broad consumer-tech coverage and regular reviews. ([techradar.com](https://www.techradar.com/news/about-us)) If you want, I can narrow this to the best alternative for **phones, TVs, laptops, audio, or smart-home gear**.
Which tech and science outlets are better for independent analysis than corporate media? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **more independent analysis** than mainstream corporate media, these are strong picks: ### Tech - **Ars Technica** — solid technical depth, especially on computing, policy, and security. - **The Verge** — mixed, but their longer explainers and reviews can be useful. - **Techdirt** — strong on tech policy, regulation, and platform power. - **Wired** — occasionally excellent long-form reporting; not fully independent, but often sharper than cable-style coverage. - **404 Media** — one of the best newer independent tech/news outlets. ### Science - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent deep reporting on math, physics, CS, and biology. - **Nautilus** — thoughtful long-form science and ideas. - **Undark** — strong investigative science journalism. - **The Conversation** — articles written by academics; good for context and analysis. - **STAT** — especially strong on biotech, medicine, and health policy. ### Best “independent” overall - **The Register** — tech news with a skeptical, no-hype tone. - **Techdirt** - **404 Media** - **Quanta Magazine** ### Good rule of thumb For independent analysis, look for outlets that: - publish primary-source links, - separate reporting from opinion, - have domain experts as writers, - and don’t run mostly PR-driven product coverage. If you want, I can also give you a **ranked list by trustworthiness** or a list focused on **AI, space, biotech, or cybersecurity**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **more independent analysis**, I’d start with these: - **Quanta Magazine** — editorially independent, foundation-funded, and explicitly says outside editorial decisions don’t review its stories. Great for deep science/math analysis. ([quantamagazine.org](https://www.quantamagazine.org/about?utm_source=openai)) - **Undark** — nonprofit and editorially independent; strong on longform science, medicine, and science-policy reporting. ([undark.org](https://undark.org/who-is-undark/?utm_source=openai)) - **Inside Climate News** — nonprofit, non-partisan, and watchdog-oriented; excellent for climate/environment science with investigative depth. ([insideclimatenews.org](https://insideclimatenews.org/about/?utm_source=openai)) - **New Atlas** — positions itself as “fiercely independent” and says it’s 100% independent and self-funded. Good for broad tech/science/innovation coverage. ([newatlas.com](https://newatlas.com/about?utm_source=openai)) - **Scientific American** — not independent in ownership (it’s published by Springer Nature), but it states a strict policy of editorial independence, so it’s often stronger than many corporate outlets on substantive science coverage. ([scientificamerican.com](https://www.scientificamerican.com/page/about-scientific-american/?utm_source=openai)) **Best overall picks for independent analysis:** **Quanta**, **Undark**, and **Inside Climate News**. **Best for broader tech/innovation:** **New Atlas**. ([quantamagazine.org](https://www.quantamagazine.org/about?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **“most independent” top 10**, or 2. a split list for **AI / biotech / climate / consumer tech**.
What are the best alternatives to a paywalled science publication? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best legal alternatives to a paywalled science paper/journal: - **Preprints**: `arXiv`, `bioRxiv`, `medRxiv`, `chemRxiv` - **Author manuscripts**: check **Google Scholar**, **PubMed**, **Semantic Scholar**, or the author’s university page - **Open access journals**: `PLOS`, `eLife`, `PeerJ`, `Frontiers`, `BMJ Open`, `Nature Communications` (many articles) - **Library access**: your local library, university library, or **Interlibrary Loan (ILL)** - **Research networks**: `ResearchGate` and `Academia.edu` sometimes host legal copies shared by authors - **Contact the author directly**: a short email often gets you a free PDF - **Free indexes/search tools**: `Google Scholar`, `Unpaywall`, `OpenAlex`, `DOAJ` (Directory of Open Access Journals) If you want, I can help you find a free legal copy of a specific paper.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best alternatives: 1. **Open-access journals** — especially journals indexed in DOAJ, which only includes peer-reviewed open-access journals and keeps the full text freely available. ([doaj.org](https://doaj.org/?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Preprint servers** — like arXiv for physics/math/computer science and PMC’s preprint pilot for some NIH-funded biomedical work. These are usually not the final peer-reviewed version, but they’re often the fastest free alternative. ([pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/about/nihpreprints/?utm_source=openai)) 3. **PubMed Central (PMC)** — for biomedical/life-science papers, PMC is a free full-text repository for papers under public-access policies. ([nihms.nih.gov](https://www.nihms.nih.gov/about/publicaccess/?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Author manuscripts in institutional repositories** — many papers have an accepted manuscript available legally through university or funder repositories, sometimes after an embargo. ([nihms.nih.gov](https://www.nihms.nih.gov/about/publicaccess/?utm_source=openai)) 5. **OA-finding tools** — Unpaywall can help locate a legal open-access copy when one exists. ([support.unpaywall.org](https://support.unpaywall.org/support/solutions/articles/44001874811-link-resolver-integrations?utm_source=openai)) 6. **Publisher/open-science brands** — e.g. PLOS is a major open-access publisher with fully accessible articles. ([plos.org](https://plos.org/?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: - the **best alternatives by field** (bio, physics, CS, medicine), or - a **quick workflow to find a free legal copy** of any specific paper.
Which outlets are better for startup coverage than general business news sites? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
For startup coverage, these are usually stronger than general business news sites: - **TechCrunch** — best all-around for startup launches, funding, and founder news. - **The Information** — deeper, more exclusive reporting; especially good for venture, AI, and big startup moves. - **Sifted** — excellent for European startups and VC. - **Crunchbase News** — good for funding rounds, market maps, and startup trends. - **VentureBeat** — stronger on AI, enterprise startups, and product/business crossover. - **Axios Pro: R&D / Axios Pro: Dealmakers** — useful if you want concise startup and venture coverage. - **PitchBook News / PitchBook reports** — best for data-driven venture and private markets coverage. - **Fortune Term Sheet** — great startup/VC newsletter if you want a daily digest. - **StrictlyVC** — solid newsletter for Silicon Valley and venture gossip/news. - **GeekWire** — strong for Seattle and broader tech startup ecosystems. If you want the best few to follow: **TechCrunch, The Information, Sifted, and Crunchbase News**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you want **startup-specific coverage**, these are usually better than general business news sites: - **TechCrunch** — broad startup coverage, especially launches, fundraising, and founder news. ([eu.techcrunch.com](https://eu.techcrunch.com/?utm_source=openai)) - **Crunchbase News** — best if you care about **funding, private markets, and data-driven startup reporting**. ([news.crunchbase.com](https://news.crunchbase.com/about-news/?utm_source=openai)) - **The Information** — stronger for **deep reporting, venture trends, and proprietary startup/VC analysis**. ([theinformation.com](https://www.theinformation.com/topics/startups?utm_source=openai)) - **Sifted** — especially good for **European startups** and investor coverage. ([sifted.eu](https://sifted.eu/articles/sifted-membership?utm_source=openai)) - **StrictlyVC** — a strong **VC/startup newsletter** for funding and venture-scene updates. ([strictlyvc.com](https://strictlyvc.com/newsletter/?utm_source=openai)) **Rule of thumb:** - **Need breaking startup news?** TechCrunch - **Need funding/data?** Crunchbase News - **Need deeper analysis?** The Information - **Need Europe?** Sifted - **Need daily VC intel?** StrictlyVC If you want, I can also rank them by **best free options**, **best paid options**, or **best for early-stage founders**.
How do I find trustworthy tech and science news outlets? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Look for outlets that do most of these well: - **Clear sourcing**: links to studies, documents, or original data - **Real experts**: named reporters/editors with science/tech background - **Correction policy**: easy-to-find corrections page - **Separation of news vs opinion**: labeled clearly - **No hype language**: avoids “shocking,” “game-changing,” etc. - **Multiple confirmations**: especially for big claims Good, generally trustworthy tech/science outlets: - **Reuters** — excellent for straight news - **Associated Press (AP)** — solid, neutral reporting - **Nature News** — strong science journalism - **Science News** — good science coverage - **MIT Technology Review** — thoughtful tech reporting - **IEEE Spectrum** — great for engineering/technical stories - **Ars Technica** — strong tech reporting, more in-depth - **STAT** — especially good for biotech/health science - **NPR Science** — accessible and usually careful - **The Verge** — useful for tech, but best when paired with more source-heavy outlets For a quick credibility check, I’d start with **Reuters + AP + Nature/Science News** and then use **Ars Technica** or **MIT Technology Review** for deeper tech coverage. If you want, I can also give you a **“best outlets by topic” list** (AI, space, health, gadgets, etc.).
retrieval Not mentioned
Use a few filters: - **Primary sourcing:** Do they link to the original paper, data, or company statement? - **Editorial standards:** Clear corrections policy, named editors/reporters, and separation of news vs opinion. - **Track record:** Check whether they’ve had major factual corrections or sensational headlines. - **Domain expertise:** Prefer outlets with specialized tech/science reporters, not general clickbait sites. - **Transparency:** They explain methods, limitations, and uncertainty. - **Cross-checking:** See if the same story appears in reputable outlets with consistent facts. Good signs: - They cite peer-reviewed studies or official documents. - They distinguish **preprint** from **peer-reviewed** research. - They don’t oversell early findings. - Headlines match the article content. Red flags: - “Scientists say” with no source. - Big claims from one study. - Heavy ads, affiliate spam, or sensational language. - No author name or publication date. A practical workflow: 1. Start with a few trusted outlets. 2. Click through to the original source. 3. Compare coverage across 2–3 reputable sources. 4. For science, verify against the paper or institution release. 5. For tech, verify against company docs, release notes, or filings. Examples of generally solid starting points: - **Science:** Nature, Science, Quanta Magazine, STAT, Scientific American - **Tech:** The Verge, Ars Technica, IEEE Spectrum, TechCrunch (for industry news, with caution) If you want, I can also give you a **ranked list of trustworthy tech/science outlets** or a **checklist for spotting bad reporting fast**.
How do I choose a tech outlet that is not just clickbait? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Look for outlets that do **reporting, testing, and corrections**—not just headlines. ### Good signs - **Clear authorship**: named writers/editors, not anonymous posts. - **Original testing**: real benchmarks, hands-on reviews, photos/screenshots. - **Evidence-backed claims**: links to sources, documents, and primary data. - **Transparent monetization**: obvious affiliate/disclosure pages. - **Corrections policy**: they fix mistakes publicly. - **Balanced coverage**: not every article is “best ever” or “shocking leak.” - **Long-form reviews**: pros, cons, and tradeoffs, not just verdicts. ### Red flags - All-caps or sensational titles - “You won’t believe…” style framing - No testing methodology - Recycled rumors with no sourcing - Heavy affiliate push without real analysis - Reviews that read like product ads ### Reliable tech outlets to start with - **Wirecutter** (very strong on testing and recommendations) - **The Verge** (good reporting; reviews can be opinionated) - **Ars Technica** (deep, careful, less hype) - **Tom’s Hardware** (especially for components/benchmarks) - **Notebookcheck** (excellent laptop testing data) - **RTINGS** (great for TVs, monitors, headphones, etc.) ### Quick rule If an outlet can explain **how** it knows something, it’s probably better than one that just tries to shock you. If you want, I can give you a **short checklist for spotting clickbait in 30 seconds**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Look for outlets that consistently do these things: - **Show sources**: links to primary docs, filings, benchmarks, or interviews. - **Separate news from opinion**: clear labeling, not mixed together. - **Explain the “why”**: not just headlines, but context and tradeoffs. - **Correct mistakes openly**: visible updates/corrections page. - **Avoid hype language**: fewer “shocking,” “game-changing,” “you won’t believe” headlines. - **Have real authors**: named reporters/editors with track records. - **Use evidence**: screenshots, specs, data, hands-on testing. - **Cover limits too**: good reviews mention downsides, not just praise. Quick test: 1. Read 5 headlines. 2. If they all feel engineered to provoke outrage/FOMO, skip it. 3. Open one article and check whether the body actually delivers what the headline promised. 4. Compare with 1–2 other outlets. Good signs: - Ars Technica - The Verge (varies, but often solid on reporting) - Wired - Tom’s Hardware - AnandTech archives / reviewers with rigorous testing - Notebookcheck for laptop/phone reviews Best rule: **trust outlets that make you more informed, not more emotional.** If you want, I can also give you a **“good tech outlet checklist”** or suggest **reliable outlets for phones, AI, laptops, or security**.
How do I stay up to date on science and technology without reading too much? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use **high-signal summaries**, not full articles. ### Good low-reading options - **1 newsletter/day** - **The Download** (MIT Technology Review) - **Next Draft** (news curation, very short) - **Stratechery** (tech business; paid, but high quality) - **Quanta Magazine** newsletter (science, beautifully written) - **Podcasts while commuting/exercising** - **Science Vs** - **The Daily** (for broader context) - **Hard Fork** (tech) - **Ologies** (science, lighter tone) - **Aggregators/apps** - **Apple News** or **Google News** for a custom feed - **Flipboard** if you want magazine-style curation - **Inoreader** if you want RSS with strong filtering - **Feedly** with AI “Leo” for topic filtering - **Short-form video / audio summaries** - **TED Talks Daily** - **BBC Science Hour** - **Nature Briefing** for quick science updates ### A simple routine - **5 min morning:** one newsletter - **During commute:** one podcast segment - **Weekly:** one “deep dive” article or video ### Best combo for most people - **MIT Technology Review’s The Download** - **Quanta Magazine** - **Hard Fork** or **Science Vs** - **Feedly** for your own topics If you want, I can build you a **personalized 10-minute-a-day science/tech info diet** based on your interests.
retrieval Not mentioned
Use a **high-signal, low-volume** system: - **Pick 3 sources max** Example: one daily newsletter, one weekly roundup, one podcast. - **Prefer summaries over full articles** Look for “what changed” and “why it matters.” - **Set a time cap** 10–15 minutes/day, or 30 minutes twice a week. - **Follow one layer up** Read “field updates” instead of every paper or news story. - **Use alerts sparingly** Save only topics you care about: AI, biotech, space, energy, etc. - **Skip hype-heavy feeds** Favor reputable outlets and primary-source digests. Good formats: - **Newsletters:** one short daily tech/science digest - **Podcasts:** 1 episode/week at 1.5x speed - **RSS/read-later:** only from a curated list - **Social media:** follow a few researchers/journalists, mute the rest A simple routine: - **Daily:** 1 newsletter - **Weekly:** 1 roundup or podcast - **Monthly:** 1 deeper dive on a topic you care about If you want, I can build you a **personalized 10-minute science/tech info diet** based on your interests.
How do I find a tech publication with both news and analysis? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Look for a publication that clearly labels both **news** and **analysis/opinion** sections. Good signs: - Separate **News**, **Analysis**, and **Opinion** tabs - Articles tagged like **“breaking,” “reported,” “analysis,”** or **“commentary”** - A mix of short updates and longer explainers Good tech publications to try: - **The Verge** — strong on news + analysis - **Wired** — more analysis and feature-heavy - **TechCrunch** — startup/news focused, with some analysis - **Ars Technica** — very good technical reporting + analysis - **Bloomberg Technology** — business tech news + market analysis If you want, I can suggest the **best one for your interests** (gadgets, AI, startups, or enterprise tech).
retrieval Not mentioned
Look for a site that clearly has both: - **Breaking news / daily reporting** - **Analysis / opinion / explainers** - **A newsroom or editorial staff page** - **A mix of short updates and longer, sourced articles** Good signs: - Article labels like **News**, **Analysis**, **Commentary**, **Explainer** - Reporters and editors with bylines - Coverage of **recent events** plus **industry trends** - Fewer pure listicles / gadget reviews if you want more journalism Search terms to use: - `tech news and analysis publication` - `technology news site analysis` - `tech journalism opinion analysis` - `best tech news outlets with analysis` Examples that usually fit this style: - **The Verge** - **Wired** - **Ars Technica** - **MIT Technology Review** - **TechCrunch** (more news-heavy) - **Rest of World** (for global tech analysis) If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **shortlist by vibe** (serious, industry, consumer tech), or 2. the **best one for your interests**.
How do I get better startup and innovation coverage in one place? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use a **single news aggregator** and tune it for startups/innovation. Best options: - **Feedly** — best overall; follow topics like startups, AI, venture capital, product launches, and specific publications. - **Inoreader** — great if you want more control, filters, and automation. - **Techmeme** — best “one-page” view for startup/tech news, especially for industry headlines. - **Flipboard** — easiest if you want a magazine-style experience. A good setup: 1. Add sources like **TechCrunch, The Verge, VentureBeat, Sifted, PitchBook, Crunchbase News, Product Hunt, Hacker News**. 2. Create a folder for **Startups / Innovation**. 3. Turn on keyword alerts for terms like **AI startup, funding, seed round, product launch, innovation**. 4. If you want email too, use **Morning Brew Tech** or **StrictlyVC** for a daily digest. If you want, I can build you a **starter source list** for Feedly or Inoreader.
retrieval Not mentioned
Use **Feedly** as the hub, then plug in the best startup sources around it. Feedly can aggregate news “in one place,” track company press releases, and its Market Intelligence tools include a **Startup Innovation Radar**, **Company Insights Cards**, and **Automated Newsletters**. ([feedly.com](https://feedly.com/news-reader?utm_source=openai)) A solid setup: - **Feedly** = your main inbox. ([feedly.com](https://feedly.com/news-reader?utm_source=openai)) - **Techmeme** = fast tech/startup headlines and broad industry coverage. ([techmeme.com](https://techmeme.com/about?utm_source=openai)) - **Crunchbase News** = startups, VC, founders, and private markets with data-driven reporting. ([news.crunchbase.com](https://news.crunchbase.com/about-news/?utm_source=openai)) - **Product Hunt** = new product launches and what’s getting traction. ([producthunt.com](https://www.producthunt.com/about?utm_source=openai)) If you want the simplest answer: **set up a Feedly feed with Techmeme, Crunchbase News, Product Hunt, and a few company press-release RSS feeds**. That gives you news, funding, launches, and official announcements in one dashboard. ([feedly.com](https://feedly.com/news-reader?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can build you a **starter feed list** by theme, like AI, climate, fintech, or B2B SaaS.
How do I find a science outlet that explains complex topics simply? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Look for outlets that do 3 things well: - **Use plain language** - **Show the “why it matters”** - **Link to the original study or expert source** Good science outlets that usually fit this: - **NPR Science** — clear, balanced, easy to follow - **Scientific American** — more detailed, but still accessible - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent for hard topics explained simply - **Nautilus** — thoughtful long-form science writing - **Science News** — concise and reliable - **The Conversation** — expert-written, often very readable - **Popular Science** — more mainstream, generally simple If you want the simplest style, start with **NPR Science** and **The Conversation**. If you want deeper but still clear, try **Quanta Magazine** and **Scientific American**. Quick test: if an article explains a topic in **1–2 short paragraphs before using jargon**, that’s usually a good outlet for you. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best science outlets by topic** (space, medicine, AI, climate), or 2. a **list of YouTube channels/podcasts** that explain science simply.
retrieval Not mentioned
Look for these traits: - **Clear writing**: short sentences, few jargon dumps. - **Good explainers**: they define terms and use analogies. - **Sources cited**: studies, journals, or expert interviews. - **Multiple levels**: headline summary + deeper article. - **Consistent tone**: curious, not sensational. - **Transparent limits**: says what’s known vs uncertain. Good signs in a science outlet: - “Explainer,” “Q&A,” or “How it works” sections - Editors or staff with science background - Links to original research - No clickbait headlines Quick test: 1. Pick one article on a topic you know a little about. 2. Ask: did I understand it without feeling talked down to? 3. Check whether it made the science simpler **without** oversimplifying. If you want, I can also suggest a few **specific science outlets** depending on whether you want **news, deep dives, or beginner-friendly explainers**.
How do I keep up with gadget launches and reviews? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
Best way: use a mix of **2–3 trusted sources** plus alerts. **For launch news** - **The Verge** - **Engadget** - **TechCrunch** - **9to5Mac** (Apple) - **Android Authority** / **Android Police** (Android) **For reviews you can trust** - **MKBHD (Marques Brownlee)** on YouTube - **MrWhoseTheBoss** - **Rtings** for TVs, monitors, headphones - **Notebookcheck** for laptops/phones - **GSMArena** for phone specs + early impressions **Easy setup** - Subscribe to the **The Vergecast** and **Waveform** podcasts - Use **Feedly** to follow gadget sites in one place - Turn on **YouTube notifications** for MKBHD, The Verge, and Austin Evans - Set **Google Alerts** for products/brands you care about **If you want one app** - **Feedly** is the simplest all-in-one reader If you want, I can make you a **custom gadget-following list** for phones, laptops, or smart home gear.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best way: build a small **stack** instead of relying on one app. 1. **Use an RSS reader** like **Feedly** to track launch/news/review sites in one place. Feedly supports websites, RSS feeds, newsletters, and Google News feeds; it also has an RSS Builder for sites without RSS. ([feedly.com](https://feedly.com/news-reader?utm_source=openai)) 2. **Add Google News topics/sources** for things like “smartphones,” “laptops,” “Bluetooth earbuds,” or specific brands. Google News lets you customize topics and sources you follow. ([support.google.com](https://support.google.com/googlenews/answer/9010862?co=GENIE.Platform%3DiOS&hl=en&utm_source=openai)) 3. **Subscribe to a few review-first outlets** and keep it tight—one launch-news source, one deep-review source, and one deals/buying-guide source. Feedly’s setup makes that easy. ([feedly.com](https://feedly.com/news-reader?utm_source=openai)) 4. **Turn on notifications/newsletters** for the brands and outlets you care about most, so you catch embargo lifts and launch-day reviews fast. Feedly can ingest newsletters directly. ([feedly.com](https://feedly.com/news-reader?utm_source=openai)) A simple setup I’d use: - **Feedly** = everything I want to monitor - **Google News** = broad topic discovery - **Email/newsletters** = launch-day alerts from favorite sites/brands If you want, I can make you a **starter list of 10 gadget sources** for phones, laptops, headphones, and smart home.
How do I find an outlet with a good daily newsletter on tech? problem 20/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Look for a tech newsletter that matches your **depth + bias + format** preferences. **Best way to find one:** 1. Search for “daily tech newsletter” + topics you care about: AI, startups, gadgets, business, security. 2. Check the **sample issue**: does it have real reporting, or just links? 3. Look at the **byline/outlet**: credible names usually have known editors/reporters. 4. See if it has a **consistent cadence** and archive. 5. Prefer newsletters with **original analysis**, not just aggregation. **Good daily tech newsletters to try:** - **The Verge’s The Vergecast / newsletter** — broad consumer tech and internet culture - **Axios Tech** — quick, business-focused tech news - **TechCrunch Daily Crunch** — startups and venture capital - **The Information** — deep tech/business reporting (paid, very strong) - **Morning Brew: Emerging Tech Brew** — easy-to-skim tech/business mix - **Platformer** — great for AI and big tech policy - **Wired’s daily newsletter** — broader tech trends and culture **Quick tip:** If you want “best overall,” start with **Axios Tech** for daily efficiency and **The Information** if you want premium reporting. If you tell me your focus—**AI, gadgets, startups, cybersecurity, or big tech**—I can narrow it to the best 3.
retrieval Not mentioned
Look for an outlet that has: 1. **A clearly labeled daily tech newsletter** 2. **An archive or preview** so you can sample a few issues before subscribing 3. **A narrow beat** if you want depth (AI, startups, gadgets, security), or a broader digest if you want the day’s biggest stories. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/newsletters?utm_source=openai)) Good places to start: - **TechCrunch Daily News** — weekday + Sunday coverage from a startup/tech angle. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/newsletters?utm_source=openai)) - **Ars Technica Daily** — once-a-day digest of top stories, with a strong technical bent. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/newsletters/?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED Daily** — handpicked biggest stories each day, plus breaking alerts. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/newsletter/daily?utm_source=openai)) - **Axios Technology News / Axios AI+** — concise, newsletter-first coverage; Axios says its tech newsletters are daily on weekdays, and its AI+ newsletter is written by its chief technology correspondent. ([pages.axios.com](https://pages.axios.com/technology?utm_source=openai)) My quick rule: - **Want startup/VC/news cadence?** TechCrunch. - **Want smart, technical analysis?** Ars or WIRED. - **Want super short, skimmable briefs?** Axios. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/newsletters?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can narrow it to **best daily newsletter for AI, startups, gadgets, or security**.
How do I avoid missing important AI and software news? problem 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Use a simple **3-layer system**: ### 1) One daily news source Pick **one** and check it once a day: - **Techmeme** — best broad tech/software headlines - **The Verge** — easier reading, good for consumer + AI - **Ben’s Bites** — very good AI-specific newsletter - **The Batch (deeplearning.ai)** — strong AI news roundup ### 2) One alert system for keywords Set alerts for terms like: - “OpenAI”, “Anthropic”, “GPT”, “Claude”, “Gemini” - your main software stack - your competitors Use: - **Google Alerts** — free, simple - **Talkwalker Alerts** — good free alternative - **Feedly** — better if you want to track many sources in one place ### 3) One social feed for breaking news Follow a small, curated list on: - **X (Twitter)** — fastest for AI/software announcements - **LinkedIn** — good for company/product updates - **Reddit** — try `r/ArtificialIntelligence`, `r/MachineLearning`, `r/programming` ### Best setup for most people If you want the easiest reliable combo: - **Techmeme** - **Ben’s Bites** - **Google Alerts** - **Feedly** If you want, I can give you a **ready-made AI/software news stack** based on whether you want **free**, **minimal**, or **power-user**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Use a **2-layer system**: 1. **One daily feed** - Subscribe to a few high-signal newsletters: - **The Batch** (AI) - **Ben’s Bites** (AI/software) - **TLDR AI** or **TLDR** - **Import AI** - Follow a couple of broad tech reporters/accounts you trust. 2. **One alert layer** - Set Google Alerts for: - your key companies - tools you use - topics like “LLM”, “open source AI”, “security update”, “framework release” - Turn on app notifications only for the most important sources. Best practices: - **Limit sources** to avoid overload. - **Use RSS** in Feedly/Inoreader for blogs, docs, and release notes. - **Track release notes** for major vendors you rely on. - **Create a weekly review**: 15–30 minutes to scan everything you saved. - **Save, don’t read immediately**: Pocket/Readwise Reader helps. If you want, I can build you a **minimal “AI + software news stack”** for: - casual, - serious, - or “I work in AI and can’t miss anything.”
How do I get reliable science reporting for non-experts? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Best approach: use a **small trusted mix** of sources, not one outlet. **Good non-expert science reporting** - **Nature Briefing** — daily science news roundup - **Science News** — clear, mainstream, well-edited - **STAT News** — strong health/biomed reporting - **The Conversation** — experts write in plain English - **NPR Science / Short Wave** — accessible and usually careful - **BBC Future / BBC Science** — broad, readable coverage **For fact-checking claims** - **PubMed** — to see if a real study exists - **Cochrane** — best for medical evidence summaries - **Our World in Data** — great for data-backed topics - **HealthFeedback** — good for spotting misleading health claims **Simple rules** - Prefer articles that link to the **original study** - Be cautious with headlines using **“breakthrough,” “cure,” “shocks experts”** - Check whether the study was on **mice, cells, or humans** - Look for **sample size**, **limits**, and **independent confirmation** - If it’s medical, trust **systematic reviews** over a single study **Easy workflow** 1. Read the news story 2. Check the study link 3. Compare with a second outlet 4. Look for review articles or expert commentary If you want, I can give you a **“top 10 science sources” list by topic**: health, space, AI, environment, or general science.
retrieval Not mentioned
For reliable science reporting as a non-expert: - **Prefer primary sources**: paper abstracts, university press releases, government agencies, major journals. - **Check the study type**: review/meta-analysis > randomized trial > observational study > animal study > lab study. - **Look for sample size and limits**: small, single-study, or preprint = tentative. - **Watch for hype words**: “breakthrough,” “cure,” “prove,” “shocking.” - **Compare 2–3 reputable outlets**: Reuters, AP, BBC, Nature News, Science, STAT. - **Notice conflicts of interest**: who funded the study? who benefits? - **Ask: is this consensus or one result?** One study rarely changes the field. - **Use explainers**: journalists who translate stats well, not just headlines. If you want, I can also give you: 1. a **short list of trustworthy science outlets**, or 2. a **checklist for spotting bad science headlines**.
What do tech and science outlets cost on average? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you mean **advertising/sponsored content in tech and science media outlets**, a rough average is: - **Small niche outlets:** **$500–$5,000** - **Mid-tier outlets (e.g., TechCrunch, Wired, Ars Technica):** **$5,000–$25,000** - **Top-tier outlets (e.g., The Verge, MIT Technology Review, Scientific American):** **$25,000–$100,000+** It depends a lot on: - audience size - article type - newsletter placement - homepage placement - whether it’s sponsored, display ads, or PR coverage If you meant **something else** by “cost,” tell me what kind of outlet you mean and I’ll narrow it down.
retrieval Not mentioned
Do you mean: 1. **Subscriptions** to tech/science news outlets, or 2. **Advertising/PR placement** in tech/science outlets? If you want, I can give you an average **price range by outlet type** for either one.
Are there free tech and science newsletters worth subscribing to? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes — several good free ones are worth it. A few solid picks: - **The Download (MIT Technology Review)** — tech + AI + science news, very good quality. - **Axios Future** — short, smart updates on AI, tech, and science. - **NextDraft** — fun daily roundup of the best stories across tech/science/current events. - **Hacker Newsletter** — curated links for developers and tech readers. - **Stratechery (free articles/newsletter snippets)** — excellent tech industry analysis, though most is paid. - **The Pulse (Undark)** — science journalism focused on research and public impact. - **Quanta Magazine newsletter** — excellent math, physics, and computer science coverage. - **Nature Briefing** — daily science news from Nature. - **IEEE Spectrum newsletters** — engineering, robotics, AI, and emerging tech. If you want, I can also recommend: 1. **best newsletters for AI specifically**, 2. **best for science**, or 3. **best daily quick-read newsletters**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes — a few free ones are genuinely worth it: - **Nature Briefing** — free daily science roundup; good if you want the biggest research/news developments in a short format. ([nature.com](https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-04150-8?utm_source=openai)) - **WIRED Daily** — free tech digest with handpicked stories, plus a separate **Science Newsletter** if you want the science angle too. ([wired.com](https://www.wired.com/newsletter/subscribe?utm_source=openai)) - **TechCrunch Daily News** — free weekday + Sunday tech/startup roundup; solid for startups, AI, apps, and industry news. ([techcrunch.com](https://techcrunch.com/newsletters?utm_source=openai)) - **Science News** — the magazine offers subscription access, and its site also points readers to free science coverage like **Science News Explores** for students/educators. ([sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/about-science-news/frequently-asked-questions?utm_source=openai)) - **Scientific American Daily Newsletter** — free daily newsletter from a well-known science outlet. ([scientificamerican.com](https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/our-subscribers/?utm_source=openai)) - **Smithsonian newsletters** — free daily/weekly emails, including science/innovation-focused options. ([subscribe.smithsonianmag.com](https://subscribe.smithsonianmag.com/vip?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best 5 for tech**, 2. the **best 5 for science**, or 3. a **“no fluff, only high-signal”** shortlist.
Which tech and science publications have a free tier? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned
A lot of tech/science publications have a **free tier** (usually free articles/newsletters, with premium paywall extras). ### Tech - **TechCrunch** — free articles - **The Verge** — free articles - **Wired** — some free articles - **Ars Technica** — mostly free, some subscriber perks - **MIT Technology Review** — some free articles/newsletters - **IEEE Spectrum** — many free articles - **CNET** — free articles/reviews - **Engadget** — free articles - **Tom’s Hardware** — free articles/reviews - **Android Central / iMore / Windows Central** — free articles ### Science - **Nature** — free news/features, research mostly paywalled - **Science Magazine** — some free news content - **Scientific American** — some free articles - **New Scientist** — some free articles - **Smithsonian Magazine** — free articles - **Quanta Magazine** — free, excellent coverage - **Nautilus** — free articles - **Big Think** — free science/ideas content - **The Conversation** — free, expert-written science pieces - **Science News** — some free articles ### Best “free-tier” picks If you want the most useful free access, start with: - **Quanta Magazine** - **The Conversation** - **Ars Technica** - **IEEE Spectrum** - **MIT Technology Review** - **The Verge** If you want, I can also make a **short list by topic** like AI, space, consumer tech, biology, or climate science.
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—if by “free tier” you mean **some content you can read without paying**, these are good examples: | Publication | Free tier type | |---|---| | **Ars Technica** | The site’s public content is free; subscription is optional. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/uncategorized/2009/09/subscriber-faq/?utm_source=openai)) | | **Scientific American** | Metered paywall: unregistered readers get **3 articles/month**, registered readers get **5 articles/month** before subscribing. ([scientificamerican.com](https://www.scientificamerican.com/contact-us/?utm_source=openai)) | | **Nature** | Free account + selected free articles; some articles are also open access and free to read. ([support.nature.com](https://support.nature.com/en/support/solutions/articles/6000210920-register-on-the-nature-website?utm_source=openai)) | | **Science (AAAS)** | Free registration for **selected content**; also offers a free daily newsletter. ([advertising.science.org](https://advertising.science.org/products-services/online/?utm_source=openai)) | If you want, I can make this into a bigger list of **tech-only**, **science-only**, or **best free newsletters**.
How much is a premium tech news subscription? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Premium tech news subscriptions usually run **about $10–$40/month**. Examples: - **The Information**: about **$399/year** (roughly **$33/month**) - **Stratechery**: about **$15/month** or **$150/year** - **Financial Times** (good for broader tech/business coverage): often around **$40–$50/month** depending on promos If you want, I can recommend the **best value**, **best for startups**, or **best for AI/semiconductors**.
retrieval Not mentioned
It varies a lot by publication. Examples: - **Tom’s Hardware Premium:** **$29/year** or **$7/month**. ([tomshardware.com](https://www.tomshardware.com/premium)) - **WIRED Membership:** **$375 every 12 months**. ([joinwired.com](https://joinwired.com/get-involved/p/basic-package-gb2tk)) - **The Information Annual:** **$399/year**; **The Information Pro** is **$749/year** on offer. ([theinformation.com](https://www.theinformation.com/subscribe-new)) If you want, I can narrow it down to the best premium tech news subscription for your budget.
Which science publications offer student discounts? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes—several do, though discounts change by region and promo. Common ones to check: - **Scientific American** — often has **student digital subscription** pricing. - **New Scientist** — frequently offers **student discounts** on print/digital plans. - **Nature** — has **student/personal subscription rates** in some regions through Springer Nature. - **Science (AAAS)** — offers **student membership** options that include access to *Science*. - **IEEE Spectrum** — **student membership** with magazine access via IEEE. - **The Scientist** — sometimes runs **student pricing/promos**. Best tip: if you’re in school, also check your **university library**—you may already have free access to many of these. If you want, I can make a **cheapest-to-most-expensive student-access list** for science magazines and journals.
retrieval Not mentioned
Here are the ones I could verify as of now: - **Science (AAAS)** — AAAS offers a **student membership rate** for undergrads, grad students, and PhD students, and that membership includes a year’s Science magazine subscription. ([promo.aaas.org](https://promo.aaas.org/save/?utm_source=openai)) - **New Scientist** — New Scientist has a current **student offer** for sixth-form students: **£1 a week / 12 issues for £12**. ([landing.newscientist.com](https://landing.newscientist.com/sixthformoffer/?utm_source=openai)) I **didn’t find a current public student discount** for **Nature** or **Scientific American** on their official pages from the searches I checked. ([support.nature.com](https://support.nature.com/en/support/solutions/articles/6000210992-purchasing-a-subscription-online?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also make you a longer list of **science magazines/journals with student pricing**, including paywalled and free options.
Are tech and science outlet subscriptions worth it? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Sometimes—if you read them often. **Worth it if you want:** - **Deep reporting** beyond headlines - **Fewer ads / cleaner reading** - **Good newsletters/podcasts** - **Access to archives** or premium explainers **Usually not worth it if:** - You just skim news on social media - You only read a few articles a month - You already get enough from free sources **Good science/tech subscriptions to consider:** - **Wired** — solid for tech culture and big-picture trends - **MIT Technology Review** — excellent for serious tech analysis - **The Verge** — good if you like consumer tech and reviews - **Nature** — best for science professionals or very serious readers - **Scientific American** — good general science coverage - **Ars Technica** — strong tech news; subscription mainly for supporting them **Best value tip:** Start with a **trial** or a **single publication** you read weekly. If you’re not using it 2–3 times a week, cancel. If you want, I can suggest the best option based on whether you want **science**, **consumer tech**, or **AI/engineering** coverage.
retrieval Not mentioned
Usually: **not necessary for casual readers, yes for heavy readers**. A few solid examples show why: - **Ars Technica** is free to read, but subscriptions buy an ad-free, tracker-free experience plus extras like RSS feeds and forums. ([arstechnica.com](https://arstechnica.com/store/?utm_source=openai)) - **Scientific American** charges **$39/year** for digital access and **$79/year** for print + digital. ([scientificamerican.com](https://www.scientificamerican.com/store/?utm_source=openai)) - **MIT Technology Review** has a premium tier that was listed at **$300/year introductory** and includes subscriber-only newsletters, reports, and event discounts. ([forms.technologyreview.com](https://forms.technologyreview.com/premium-product/?utm_source=openai)) **Worth it if you:** - read tech/science news weekly or daily - want fewer ads and better site usability - care about long-form analysis, explainers, or niche coverage - actually use perks like archives, newsletters, or events **Probably not worth it if you:** - only skim headlines - already get enough from free sources, newsletters, or library access - won’t notice the ad/privacy/perks enough to justify the cost My blunt take: **buy one subscription to your favorite outlet first, not several**. If you tell me which outlets you’re considering, I can rank them by value.
What is the best value tech and science subscription? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you want **one subscription** with the best overall value for **tech + science**, I’d pick **The Economist**. **Why:** - Strong tech coverage - Good science reporting - Also gives you economics, business, and geopolitics, so it’s broader value than a niche mag **Best alternatives by focus:** - **WIRED** — best if you want more pure tech/culture/product trends - **Scientific American** — best if you want more science-heavy coverage - **Nature Briefing** — great for serious science news, but more narrow - **MIT Technology Review** — best for thoughtful AI/innovation coverage **My quick pick:** - **Best overall value:** *The Economist* - **Best tech-only value:** *MIT Technology Review* - **Best science-only value:** *Scientific American* If you want, I can also give you the **best free tech/science news sources**.
retrieval Not mentioned
Best **value for most people**: **Scientific American Digital** at **$39/year**. It’s the cheapest solid mix of mainstream science coverage and long-form reporting. ([scientificamerican.com](https://www.scientificamerican.com/page/frequently-asked-questions/products/?utm_source=openai)) Best **value if you want deep, research-heavy access**: **Nature+ Personal**. It gives access to **55 science journals**, but at **$29.99/month** after the promo period, which annualizes to about **$359.88/year**—so it’s only “best value” if you’ll use it a lot. ([shop-amers.nature.com](https://shop-amers.nature.com/pages/nature-circulation?utm_source=openai)) Best **value for engineers/tech pros**: **IEEE Spectrum via IEEE membership**. IEEE members get a full Spectrum subscription, and the referenced 2026 IEEE membership dues page shows **$69** for current members in IEEE SA membership contexts; if you’re already in IEEE, Spectrum is a strong bundled perk. ([spectrum.ieee.org](https://spectrum.ieee.org/st/contact?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also rank these by **cheapness**, **best for students**, or **best for AI/tech news**.
Which outlets have monthly subscriptions instead of annual plans? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
If you mean **news/media outlets**, these commonly offer **monthly** subscriptions: - **The New York Times** - **The Washington Post** - **The Wall Street Journal** - **The Economist** - **The New Yorker** - **Financial Times** - **Bloomberg** - **The Athletic** If you meant a different kind of “outlet” (e.g. streaming, apps, magazines, utilities), tell me which category and I’ll narrow it down.
retrieval Not mentioned
Which outlets do you mean? If you want, I can check: - **news outlets** - **streaming services** - **magazines/publications** - **local papers** - a **specific list of outlets** you have in mind Send me the names, and I’ll tell you which offer **monthly** vs **annual-only** plans.
Do tech and science newsletters have paid plans? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
Yes — many tech and science newsletters have paid plans. Common formats: - **Free + premium tier**: extra issues, deeper analysis, or archives - **Paid-only**: no free version - **Membership model**: newsletter plus community, Q&A, or perks Examples: - **Stratechery** — paid tech analysis - **The Information** — paid tech news - **Dense Discovery** — free with optional paid support - **The Browser** — premium curation - **New Scientist** — subscription access to articles/newsletter content - **Quanta Magazine** — mostly free, but some organizations offer paid support/membership around it If you want, I can recommend the best paid tech/science newsletters by topic (AI, startups, space, health, etc.).
retrieval Not mentioned
Yes—many do. Common models: - **Free newsletter + paid premium tier** - **Free issues, paid archives/resources** - **Membership with perks** like bonus issues, chat, events, or ad-free reading Examples: - **Stratechery** — paid subscription - **The Information** — paid from the start - **Dense Discovery** / **TLDR** / **Import AI**-style newsletters often have premium options or donations - Many **Substack** tech/science writers use free + paid tiers For **science newsletters**, paid plans are less universal than in tech, but they’re definitely common among independent writers and specialty publications. If you want, I can list a few **good paid tech/science newsletters** by topic.
What is included in a premium science news membership? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned
A premium science news membership usually includes things like: - Ad-free reading - Full access to all articles - Exclusive member-only stories and analysis - Early access to some content - Digital magazine issues or archives - Newsletters with curated science updates - Podcasts, videos, or special reports - Commenting/community access - Discounts on events, books, or subscriptions If you mean a specific publication, the perks vary a lot. For example, **Scientific American Premium** and **Nature** memberships offer different levels of archive access, newsletters, and subscriber-only content. If you want, I can compare premium memberships from **Scientific American, New Scientist, Nature, and Science News**.
retrieval Not mentioned
If you mean **Science News**, a paid subscription/membership includes: - **Unlimited access to ScienceNews.org**, including daily news and premium content. ([sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/about-science-news/frequently-asked-questions?utm_source=openai)) - **Full access to the archives** (their FAQ says back to **1924**; another subscription page says back to **1921**). ([sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/monthly-subscription-cta?utm_source=openai)) - **The Science News app** for Apple and Android. ([sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/about-science-news/frequently-asked-questions?utm_source=openai)) - If you buy the **print subscription**, it includes **22 issues** of the magazine. ([sciencenews.org](https://www.sciencenews.org/subscription-2?utm_source=openai)) If you want, I can also compare the **digital vs print** plans.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best tech and science news outlets?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best tech and science news outlets, by reputation and usefulness: ### Tech news - **The Verge** — best all-around consumer tech coverage - **Ars Technica** — best for deep, technical analysis - **Wired** — strong on tech + culture + future trends - **TechCrunch** — best for startups and venture capital - **Bloomberg Tech** — best for business/industry tech news - **IEEE Spectrum** — excellent for engineering and emerging tech ### Science news - **Nature News** — top-tier science reporting tied to research - **Science** / **Science News** — strong broad science coverage - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent for math, physics, and theoretical science - **Popular Science** — accessible and broad - **National Geographic** — great for earth, space, biology, and environment - **Smithsonian Magazine** — solid science and history pieces ### Best mix of both - **The Verge** - **Wired** - **Scientific American** - **Ars Technica** - **Nature** ### Good free options - **ScienceDaily** — quick summaries of new research - **MIT Technology Review** — smart tech coverage, much of it free - **BBC Future** — accessible science/tech explainers If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best newsletters**, 2. the **best podcasts**, or 3. a **“top 5 only” list** based on your interests.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best tech + science news outlets, depending on what you want: ### Best overall tech news - **The Verge** — great for consumer tech, AI, gadgets, and internet culture. - **TechCrunch** — best for startups, venture capital, and product launches. - **Wired** — strong mix of tech, business, and future-facing analysis. - **Ars Technica** — excellent for deeper tech reporting, software, security, and hardware. - **Tom’s Hardware** — best for PC hardware and component reviews. ### Best science news - **Nature** — top-tier science reporting and research news. - **Science** (AAAS) — highly respected for broad science coverage. - **Quanta Magazine** — outstanding long-form pieces on math, physics, CS, and biology. - **STAT** — especially good for biotech, medicine, and health science. - **Scientific American** — accessible and broad science coverage. ### Best for fast daily summaries - **MIT Technology Review** — smart, readable coverage of AI, biotech, and emerging tech. - **Reuters Technology** — very reliable for straight news. - **AP News** — solid general science/tech updates. - **BBC Science & Technology** — good global perspective. ### Best newsletters / aggregators - **Hacker News** — best for engineers and startup/news discovery. - **Morning Brew Tech** — quick and easy to read. - **The Batch by DeepLearning.AI** — great for AI news. - **import AI** — thoughtful AI policy and research coverage. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free outlets only**, 2. the **best for AI specifically**, or 3. a **personalized shortlist** based on your interests.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best **tech + science news outlets**, depending on what you want: ### Tech news - **The Verge** — best all-around consumer tech coverage - **Ars Technica** — deep, detailed, highly technical - **TechCrunch** — startups, VC, product launches - **Wired** — broader tech + culture + future trends - **404 Media** — sharp reporting on internet/platform issues - **Engadget** — good consumer gadget/news coverage ### Science news - **Nature News** — top-tier science reporting from a major journal publisher - **Science** / **AAAS** — strong coverage of major research developments - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent for math, physics, CS, and deep science stories - **MIT Technology Review** — great intersection of science, AI, and emerging tech - **STAT** — especially strong for health, medicine, biotech - **Smithsonian Magazine** — accessible science and discovery coverage ### Best for quick, broad updates - **Axios Future** - **BBC News: Science & Environment** - **Reuters Tech / Science** ### Best newsletters/podcasts - **The Download** (MIT Technology Review) - **Signals and Threads** (The Verge) - **Daily Briefing** (Nature) If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free outlets only**, 2. the **most reliable/least hype**, or 3. a **top 5 list** for daily reading.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are the best tech and science news outlets, by category: ## Tech news - **The Verge** — best all-around tech coverage, consumer gadgets, and policy - **Wired** — deeper reporting on tech culture, AI, cybersecurity, and society - **Ars Technica** — best for serious, detailed tech and science coverage - **TechCrunch** — startups, venture capital, and product launches - **Engadget** — good for gadget news and reviews - **Bloomberg Technology** — strong for business-side tech and AI - **Rest of World** — excellent for global tech stories outside the US ## Science news - **Nature News** — top-tier science reporting tied to major research - **Science / AAAS** — strong general science news and analysis - **Science News** — accessible, high-quality science journalism - **STAT** — great for biotech, medicine, and health science - **New Scientist** — broad, readable science coverage - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent for math, physics, and theoretical science ## Best “one-stop” picks - **Ars Technica** for tech + science - **Nature News** for science - **The Verge** for mainstream tech - **Wired** for smart longform If you want, I can also give you the **best free outlets only**, or the **best newsletters/RSS feeds** from these.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best tech and science news outlets, depending on what you want: ### Tech news - **The Verge** — best all-around for consumer tech, gadgets, and internet culture - **Wired** — strong on tech trends, startups, cybersecurity, and long-form reporting - **Ars Technica** — excellent for deep technical coverage and analysis - **TechCrunch** — best for startups, venture capital, and Silicon Valley news - **Axios Pro / Axios Tech** — concise, business-focused tech updates - **404 Media** — great for internet, privacy, platform, and surveillance reporting ### Science news - **Nature News** — top-tier reporting tied to one of the best science journals - **Science News** — reliable, accessible science coverage across fields - **Scientific American** — broad science explanations and expert commentary - **STAT** — strong for health, medicine, biotech, and life sciences - **Quanta Magazine** — outstanding for math, physics, and theoretical science - **New Scientist** — very readable general science outlet ### Best picks overall If you want just a few: 1. **Ars Technica** 2. **Wired** 3. **Nature News** 4. **Quanta Magazine** 5. **The Verge** If you want, I can also give you: - the **most unbiased** ones, - the **best free newsletters**, - or the **best RSS feed combo** for tech + science.
Which tech and science publications are most respected?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the most respected **tech** and **science** publications: ### Tech - **MIT Technology Review** — highly respected for rigorous, forward-looking tech coverage. - **Wired** — strong for tech culture, startups, and emerging trends. - **IEEE Spectrum** — excellent for engineering and technical depth. - **Ars Technica** — respected for detailed, technically informed reporting. - **The Verge** — influential, especially for consumer tech and product coverage. - **TechCrunch** — widely read for startups and venture news. ### Science - **Nature** — one of the top scientific journals/publications in the world. - **Science** — another top-tier, highly respected journal. - **Scientific American** — accessible but credible science journalism. - **National Geographic** — respected for science, environment, and exploration. - **New Scientist** — good general science coverage. - **Quanta Magazine** — highly respected for math, physics, and theoretical science. If you want, I can also rank these by **credibility**, **readability**, or **best for general readers vs professionals**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the most respected tech and science publications, grouped by area: **Tech** - **Wired** — strong for technology culture, trends, and long-form features. - **MIT Technology Review** — highly respected for serious coverage of emerging tech. - **IEEE Spectrum** — excellent for engineering and deep tech. - **The Information** — well regarded for Silicon Valley business/industry reporting. - **Ars Technica** — strong technical analysis, especially hardware/software. - **The Verge** — influential, more mainstream but still respected. - **TechCrunch** — best known for startups and venture news. **Science** - **Nature** — top-tier scientific journal and news coverage. - **Science** — one of the most prestigious general science journals. - **Scientific American** — respected science writing for a broad audience. - **New Scientist** — solid popular science coverage. - **The Lancet** — major medical journal. - **Cell** / **The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM)** — extremely respected in biology and medicine. **Best overall picks** - For tech: **MIT Technology Review** and **IEEE Spectrum** - For science: **Nature** and **Science** If you want, I can also rank them by **credibility**, **depth**, or **best for beginners**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the most respected **tech** and **science** publications: ### Tech - **MIT Technology Review** — highly regarded for serious analysis of emerging tech. - **Wired** — influential, especially on culture + technology. - **IEEE Spectrum** — strong engineering and technical coverage. - **Ars Technica** — respected for detailed, well-sourced tech reporting. - **The Verge** — broad consumer tech coverage; less academic, but influential. ### Science - **Nature** — top-tier, especially for original research and science news. - **Science** (AAAS) — one of the most respected general science journals. - **Scientific American** — accessible but still credible. - **New Scientist** — popular, widely read, good for science news. - **Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS)** — highly respected research journal. ### Best if you want the most authoritative - **Nature** - **Science** - **MIT Technology Review** - **IEEE Spectrum** If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best publications for AI specifically**, or 2. a list ranked by **credibility vs readability**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Some of the most respected publications are: **Tech** - **Wired** — strong on tech culture and emerging tech - **MIT Technology Review** — highly respected for deep, credible tech coverage - **Ars Technica** — excellent for technical depth - **The Verge** — broader consumer tech, less academic but influential - **IEEE Spectrum** — very respected for engineering and applied tech **Science** - **Nature** — top-tier journal/news coverage in science - **Science** — equally prestigious, broad science coverage - **Scientific American** — best-known mainstream science magazine - **New Scientist** — accessible, reliable science reporting - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent for math, physics, and theoretical science **If you want the most credible overall** - **Nature** - **Science** - **MIT Technology Review** - **IEEE Spectrum** - **Ars Technica** If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best publications for AI specifically**, or 2. a **“most respected vs most readable”** ranking.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the most respected **tech** and **science** publications: ### Tech - **Wired** — strong on tech culture, products, and the broader impact of technology - **MIT Technology Review** — highly respected for serious coverage of emerging tech and AI - **The Information** — excellent reporting on Silicon Valley and startups - **IEEE Spectrum** — strong engineering-focused coverage - **Ars Technica** — detailed, technical reporting and reviews - **TechCrunch** — widely read for startups and venture news ### Science - **Nature** — one of the top scientific journals/publications globally - **Science** — another leading peer-reviewed science journal - **New Scientist** — respected popular science magazine - **Scientific American** — long-established and widely trusted - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent for deep, accessible coverage of math, physics, and CS - **Smithsonian Magazine** — strong science and natural history reporting If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **most rigorous** 2. **best for general readers** 3. **best for AI/tech news**
What are the top tech and science outlets for readers?
3/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the top tech and science outlets for readers: ### Tech - **The Verge** — great for consumer tech, gadgets, and culture. - **Wired** — strong on emerging tech, AI, and industry trends. - **Ars Technica** — detailed, highly technical reporting. - **TechCrunch** — startups, funding, and the tech business. - **The Information** — premium deep dives into Silicon Valley. - **Tom’s Hardware** — hardware, PC builds, and component reviews. ### Science - **Scientific American** — accessible science writing with authority. - **Nature** — top-tier research news and analysis. - **Science Magazine** — major breakthroughs and research coverage. - **New Scientist** — broad science coverage for general readers. - **National Geographic** — excellent for science, nature, and exploration. - **Smithsonian Magazine** — history, archaeology, and science features. ### Good all-around picks - **MIT Technology Review** — one of the best for AI and future tech. - **NPR Science** — clear, trustworthy reporting. - **Quanta Magazine** — outstanding on math, physics, and computing. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free outlets**, 2. the **best newsletters**, or 3. the **best outlets for AI specifically**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are strong, widely read tech and science outlets for readers: **Tech** - **Wired** — big-picture tech culture, gadgets, AI, internet trends - **The Verge** — consumer tech, product reviews, platforms, and policy - **Ars Technica** — deeper technical reporting and analysis - **TechCrunch** — startups, venture capital, product launches - **MIT Technology Review** — emerging tech with more research depth - **Engadget** — gadgets, consumer electronics, news - **CNET** — broad consumer tech coverage and reviews - **Bloomberg Tech** — business side of tech and major industry news **Science** - **Nature** — top-tier research news and commentary - **Science** — major peer-reviewed journal with accessible reporting - **Scientific American** — broad science writing for general readers - **New Scientist** — approachable science news and features - **National Geographic** — science, environment, space, and exploration - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent math, physics, and computer science coverage - **Smithsonian Magazine** — history, archaeology, space, and science - **Live Science** — quick-read science news and explainers If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free ones**, 2. **best newsletters**, or 3. a **top 5 shortlist** depending on your interests.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the best-known tech and science outlets for readers: ### Tech - **The Verge** — consumer tech, gadgets, culture - **Wired** — tech trends, AI, security, science-adjacent features - **Ars Technica** — in-depth reporting on hardware, software, and policy - **TechCrunch** — startups, venture capital, and tech business - **Engadget** — gadget reviews and consumer tech news - **CNET** — product reviews, buying guides, and practical tech news ### Science - **Scientific American** — broad science coverage for general readers - **National Geographic** — science, nature, exploration - **Science News** — research-focused science reporting - **New Scientist** — accessible science and tech coverage - **Smithsonian Magazine** — history, science, and discovery - **Quanta Magazine** — strong on math, physics, and computer science ### Good crossovers - **MIT Technology Review** — excellent for AI, computing, biotech, and emerging tech - **Popular Science** — approachable science and tech stories If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free outlets**, 2. the **best newsletters**, or 3. the **best outlets by topic** (AI, space, biotech, gadgets, etc.).
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **tech and science outlets for general readers**: ### Tech - **Wired** — smart, readable coverage of tech, culture, and the future - **The Verge** — great for consumer tech, gadgets, and digital culture - **Ars Technica** — deeper technical reporting, strong on industry and science-adjacent topics - **TechCrunch** — startup and Silicon Valley news - **MIT Technology Review** — one of the best for thoughtful, high-quality tech analysis ### Science - **Scientific American** — classic, accessible science writing - **National Geographic** — excellent for science, nature, and exploration - **Quanta Magazine** — outstanding for math, physics, and deep science stories - **New Scientist** — broad science coverage, easy to read - **Science News** — concise, reliable reporting on recent research ### Good all-around picks - **Nature News** — more research-heavy, but very reputable - **The Atlantic** — often strong long-form tech/science features - **Popular Science** — friendly, broad-interest science and tech If you want, I can also rank these by **best for beginners**, **best for deep dives**, or **best free websites**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the top tech and science outlets for readers: **Tech** - **The Verge** — consumer tech, gadgets, culture - **Wired** — tech trends, business, future of tech - **Ars Technica** — deep-dive tech reporting and analysis - **TechCrunch** — startups, venture capital, product launches - **Engadget** — gadgets, reviews, consumer electronics - **MIT Technology Review** — emerging tech and AI coverage **Science** - **Nature** — top-tier research news and commentary - **Science** (AAAS) — major scientific research coverage - **Scientific American** — accessible science journalism - **New Scientist** — broad science news for general readers - **Popular Science** — lighter, reader-friendly science and tech - **NASA** / **ESA** official sites — space and mission updates **Best all-around picks** - **Ars Technica** for serious tech readers - **MIT Technology Review** for AI and future tech - **Nature** and **Scientific American** for science If you want, I can also give you: 1. **the best free outlets**, 2. **the best newsletters/podcasts**, or 3. **the best outlets by topic** (AI, space, biotech, gadgets).
Which digital publications cover both technology and science well? 10/mo
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
A few digital publications that do both well: - **Wired** — Strong on emerging tech, AI, startups, and science-adjacent topics; good long-form features. - **MIT Technology Review** — Excellent for serious coverage of AI, biotech, climate tech, and research translated for a broad audience. - **Ars Technica** — Deep tech reporting with solid science coverage, especially computing, space, physics, and internet policy. - **The Verge** — Best for consumer tech plus occasional science, futurism, and space coverage. - **New Scientist** — More science-first, but often covers tech, medicine, and AI in an accessible way. - **Scientific American** — Science-led, but regularly covers computing, AI, health tech, and innovation. - **Quanta Magazine** — High-quality science/math/CS coverage; less tech news, more intellectually rigorous. - **Nature News** — Research-focused science publication that also covers AI, biotech, and research tools. If you want the best balance of **tech + science news**, I’d start with **MIT Technology Review, Wired, and Ars Technica**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Good picks for **both technology and science**: - **MIT Technology Review** — strong on emerging tech, AI, biotech, climate, and science-adjacent reporting. - **Ars Technica** — excellent for tech journalism plus solid science coverage, especially space, physics, medicine, and computing. - **New Scientist** — more science-first, but covers tech well when it overlaps with AI, health, energy, and future tech. - **Nature News** — top-tier science reporting, with useful coverage of research-driven tech and biotech. - **IEEE Spectrum** — great for engineering, robotics, AI, semiconductors, and applied science. - **Wired** — broad and readable; good on tech trends, science, AI, and culture. - **Scientific American** — strong science coverage with regular tech, health, and innovation pieces. - **The Verge** — best for consumer tech and AI, with some science and space coverage. If you want the **best overall mix**, I’d start with: 1. **MIT Technology Review** 2. **Ars Technica** 3. **IEEE Spectrum** If you want, I can also rank them by **best for serious reporting**, **best for beginners**, or **best free access**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
A few digital publications do both well: - **MIT Technology Review** — probably the best single pick for the overlap of tech, AI, and science. - **Wired** — strong on emerging technology, with decent science coverage and big-picture analysis. - **The Verge** — excellent for consumer tech; science coverage is solid but lighter. - **Nature News / Nature** — best for serious science, with good coverage of tech-adjacent topics like AI, biotech, and climate. - **Scientific American** — broad science coverage with frequent tech crossover pieces. - **New Scientist** — very good balance of science, tech, and future-focused reporting. - **IEEE Spectrum** — great if you want engineering-heavy tech plus deep technical science stories. If you want just 2–3 to subscribe to, I’d start with **MIT Technology Review**, **Wired**, and **New Scientist**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Good picks: - **The Verge** — strong on consumer tech, gadgets, AI, and occasional science coverage. - **Wired** — one of the best for the overlap of tech, science, internet culture, and future trends. - **MIT Technology Review** — excellent for AI, emerging tech, and science-adjacent reporting. - **Nature** — top-tier science journalism; also covers scientific computing, biotech, and tech in research. - **New Scientist** — broad science coverage with plenty on space, health, AI, and future tech. - **Scientific American** — accessible science coverage, including tech, medicine, and computing. - **Ars Technica** — especially good for deep tech, computing, space, and science. - **Popular Science** — lighter, broader coverage of science and technology. Best overall for both: **Wired**, **MIT Technology Review**, and **Ars Technica**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Good options that cover **both technology and science** well: - **Wired** — strong on emerging tech, AI, biotech, space, and science-adjacent trends. - **The Verge** — best for consumer tech, future tech, and occasional science coverage. - **Ars Technica** — excellent for serious tech plus space, computing, and science reporting. - **MIT Technology Review** — one of the best for AI, biotech, climate, and cutting-edge science/tech. - **New Scientist** — science-first, but regularly covers robotics, AI, space, and tech implications. - **Nature** / **Scientific American** — top-tier science, with good coverage of tech that intersects with research. - **Quanta Magazine** — superb for math, physics, computer science, and deep scientific explainers. If you want the **best all-around pair**: **MIT Technology Review + Ars Technica**. If you want **more readable/general-audience**: **Wired + New Scientist**.
What are the most popular tech and science magazines online?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the most popular online **tech** and **science** magazines/sites: ### Tech - **Wired** — tech, culture, gadgets, AI - **The Verge** — consumer tech, reviews, industry news - **TechCrunch** — startups, funding, Silicon Valley news - **Ars Technica** — in-depth tech analysis, hardware, software - **CNET** — product reviews, buying guides, tech news - **Engadget** — gadgets, consumer electronics, reviews - **Tom’s Hardware** — PC hardware, components, benchmarks - **ZDNET** — enterprise tech, software, IT news ### Science - **Scientific American** — broad science coverage, accessible articles - **New Scientist** — science news, analysis, future tech - **National Geographic** — science, nature, environment - **Popular Science** — consumer-friendly science and innovation - **Live Science** — daily science news - **Science News** — research and scientific developments - **Discover Magazine** — science, health, space, tech - **Smithsonian Magazine** — history, science, culture, museums If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free ones**, 2. the **best for deep analysis**, or 3. the **best for gadget/product reviews**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the most popular online tech and science magazines/publications: ### Tech - **Wired** — big on tech, internet culture, AI, gadgets - **The Verge** — consumer tech news, reviews, and culture - **TechCrunch** — startups, venture capital, and tech business - **Ars Technica** — deeper technical reporting and analysis - **Engadget** — gadgets, consumer electronics, and product news - **CNET** — mainstream tech news, reviews, buying guides - **Mashable** — tech plus digital culture and entertainment ### Science - **Scientific American** — broad, well-known science coverage - **New Scientist** — science news and analysis - **Nature** — top-tier research publication and science news - **Popular Science** — accessible science and tech stories - **Smithsonian Magazine** — science, history, and discovery - **Quanta Magazine** — high-quality math, physics, and computer science writing - **Discover Magazine** — general science news and features If you want, I can also rank them by: - **best for beginners** - **most credible** - **best free sites** - **best for cutting-edge AI/space/biology**
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the most popular **online tech and science magazines/sites**: ## Tech - **Wired** — tech culture, gadgets, AI, business - **The Verge** — consumer tech, reviews, news - **Ars Technica** — deeper tech reporting, computing, science/IT - **TechCrunch** — startups, venture capital, product launches - **MIT Technology Review** — AI, emerging tech, research - **CNET** — consumer electronics, reviews, buying guides - **Tom’s Hardware** — PCs, components, benchmarks - **Engadget** — gadgets, consumer tech, product news ## Science - **Scientific American** — broad science coverage, long-running and popular - **New Scientist** — accessible science news and analysis - **Nature** — top-tier research news and commentary - **Science** — major peer-reviewed journal with news section - **Popular Science** — science, gadgets, trends - **Smithsonian Magazine** — science, history, nature - **National Geographic** — science, environment, exploration - **Live Science** — fast-moving science news If you want, I can also rank these by **best for general readers**, **best for deep technical content**, or **best free sites**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Here are some of the most popular online tech and science magazines/sites: ### Tech - **Wired** — big on tech, culture, AI, gadgets, and future trends - **The Verge** — popular for tech news, reviews, and product coverage - **TechCrunch** — startup, venture capital, and Silicon Valley news - **Ars Technica** — deeper technical reporting on hardware, software, and science - **CNET** — consumer tech news, reviews, and buying guides - **Engadget** — gadget news, reviews, and consumer electronics ### Science - **National Geographic** — science, nature, exploration, and photography - **Scientific American** — long-running science magazine with accessible explainers - **New Scientist** — popular science news and analysis - **Popular Science** — mainstream science, tech, and innovation coverage - **Smithsonian Magazine** — science, history, culture, and discovery - **Nature** / **Science** — top-tier research journals with news sections, though more academic than magazine-style ### Good all-around picks If you want just a few: - **Wired** - **The Verge** - **Scientific American** - **New Scientist** - **National Geographic** If you want, I can also rank them by **best for beginners**, **best for serious science readers**, or **best free sites**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the most popular online tech and science magazines are: ### Tech - **Wired** - **MIT Technology Review** - **The Verge** - **Ars Technica** - **TechCrunch** - **CNET** - **Tom’s Hardware** - **ZDNET** - **Engadget** - **Mashable** ### Science - **Scientific American** - **National Geographic** - **New Scientist** - **Popular Science** - **Science** - **Nature** - **Smithsonian Magazine** - **Discover Magazine** - **Quanta Magazine** - **Live Science** If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **best for general readers** 2. **best for deep tech/science coverage** 3. **best free online access**
What are the best tech news sites with science reporting?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best tech news sites that also do solid science reporting: - **Ars Technica** — probably the best overall mix of tech, science, and deep analysis. - **Wired** — strong on emerging tech, AI, biotech, and broader science-adjacent coverage. - **The Verge** — great for mainstream tech news, with occasional strong science and future-tech pieces. - **MIT Technology Review** — excellent for serious coverage of AI, computing, climate tech, and science-driven innovation. - **Popular Science** — more accessible, with a good blend of consumer tech and science stories. - **New Scientist** — best if you want more science than tech, but still lots of tech-related reporting. - **IEEE Spectrum** — very good for engineering, robotics, computing, and advanced tech. - **Nature News** / **Nature** — top-tier science reporting, especially when tech intersects with research. - **Science** / **AAAS Science** — excellent science journalism, including computing and biotech. - **TechCrunch** — best for startup and industry news, with some science/biotech coverage. If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **best overall** 2. **best for AI** 3. **best for science-first readers** 4. **best free sites**
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best tech news sites that also do strong science reporting: - **Ars Technica** — Best overall for serious, in-depth coverage of tech, science, and policy. - **Wired** — Great mix of tech culture, emerging science, AI, and big-picture trend pieces. - **The Verge** — Strong for consumer tech plus occasional solid science and future-tech reporting. - **MIT Technology Review** — Excellent for AI, biotech, climate tech, and research-driven science/tech analysis. - **Nature News** — Best if you want science-first reporting that often overlaps with tech. - **New Scientist** — Good general science outlet with frequent tech and innovation coverage. - **TechCrunch** — Best for startups, AI, and product/industry news; lighter on pure science. - **IEEE Spectrum** — Great for engineering, robotics, hardware, and applied science. - **Futurism** — Easy-to-read coverage of AI, space, biotech, and science-adjacent tech. - **Popular Science** — Broad, accessible science and gadget coverage. If you want, I can also narrow this down to: 1. **the most reliable/serious**, 2. **the best for AI**, or 3. **the best free newsletters/RSS feeds**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best tech news sites that also do strong science reporting: - **Ars Technica** — Probably the best overall mix of deep tech coverage and solid science writing. - **Wired** — Great for big-picture tech, future trends, AI, and occasional science features. - **The Verge** — Strong on consumer tech and policy, with some science/space coverage. - **MIT Technology Review** — Excellent for AI, biotech, computing, and research-driven science-tech stories. - **Nature News** — Best if you want serious science reporting with tech overlap. - **IEEE Spectrum** — Very good for engineering, robotics, AI, and applied science. - **New Scientist** — Strong general science outlet that often covers emerging tech too. - **ScienceAlert** — Fast-moving science news with lots of tech-adjacent stories. - **Popular Science** — Accessible coverage of science, gadgets, and innovation. - **Gizmodo** — More entertainment-heavy, but still useful for tech and science headlines. If you want the shortest “best of the best” list: **Ars Technica, MIT Technology Review, Nature News, IEEE Spectrum, and Wired**. If you want, I can also rank them by **depth**, **speed**, or **least clickbait**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best tech news sites that also do strong science reporting: - **Ars Technica** — Best overall for serious tech + science coverage; very strong on space, physics, medicine, and deep explainers. - **Wired** — Great mix of tech, science, AI, and future-focused reporting; more mainstream and readable. - **The Verge** — Strong consumer tech with decent science/space coverage, especially when it overlaps with tech policy and hardware. - **MIT Technology Review** — Excellent for AI, biotech, climate tech, and emerging science-driven technologies. - **Nature News** — Best if you want science-first reporting with a lot of relevance to tech, biotech, and research. - **IEEE Spectrum** — Good for engineering, robotics, computing, semiconductors, and applied science. - **Scientific American** — Broad science coverage, with occasional strong pieces on technology and innovation. - **New Atlas** — More gadgety and engineering-oriented; often covers prototypes, materials, transport, and practical science. If you want the **best 3** overall, I’d pick: 1. **Ars Technica** 2. **MIT Technology Review** 3. **Wired** If you want, I can also give you: - the **best free options** - the **best newsletters** - or a **ranked list for AI/space/biotech specifically**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Good picks for **tech news sites that also do solid science reporting**: - **Ars Technica** — Best overall for deep, accurate coverage of tech, science, space, and policy. - **MIT Technology Review** — Excellent for AI, biotech, climate tech, and emerging science-driven tech. - **Wired** — Strong on future tech, science, security, and big-picture explainers. - **IEEE Spectrum** — Great for engineering, robotics, computing, and applied science. - **The Verge** — More consumer-tech focused, but with a good science/space section. - **New Scientist** — More science-first than tech-first, but very good for tech-adjacent science. - **ScienceAlert** — Fast, readable science stories with some tech crossover. - **TechCrunch** — Best for startup/news in tech; less science-heavy, but useful for AI and biotech funding/news. - **Popular Science** — Broad, accessible coverage of science and practical tech. - **Quanta Magazine** — Best for high-quality math, physics, and computer science reporting. If you want the **best 3 overall**, I’d start with: 1. **Ars Technica** 2. **MIT Technology Review** 3. **IEEE Spectrum** If you want, I can also rank these by **accuracy**, **readability**, or **how much they cover AI/space/biotech**.
Which outlets are good for startup and technology news?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Good sources for startup and tech news: - **TechCrunch** — startups, VC, product launches - **The Information** — deeper Silicon Valley/business coverage - **Wired** — broader tech trends and culture - **The Verge** — consumer tech, platforms, and product news - **Ars Technica** — technical deep-dives and policy - **Bloomberg Tech** — business + Big Tech - **CNBC Tech** — market-moving tech news - **PitchBook News** — startup funding and VC data - **Crunchbase News** — startup ecosystem and fundraising - **a16z’s Future** / **Andreessen Horowitz blog** — startup/operator perspective If you want, I can also suggest the best **free newsletters** and **podcasts** for startup/tech news.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Good startup/tech news outlets: - **TechCrunch** — startups, funding, product launches - **The Verge** — consumer tech, big industry news - **Wired** — deeper tech/business coverage - **Axios Pro Rata / Axios Tech** — quick startup and VC updates - **Business Insider (Tech)** — startup and Big Tech reporting - **Forbes Technology / Forbes Startups** — founder and funding coverage - **VentureBeat** — AI, enterprise tech, startup trends - **Sifted** — strong European startup coverage - **Crunchbase News** — funding and market data-driven stories - **Y Combinator Hacker News** — fast-moving startup/tech discussion If you want, I can also give you the **best free newsletters** or **best outlets by region**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Good startup + tech news outlets: - **TechCrunch** — startups, funding, product launches - **The Information** — deeper reporting on tech companies and VC - **Wired** — broader tech trends and big-picture analysis - **The Verge** — consumer tech, platforms, and industry news - **Bloomberg Technology** — business + tech markets, big company coverage - **Axios Pro Rata / Axios Tech** — fast, concise startup and tech updates - **Sifted** — excellent for European startups - **Crunchbase News** — funding rounds, startup ecosystem, VC trends - **Hacker News** — good for what builders are discussing - **Product Hunt** — useful for new product discovery If you want, I can also suggest the best **free** ones vs **paid/deep-dive** ones.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Good startup + tech news outlets: - **TechCrunch** — startups, funding, product launches - **The Verge** — consumer tech, platforms, big industry moves - **Wired** — deeper tech trends, culture, and policy - **Bloomberg Technology** — business-side tech and market news - **Reuters Technology** — fast, reliable general tech coverage - **Axios Pro Rata / Axios AI+** — concise startup, VC, and AI updates - **Sifted** — excellent for European startups and VC - **VentureBeat** — enterprise tech, AI, and startup coverage - **Crunchbase News** — funding rounds and startup ecosystem news - **Tech in Asia** — strong for Asia startup and tech scenes If you want, I can also give you the **best free newsletters** or **best podcasts** for startup/tech news.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Good startup + tech news outlets: - **TechCrunch** — best for startups, funding rounds, VC, and Silicon Valley news - **The Information** — deeper reporting on startups, Big Tech, and industry shifts - **Wired** — broader tech trends, product coverage, and culture - **The Verge** — consumer tech, gadgets, platform news, and policy - **Ars Technica** — more technical, strong on software and hardware analysis - **Business Insider / BI Tech** — startup and business-tech crossover - **Sifted** — excellent for European startup news - **Crunchbase News** — startup funding and company tracking - **Reuters Technology** — fast, reliable general tech/business news - **Tech in Asia** — strong for Asia startup ecosystems If you want, I can also give you: 1. **the best free sources**, 2. **the best newsletters**, or 3. **a “must-follow” list for founders/investors**.
What are the most recommended science and tech newsletters?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the most recommended science and tech newsletters: ### Science - **Quanta Magazine** — deep, high-quality reporting on physics, math, biology, and CS. - **The Alan Alda Center / Clear Science?** Hmm not newsletter. Better: - **The New York Times: The Morning / Science section** — broad science updates. - **Nautilus** — thoughtful long-form science and philosophy. - **Big Think** — accessible science/ideas coverage. - **The Science Times** (NYT) — if you want mainstream science news. ### Tech - **Stratechery** — one of the most respected for tech industry analysis. - **The Information** — premium, very strong insider tech reporting. - **Ben Thompson’s Stratechery** — especially good for platform/business strategy. - **Dense Discovery** — curated design/tech/interesting web finds. - **TLDR** — quick daily tech news roundup. - **Hacker Newsletter** — great for developers and startup/tech readers. - **ByteByteGo** — excellent for software engineering/system design. - **Morning Brew: Tech Brew** — easy-to-read tech business news. ### Best “all-around” picks If you only want a few: 1. **Quanta Magazine** 2. **Stratechery** 3. **The Information** 4. **ByteByteGo** 5. **TLDR** If you want, I can also give you: - the **best free** ones, - the **best paid** ones, or - a list tailored to **AI, software, space, or startups**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the most recommended **science + tech newsletters**: ### Tech / AI / Industry - **Stratechery** — Ben Thompson’s deep analysis of tech business and strategy. - **The Information** — premium, very high-signal tech industry reporting. - **Platformer** — great for tech policy, AI, and Big Tech coverage. - **TLDR** — short, clean daily tech/news roundup. - **Hacker Newsletter** — curated links from Hacker News, good for builders. - **Dense Discovery** — thoughtful curation of tech, design, and internet culture. ### Science / Research - **Quanta Magazine** — one of the best science newsletters for deep, readable explainers. - **Nature Briefing** — concise roundup from the Nature team. - **Science News This Week** — broad science coverage in digest form. - **Asimov Press** — strong on biotech, synthetic biology, and future science. - **The Browser** — not science-only, but often includes excellent science essays and ideas. ### AI-focused - **The Batch** (DeepLearning.AI) — one of the best AI newsletters for practical updates. - **Import AI** (when active) — historically excellent AI analysis; worth checking current status. - **Ben’s Bites** — popular, fast-moving AI product/news roundup. - **Superhuman AI** — broad AI news with a consumer/product angle. ### If you want just a few to start 1. **Quanta Magazine** 2. **Stratechery** 3. **The Batch** 4. **Nature Briefing** 5. **TLDR** If you want, I can also give you: - **the best free ones only** - **the best paid ones** - **the best newsletters for AI specifically**
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the most recommended science and tech newsletters: - **Stratechery** — excellent for tech industry analysis and strategy. - **The Batch (by DeepLearning.AI)** — great for AI and machine learning news. - **Import AI (by Jack Clark)** — strong on AI policy, research, and industry trends. - **Dense Discovery** — thoughtful mix of tech, design, and internet culture. - **Ben’s Bites** — fast, practical AI startup/news roundup. - **TLDR** — very popular daily digest for tech news and tools. - **The Neuron** — AI-focused newsletter with quick, readable updates. - **MIT Technology Review’s The Download** — solid science/tech reporting. - **IEEE Spectrum’s newsletters** — good for engineering and emerging tech. - **Quanta Magazine newsletter** — best if you want high-quality science coverage. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free ones only**, 2. the **best AI-focused ones**, or 3. the **best science newsletters** specifically.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the most recommended science and tech newsletters: ### Tech / AI / startups - **Stratechery** — best for deep analysis of tech business and strategy. - **The Verge’s Notepad** — sharp tech industry commentary. - **Benedict Evans** — excellent macro-level tech trends and market shifts. - **Import AI** — strong AI research and industry roundup. - **MIT Technology Review’s The Algorithm** — one of the best AI-focused newsletters. - **TLDR** — quick daily-ish summaries of tech news. - **Hacker Newsletter** — great curated picks from Hacker News. ### Science - **Nature Briefing** — top-tier science news from *Nature*. - **Scientific American’s Daily Newsletter** — broad science coverage. - **Quanta Magazine Newsletter** — high-quality explanations in math, physics, and CS. - **The New York Times Science section newsletter** — accessible mainstream science updates. - **STAT Morning Rounds** — strong for medicine, biotech, and health science. ### Good “one-stop” picks If you only want a few: 1. **Stratechery** 2. **MIT Technology Review’s The Algorithm** 3. **Quanta Magazine Newsletter** 4. **Nature Briefing** 5. **TLDR** If you want, I can also give you: - **the best free newsletters only** - **best AI newsletters** - **best science newsletters for beginners**
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the most widely recommended science and tech newsletters: ### Science - **The Kid Should See This** — great bite-sized science, nature, and STEM discoveries - **Quanta Magazine Newsletter** — excellent deep science/math/physics coverage - **Nautilus** — thoughtful science + philosophy + culture - **Big Think** — broad science, psychology, and future-thinking - **Nature Briefing** — top-tier research news from *Nature* ### Tech - **Stratechery** — one of the best for tech strategy and industry analysis - **The Information** — premium, very well-regarded tech reporting - **Platformer** — strong coverage of Big Tech and policy - **404 Media** — sharp reporting on internet culture, platforms, and tech power - **Dense Discovery** — curated links on design, tech, and internet culture - **TLDR** — fast daily summaries of tech news - **Ben’s Bites** — popular AI-focused newsletter - **Import AI** — smart AI research and industry insights ### Best overall picks - **Quanta Magazine** for science - **Stratechery** for tech analysis - **Nature Briefing** for research news - **Ben’s Bites** for AI - **TLDR** for quick daily updates If you want, I can also give you: 1. **free-only picks**, 2. **best AI newsletters**, or 3. **a short list for busy people**.
What are the best subscription tech and science publications?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best paid tech + science subscriptions, by use case: ## Best overall - **MIT Technology Review** — best mix of serious tech coverage, AI, policy, and future trends. - **Nature** — top-tier scientific journalism and access to research/news. ## Best tech publications - **Wired** — best for consumer tech, culture, and future-facing stories. - **The Information** — best for deep Silicon Valley/business tech reporting. - **IEEE Spectrum** — excellent for engineering, robotics, AI, and hard tech. - **Ars Technica** — strong if you want technical, detailed reporting. ## Best science publications - **Scientific American** — best general science magazine for smart non-specialists. - **New Scientist** — broad, readable, and consistent. - **Quanta Magazine** — free, but worth including because it’s outstanding for math/physics/CS/science. - **National Geographic** — best for science + nature + exploration. ## Best newsletters / digital subscriptions - **Stratechery** — best premium tech strategy newsletter. - **The Verge** / **The Verge Substack-style coverage** — good for product and platform shifts. - **Axios Future of Tech** — concise industry updates. ## If you want just 3 picks 1. **MIT Technology Review** 2. **Nature** 3. **Wired** or **The Information** depending on whether you want broader coverage or business/industry depth If you want, I can also give you: - the **best cheap subscriptions** - the **best for AI specifically** - or a **best bundle for students/professionals**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **subscription tech and science publications**: ## Tech - **MIT Technology Review** — best all-around tech policy, AI, biotech, and future-of-industry coverage. - **The Information** — excellent for serious Silicon Valley/business/AI reporting. - **Wired** — best for accessible, high-quality coverage of tech culture and emerging trends. - **IEEE Spectrum** — great for engineering, robotics, computing, and deep technical reporting. - **Rest of World** — strong international tech reporting outside the U.S. ## Science - **Nature** — top-tier general science journal/news coverage. - **Science** — another elite source for major research and science policy. - **Scientific American** — best for smart, readable science journalism. - **New Scientist** — broad, approachable science coverage with a weekly format. - **Quanta Magazine** — outstanding math, physics, CS, and theoretical science coverage; free, but worth treating like a premium publication. ## Best picks by type - **Best overall tech:** MIT Technology Review - **Best deep industry reporting:** The Information - **Best science for general readers:** Scientific American - **Best for cutting-edge research:** Nature If you want, I can also make a **“best value” list** or a **bundle-by-budget recommendation**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **subscription tech and science publications**: ### Tech - **The Information** — best for serious Silicon Valley / startup / AI industry reporting. - **MIT Technology Review** — strong mix of emerging tech, AI, policy, and deep analysis. - **Wired** — broader, more readable coverage of tech, culture, and the future. - **IEEE Spectrum** — excellent engineering-focused tech journalism. - **Stratechery** — great for strategy, platforms, and tech business analysis. - **Rest of World** — strong global tech coverage outside the US. ### Science - **Nature** — top-tier general science news and research coverage. - **Science** (AAAS) — another leading general science journal/news source. - **Scientific American** — best for accessible science writing for a broad audience. - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent deep dives into math, physics, computer science, and biology. - **New Scientist** — broad, readable science coverage with a magazine feel. - **Undark** — strong science journalism, often on ethics, medicine, and policy. ### Best overall picks - **MIT Technology Review** if you want one subscription covering tech + science-adjacent topics. - **Quanta Magazine** if you love deep, high-quality science explanations. - **The Information** if your priority is business/industry tech news. If you want, I can also rank them by **best value**, **best for AI**, or **best for casual reading**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **subscription tech and science publications**—good mixes of reporting, analysis, and depth: ## Tech - **The Information** — Best for serious tech industry reporting, especially startups, big tech, and AI. - **Wired** — Strong on tech culture, emerging trends, and accessible long-form features. - **MIT Technology Review** — Excellent for AI, computing, biotech, and future-facing science/tech. - **The Verge** — Best if you want consumer tech plus smart analysis. - **Stratechery** — Great for business/strategy analysis of tech companies and platforms. ## Science - **Scientific American** — The classic all-around science magazine; broad, readable, reliable. - **Nature** — Best for cutting-edge research and major science news. - **Science** — Similar to Nature, with top-tier research coverage and analysis. - **Quanta Magazine** — Outstanding for deep, beautifully written explanations in math, physics, CS, and biology; free, but worth including. - **New Scientist** — Very good general-interest science coverage with a slightly more casual tone. ## Best picks by use case - **Best overall tech:** The Information - **Best overall science:** Nature or Scientific American - **Best for future tech/AI:** MIT Technology Review - **Best for thoughtful tech commentary:** Stratechery - **Best for readable science features:** New Scientist If you want, I can also give you: 1. **the best budget bundle**, 2. **the best one subscription for AI**, or 3. **the best publications for academic researchers vs general readers**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **subscription tech and science publications**, grouped by type: ## Tech - **Wired** — Best all-around for tech, internet culture, startups, and future trends. - **MIT Technology Review** — Best for serious coverage of AI, computing, biotech, and emerging tech. - **The Information** — Best for deep Silicon Valley/business reporting; expensive but highly respected. - **Rest of World** — Great for global tech stories outside the U.S. - **The Verge** — Good for consumer tech, gadgets, and big tech news. ## Science - **Nature** — Top-tier for cutting-edge scientific research and analysis. - **Science** — Another leading journal for major research across disciplines. - **New Scientist** — Best for accessible, well-written science journalism. - **Scientific American** — Broad, readable coverage of science and tech. - **Quanta Magazine** — Excellent for math, physics, and deep science explainers; free, though not really a subscription magazine. ## Best picks by use case - **Best overall tech + science mix:** *Wired* - **Best serious/analytical:** *MIT Technology Review* - **Best academic science:** *Nature* or *Science* - **Best readable mainstream science:** *New Scientist* - **Best premium tech insider reporting:** *The Information* If you want, I can also recommend the **best budget subscription bundle** or the **best 3 to subscribe to based on your interests** (AI, gadgets, space, biotech, etc.).
Which tech and science outlets are worth paying for?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want **actually worth paying for**, I’d shortlist these: ### Tech - **Stratechery** — best for serious analysis of tech/business strategy. - **The Information** — strong on Silicon Valley, startups, and industry scoops. - **IEEE Spectrum** — great if you like engineering and deep tech, not hype. - **Ars Technica** — one of the best all-around tech publications; especially good for policy, security, and detailed explainers. ### Science - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent, free-ish feeling but high quality; worth supporting. - **Scientific American** — good broad science coverage and long-form pieces. - **Nature / Nature Briefing** — best if you want serious research coverage and academic rigor. - **New Scientist** — good for smart, readable science news. ### Best “one subscription” picks - **Stratechery** for tech. - **Quanta Magazine** for science. ### Best value combo - **Ars Technica + Quanta Magazine** if you want practical tech plus top-tier science. If you tell me whether you want **news**, **deep analysis**, or **just the best general-interest picks**, I can narrow it to 3.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
If you’ll pay for just a few, these are the strongest bets: ### Tech - **The Information** — Best for deep, original tech/business reporting. Expensive, but the reporting is often first-rate. - **Wired** — Good mix of tech, culture, and future-facing coverage. Worth it if you like broader, polished longform. - **IEEE Spectrum** — Excellent for serious engineering and emerging tech. Strong value, especially if you like hardware/AI/robots. - **Ars Technica** — Great if you want practical, technical coverage. Usually better value than flashy tech news sites. - **Stratechery** — Best if you care about tech strategy, platforms, and business analysis. Very worth it for industry insight. ### Science - **Nature** — One of the best for serious science news and commentary. Worth paying if you want high-quality reporting. - **Science** — Strong general science coverage; good companion to Nature. - **Quanta Magazine** — Outstanding writing on math, physics, CS, and biology. Free, but if you can support it, do it. - **The New Scientist** — Broad, readable science coverage. Good “one subscription” choice for non-specialists. - **Undark** — Strong investigative science journalism; smaller but high quality. ### Best value picks - **Tech:** Ars Technica or Stratechery - **Science:** Nature or New Scientist If you want, I can narrow this to: 1. **best budget picks**, 2. **best for AI**, or 3. **best for non-technical readers**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
If you read tech/science news a lot, these are the subscriptions most often worth it: ### Best overall - **The Verge** — good for consumer tech, product coverage, and explainers. - **Wired** — strong on tech culture, policy, and long-form pieces. - **Ars Technica** — best if you want deeper technical reporting and less fluff. - **MIT Technology Review** — excellent for AI, emerging tech, and serious analysis. ### Best for science - **Nature** — top-tier research reporting and science journalism. - **Science** / **AAAS** — very solid if you want broad science coverage. - **Scientific American** — more accessible than Nature, still high quality. ### Best niche picks - **IEEE Spectrum** — great for engineering and hardware. - **Quanta Magazine** — fantastic for math, physics, CS, and deep science stories. - **STAT** — worth it if you care about biotech and health science. ### Best value - **Ars Technica** and **Quanta Magazine** are usually the easiest “yes” for the money. - If you only pick one big-name outlet, I’d choose **MIT Technology Review** or **Wired** depending on whether you prefer analysis or broader tech culture. ### Usually not worth paying for unless you love the niche - General news tech sections - Paywalled headlines/aggregators - Sites you only read occasionally If you want, I can rank them for **AI**, **consumer tech**, or **science research** specifically.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A few that are genuinely worth paying for: ### Tech - **The Verge** — best if you want mainstream tech coverage with strong reviews and explainers. - **Wired** — great for broader tech/culture/AI coverage; good for “why this matters.” - **Ars Technica** — excellent for deep, nerdy, high-signal reporting on software, hardware, and policy. - **Stratechery** — worth it if you care about tech business strategy, chips, platforms, and AI. - **The Information** — pricey, but strong if you want insider tech industry reporting. ### Science - **Nature** / **Nature Briefing** — top-tier science journalism and research context. - **Science** / **Science News** — strong for general science coverage. - **Quanta Magazine** — free, but absolutely worth following; one of the best science outlets out there. - **Undark** — good investigative science journalism. - **STAT** — especially good for biotech, medicine, and health policy. ### Best “one subscription” picks - **Ars Technica** for tech. - **Nature** for science. - **Wired** if you want one outlet that covers both tech and culture. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free alternatives**, or 2. a **budget ranking** of which subscriptions are most worth the money.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
If you want **high-signal tech + science subscriptions**, these are usually the most worth paying for: ## Tech - **The Information** — best for serious tech industry reporting, startups, AI, and business gossip that actually matters. - **IEEE Spectrum** — excellent for engineering, robotics, AI, semiconductors, and deep tech. - **MIT Technology Review** — strong on emerging tech, AI, climate tech, and thoughtful analysis. - **Ars Technica** — good if you want detailed tech journalism, especially computing, security, and policy. - **Wired** — worth it if you like a broader, more readable mix of tech, culture, and future trends. ## Science - **Quanta Magazine** — outstanding for math, physics, biology, and computer science. Free, but donation-worthy. - **Nature** — worth it if you want top-tier research news and commentary. - **Science** (AAAS) — similarly strong for major science coverage and research updates. - **STAT** — especially good for biotech, medicine, and health science. - **New Scientist** — best if you want accessible science coverage across many fields. ## Best value picks If you only want a few: 1. **The Information** (tech industry) 2. **MIT Technology Review** (tech trends) 3. **Quanta Magazine** (science) 4. **Nature** or **Science** (research) If you tell me your interests—**AI, startups, gadgets, biotech, astronomy, climate, etc.**—I can narrow it to the best 3.
What are the top independent tech and science publications?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **independent tech and science publications** worth following: ### Tech - **Stratechery** — deep analysis of tech strategy, platforms, and business models. - **404 Media** — sharp, independent reporting on tech, labor, platforms, and online culture. - **The Verge** — larger outlet, but still strong for tech news, reviews, and interviews. - **Wired** — broader, but excellent long-form tech and future-focused reporting. - **Ars Technica** — great for technical depth, computing, science, and policy. - **IEEE Spectrum** — engineering-focused coverage of emerging tech and science. - **Rest of World** — excellent for global tech stories outside the US/Europe. ### Science - **Quanta Magazine** — top-tier explanatory science and math journalism. - **Big Think** — accessible science ideas and interviews with researchers. - **Undark** — independent science reporting with strong editorial standards. - **Nautilus** — long-form science, philosophy, and culture. - **The Open Notebook** — great for science journalism craft and reporting context. - **Science News** — reliable science coverage, especially for recent research. - **STAT** — strong biotech, medicine, and life sciences reporting. ### Best paid subscriptions to consider - **Stratechery** - **404 Media** - **Quanta Magazine** (free to read, but worth supporting) - **Rest of World** - **Undark** If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free-only options**, 2. the **most rigorous/least clickbait** picks, or 3. a **tech + science newsletter shortlist**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **independent** tech and science publications: ### Tech - **Stratechery** — deeply analytical coverage of tech business and strategy. - **Ben Evans’ Newsletter** — excellent on mobile, AI, chips, and platform shifts. - **Six Colors** — great Apple-focused journalism, independent and well-researched. - **Platformer** — strong reporting on Silicon Valley, platforms, and AI. - **404 Media** — independent tech and internet culture reporting, often very original. - **The Verge** — not fully independent in the strictest sense, but still a top-quality tech publication. ### Science - **Quanta Magazine** — one of the best science publications anywhere; beautifully written and rigorous. - **Undark** — strong science journalism with a focus on ethics, policy, and public impact. - **Nautilus** — high-quality longform science writing and ideas. - **The Transmitter** — excellent neuroscience coverage. - **ScienceAlert** — more mainstream and broad, but useful for quick science news. - **Big Think** — science/ideas mix; quality varies but often good. ### Best overall picks If you want the strongest independent options, start with: 1. **Quanta Magazine** 2. **Stratechery** 3. **404 Media** 4. **Platformer** 5. **Undark** If you want, I can also give you: - **the best paid newsletters** - **the best free publications** - **the best sources for AI specifically**
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best independent tech and science publications: - **Ars Technica** — deep tech coverage, hardware, policy, science. - **404 Media** — great for internet culture, tech accountability, and platform reporting. - **The Verge** — not fully independent in the strictest sense, but editorially strong for consumer tech and culture. - **Wired** — broad tech/science magazine with strong feature writing. - **STAT** — one of the best for health and biomedical science journalism. - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent, highly readable science/math/physics coverage. - **ScienceAlert** — fast-moving science news, more mainstream but useful. - **The Conversation** — expert-written science and tech analysis. - **MIT Technology Review** — highly respected, especially for AI, biotech, and emerging tech. - **Undark** — independent nonprofit focused on science, risk, and evidence-based reporting. If you want, I can also split these into: 1. **best for hard science**, 2. **best for tech news**, and 3. **best for long-form investigative coverage**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best-known **independent** tech and science publications: ## Tech - **Techdirt** — sharp coverage of tech policy, IP, privacy, and internet law. - **Daring Fireball** — excellent Apple/product commentary and industry analysis. - **The Register** — irreverent, fast, and very good for enterprise/IT news. - **404 Media** — strong investigative reporting on tech, surveillance, and platforms. - **Platformer** — solid inside-baseball coverage of Silicon Valley and social media. - **Rest of World** — global tech coverage outside the US/Europe; nonprofit and independent. ## Science - **Quanta Magazine** — top-tier long-form science and math reporting. - **Nautilus** — thoughtful essays on science, philosophy, and research. - **Undark** — investigative science journalism, often about ethics and public policy. - **The Transmitter** — excellent neuroscience coverage. - **Big Think** — mixed quality, but often good science/ideas pieces. ## Best overall picks If you want a short list to start with: 1. **Quanta Magazine** 2. **Techdirt** 3. **404 Media** 4. **The Register** 5. **Undark** If you want, I can also give you: - a **more rigorous “truly independent only” list** - the **best newsletters/podcasts** from these outlets - or a list by topic like **AI, cybersecurity, space, biotech, and climate**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **independent** tech and science publications: ### Tech - **The Verge** — broad consumer tech, gadgets, and internet culture - **Ars Technica** — deep, highly detailed tech reporting and analysis - **TechCrunch** — startups, venture, and the tech business - **Wired** — tech, science, and culture with strong feature writing - **404 Media** — independent, sharp reporting on tech, surveillance, and digital power - **Rest of World** — excellent coverage of global tech beyond the US - **Platformer** — focused on Big Tech, social platforms, and policy ### Science - **Quanta Magazine** — standout long-form coverage of math, physics, biology, and CS - **Undark** — investigative science journalism - **Nautilus** — science, philosophy, and big ideas - **The Conversation (Science section)** — expert-written, accessible reporting - **STAT** — especially strong on health/biomedicine and life sciences - **Scientific American** — classic science coverage, still valuable - **The Transmitter** — excellent neuroscience publication ### Best overall picks If you only want a few: - **Ars Technica** - **Quanta Magazine** - **404 Media** - **Rest of World** - **Undark** If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **most independent** ones, 2. the **best free newsletters**, or 3. a **ranked list by quality/style**.
Which tech and science outlets are best for enthusiasts?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
For enthusiasts, these are some of the best: - **Ars Technica** — deep, smart coverage of tech, science, policy, and hardware - **IEEE Spectrum** — excellent for engineering, robotics, AI, and emerging tech - **Wired** — broader tech culture and future-facing stories - **The Verge** — consumer tech, product coverage, and industry news - **MIT Technology Review** — strong on AI, biotech, and frontier science - **New Scientist** — one of the best general science outlets for non-specialists - **Quanta Magazine** — top-tier math, physics, and theoretical science writing - **ScienceDaily** — quick way to track new research across fields - **Nature News** / **Science News** — more serious science journalism - **Popular Science** — lighter, accessible enthusiast coverage If you want the “best of the best” for a serious enthusiast, I’d start with **Ars Technica, IEEE Spectrum, MIT Technology Review, Quanta Magazine, and New Scientist**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. best **free** outlets only, 2. best **newsletters/podcasts**, or 3. best outlets by topic like **AI, space, gadgets, or biology**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
For enthusiasts, the best outlets are the ones that are **deep, frequent, and still readable**: ### Tech - **Ars Technica** — great for serious tech/news analysis - **The Verge** — broad, polished coverage of consumer tech and culture - **Wired** — strong for big-picture tech trends and odd corners of science/industry - **TechCrunch** — best if you care about startups and Silicon Valley - **AnandTech** — excellent for hardware, chips, and performance deep-dives - **Tom’s Hardware** — practical and thorough for PC builders and gamers - **IEEE Spectrum** — more engineering-focused, very good for technically minded readers ### Science - **Scientific American** — accessible but substantial science coverage - **Quanta Magazine** — outstanding for physics, math, and deep research stories - **Nature News** — top-tier for actual research and scientific developments - **Science News** — solid, broad science reporting - **Nautilus** — thoughtful long-form science and philosophy - **Live Science** — good for a fast-moving general science feed ### Best “enthusiast combo” picks If you only want a few: 1. **Ars Technica** 2. **Quanta Magazine** 3. **IEEE Spectrum** 4. **Nature News** 5. **AnandTech** If you want, I can also give you the **best newsletters, YouTube channels, or podcasts** in tech/science.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best **tech and science outlets for enthusiasts**: ## Tech - **Ars Technica** — deep, technical, well-sourced; great for hardware, software, and policy. - **The Verge** — broader, polished coverage of consumer tech and culture. - **AnandTech** — excellent for PC hardware reviews and benchmarks. - **Tom’s Hardware** — strong for GPUs, CPUs, and build advice. - **Wired** — good long-form tech and future-focused stories. - **404 Media** — sharper, more investigative tech reporting. ## Science - **Nature** — top-tier research coverage and science news. - **Science** — one of the most respected general science journals/news sources. - **Quanta Magazine** — very good explanatory pieces on math, physics, and CS. - **Scientific American** — accessible but substantive science writing. - **New Scientist** — broad, readable science and tech coverage. - **Smithsonian Magazine** — solid for archaeology, biology, space, and history. ## Best overall picks - **Ars Technica** for tech enthusiasts - **Quanta Magazine** for science enthusiasts - **Nature** for serious science news If you want, I can also give you a **best free outlets list** or **best outlets by topic** like AI, space, gadgets, or biology.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
Great enthusiast-friendly tech/science outlets: **Tech** - **Ars Technica** — best for deep, technical analysis - **The Verge** — best for consumer tech and product coverage - **Wired** — good mix of tech, policy, and future trends - **Tom’s Hardware** — great for PC parts, benchmarks, and hardware - **AnandTech** — excellent for serious hardware reviews and architecture - **9to5Mac** / **9to5Google** — best if you follow Apple or Android closely - **TechCrunch** — best for startups and industry news **Science** - **Scientific American** — broad, readable science coverage - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent for math, physics, and deep science explainers - **New Scientist** — strong all-around science reporting - **Nature News** — best for cutting-edge research updates - **Science News** — concise, reliable science journalism - **Popular Science** — more enthusiast-friendly and accessible **Best overall picks for enthusiasts** - **Ars Technica** - **Quanta Magazine** - **Scientific American** - **Tom’s Hardware** If you want, I can also give you a **“best by topic” list** like AI, gadgets, space, or PC hardware.
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
For enthusiasts, the best outlets are the ones that go a bit deeper than mainstream news. **Tech** - **The Verge** — best all-around mix of gadget coverage, reviews, and culture. - **Ars Technica** — deeper, more technical, great for nerdy/serious readers. - **Wired** — strong on trends, startups, and big-picture tech. - **AnandTech** — excellent hardware and benchmarking coverage. - **Tom’s Hardware** — good for PC builders and component news. - **Linus Tech Tips / ShortCircuit** — best if you want video-first PC/gadget enthusiasm. **Science** - **Scientific American** — accessible but still substantive. - **New Scientist** — broad science coverage, very readable. - **Quanta Magazine** — outstanding for math, physics, and computer science. - **National Geographic** — strongest for earth science, nature, and exploration. - **Smithsonian Magazine** — good general science and history crossover. - **Popular Science** — lighter, more enthusiast-friendly. **Best picks by type** - **Deep tech:** Ars Technica, AnandTech - **General enthusiast:** The Verge, Wired - **Hard science:** Quanta, Scientific American, New Scientist - **Video/YouTube:** Linus Tech Tips, Veritasium, Kurzgesagt If you want, I can also rank them by **bias, depth, or how “geeky” they are**.
What are the best science journalism sites for general readers?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best science journalism sites for general readers: - **ScienceNews** — clear, reliable, and well-edited; great all-around science coverage. - **Nature** — especially good for major research news and expert analysis. - **Scientific American** — accessible, thoughtful articles on science, tech, and policy. - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent for math, physics, computer science, and deep explanatory pieces. - **The Conversation (Science section)** — articles written by academics, usually easy to read and grounded in evidence. - **STAT** — strong for health, medicine, and biotech news. - **BBC Future** / **BBC Science Focus** — polished, readable stories for broad audiences. - **National Geographic** — best for earth science, ecology, archaeology, and exploration. - **Undark** — investigative science journalism with a strong critical lens. - **Smithsonian Magazine** — solid general-interest science and history coverage. If you want, I can also rank these by: 1. **best for beginners** 2. **best for health/medicine** 3. **best for deep-dive explanations**
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best science journalism sites for general readers: - **ScienceNews** — Clear, reliable reporting on new research across all sciences. - **National Geographic** — Excellent for biology, Earth science, archaeology, and visuals. - **New Scientist** — Great mix of current research, explainers, and big-picture science. - **Smithsonian Magazine (Science section)** — Very readable, broad, and often fascinating. - **Quanta Magazine** — Top-tier math, physics, computer science, and theoretical science coverage. - **Undark** — Strong long-form science journalism with a focus on ethics and impact. - **The Conversation (Science section)** — Expert-written, accessible, and well sourced. - **Nautilus** — Thoughtful, essay-style science writing for curious readers. - **Nature News** — More advanced, but still good for major science developments. - **Scientific American** — Classic, broad science coverage with good explainers. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free sites**, 2. the **best sites for biology/space/physics**, or 3. the **best science podcasts/newsletters**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best science journalism sites for general readers: - **Quanta Magazine** — Top-tier, clear reporting on math, physics, biology, and computer science. - **Scientific American** — Classic mainstream science journalism with broad coverage. - **National Geographic** — Great for ecology, archaeology, space, and human science. - **New Scientist** — Fast, accessible, and wide-ranging science news. - **Nautilus** — More essay-like, thoughtful long-form science writing. - **The Conversation (Science section)** — Articles written by researchers, edited for general readers. - **Smithsonian Magazine** — Strong on history, archaeology, and natural science. - **BBC Science Focus** — Easy-to-read news and explainers. - **Vox Future Perfect / science explainers** — Good for policy, health, and science-adjacent issues. - **Nature News / Nature Briefing** — More advanced, but still readable for non-specialists. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free sites only**, 2. the **best for space/physics/biology**, or 3. a **ranked top 5**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A few of the best science journalism sites for general readers: - **Scientific American** — broad, high-quality coverage with good explainers. - **New Scientist** — very readable, lots of current science news. - **Nautilus** — more essayistic, thoughtful long-form science writing. - **Quanta Magazine** — excellent for physics, math, and computer science, very clear. - **STAT** — strong on health, medicine, biotech, and policy. - **Nature News / Nature Briefing** — top-tier reporting from the science world, though a bit more technical. - **Science News** — solid general science coverage, easy to follow. - **BBC Future** — accessible articles on science, health, and the human side of research. - **The Conversation** — articles by researchers, often very clear and educational. If you want the **best all-around starting point**, I’d pick: 1. **Scientific American** 2. **New Scientist** 3. **Quanta Magazine** If you want, I can also give you: - the **best free sites only** - the **best newsletters** - or a **ranking by topic** (space, health, tech, climate).
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best science journalism sites for general readers: - **Quanta Magazine** — Excellent for deep, clear reporting on math, physics, biology, and computer science. - **NPR Science** — Very readable, broad coverage, good for breaking science news. - **Nature News** — High-quality reporting tied to top research; a bit more technical, but still accessible. - **Science News** — Strong general-science reporting, especially for non-specialists. - **Smithsonian Magazine (Science)** — Great for engaging, broad-interest science stories. - **National Geographic (Science)** — Good for biology, Earth science, and exploration, with strong visuals. - **The Conversation (Science)** — Articles written by researchers; useful and usually clear. - **Ars Technica (Science)** — Best if you like science plus tech, with more detail and analysis. - **Popular Science** — Fun, broad, easy to read. - **ScienceDaily** — Good for tracking research headlines, though it’s more press-release style than journalism. **Best overall picks:** **Quanta Magazine**, **Science News**, and **NPR Science**. If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free sites only**, 2. the **best newsletters**, or 3. the **best sites by topic** (space, medicine, environment, AI, etc.).
What are the leading tech media outlets online?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the leading tech media outlets online are: - **TechCrunch** — startup and venture capital coverage - **The Verge** — consumer tech, gadgets, and culture - **Wired** — tech trends, science, and long-form analysis - **Ars Technica** — deep dives on hardware, software, and policy - **Engadget** — consumer electronics and product news - **CNET** — reviews, how-tos, and mainstream tech news - **ZDNET** — business tech, IT, and enterprise coverage - **Tom’s Hardware** — PCs, components, and benchmarks - **9to5Mac** — Apple-focused news - **Android Authority** — Android and mobile tech coverage If you want, I can also rank them by **traffic**, **credibility**, or **best for startups/gadgets/AI**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the leading tech media outlets online are: - **TechCrunch** — startups, VC, product launches - **The Verge** — consumer tech, gadgets, culture - **Wired** — broader tech, science, and business analysis - **Ars Technica** — deep-dive tech and policy coverage - **Engadget** — consumer electronics and reviews - **CNET** — product news, reviews, buying guides - **ZDNET** — enterprise IT and tech news - **PCMag** — reviews, comparisons, how-tos - **Tom’s Hardware** — PC hardware and components - **9to5Mac** / **9to5Google** — Apple and Google ecosystem news - **Mashable** — tech, digital culture, entertainment - **Gizmodo** — gadget and consumer tech news If you want, I can also rank them by **credibility**, **startup coverage**, or **consumer product reviews**.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the leading tech media outlets online are: - **TechCrunch** — startups, venture capital, product launches - **The Verge** — consumer tech, reviews, culture, gadgets - **Wired** — tech trends, business, science, policy - **Ars Technica** — deep-dive reporting on hardware, software, security - **CNET** — mainstream tech news, product reviews, buying guides - **Engadget** — gadgets, consumer electronics, reviews - **Tom’s Hardware** — PC hardware, benchmarks, DIY builds - **ZDNET** — enterprise IT, software, business tech news - **Mashable** — tech, digital culture, consumer trends - **VentureBeat** — AI, enterprise tech, startups - **9to5Mac / 9to5Google** — Apple and Google ecosystem news - **Android Authority** — Android devices, apps, and ecosystem - **Bloomberg Tech** — business-focused tech and markets - **The Information** — premium tech and startup coverage If you want, I can also narrow this down by **best for breaking news**, **reviews**, **startups**, or **enterprise tech**.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the leading tech media outlets online are: - **TechCrunch** — startups, VC, product launches - **The Verge** — consumer tech, reviews, culture - **Wired** — broader tech and science coverage - **Ars Technica** — deep-dive analysis, IT, hardware, policy - **CNET** — consumer gadgets, buying guides, reviews - **Engadget** — gadget news, launches, reviews - **ZDNet** — enterprise tech, IT, business - **VentureBeat** — AI, enterprise, gaming, startups - **Tom’s Hardware** — PC hardware, components, benchmarks - **9to5Mac / 9to5Google** — Apple and Google ecosystem news - **MacRumors** — Apple-focused rumors and updates - **Android Police** — Android news and app coverage - **The Information** — premium tech industry reporting - **Slashdot** — older but still active tech/news community If you want, I can also rank them by **breaking news**, **deep analysis**, or **startup coverage**.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned
Some of the leading tech media outlets online are: - **The Verge** — strong on consumer tech, culture, and product reviews - **TechCrunch** — startup, VC, and Silicon Valley news - **Wired** — broader coverage of technology, science, and business impact - **Ars Technica** — deep-dive reporting on hardware, software, and policy - **Engadget** — consumer electronics, reviews, and announcements - **Mashable** — tech, digital culture, and internet trends - **CNET** — product reviews, buying guides, and tech news - **ZDNET** — enterprise IT, cybersecurity, and business tech - **Tom’s Hardware** — PC hardware, components, and benchmarks - **Android Authority** — Android phones, apps, and ecosystem news Also worth watching: - **9to5Mac** and **9to5Google** - **MacRumors** - **VentureBeat** - **Gizmodo** If you want, I can also rank them by **startup news**, **consumer gadgets**, or **enterprise/IT** focus.
Which tech and science outlets have the best newsletters?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned
A few of the best tech/science newsletters, depending on what you want: ### Tech - **Stratechery** — best for sharp industry analysis and business strategy. - **The Information** — excellent for serious tech reporting; paywalled but high quality. - **MIT Technology Review** — strong mix of emerging tech, AI, and policy. - **404 Media** — great for internet culture, surveillance, and tech accountability. - **Ars Technica** — solid, dependable tech and science coverage. ### Science - **Quanta Magazine** — probably the best for deep, readable science/math coverage. - **Science News** — broad, reliable, and easy to follow. - **Nature Briefing** — good if you want a more academic/scientific pulse. - **The Conversation: Science** — clear, expert-written explainers. - **Nautilus** — polished long-form science and big ideas. ### Good all-rounder picks - **Hacker News newsletter/email digests** — if you want what’s trending in tech. - **The Brief by MIT Tech Review** — one of the better daily AI/tech reads. - **Popular Science** — lighter, more accessible science updates. If you want, I can also give you: 1. **best free newsletters only**, 2. **best for AI specifically**, or 3. **best 5 newsletters total to subscribe to right now**.
Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned
A few of the best tech/science newsletters, in my opinion: ### Tech - **MIT Technology Review** — great for serious, well-edited AI, climate tech, and biotech coverage. - **The Verge** — good if you want a cleaner, more readable mix of consumer tech and industry news. - **Wired** — strong for big-picture tech culture and emerging trends. - **Ars Technica** — best for deeper, more technical reporting, especially computing and science-adjacent topics. - **Platformer** — excellent for social media / big tech policy and inside-baseball platform news. ### Science - **Nature Briefing** — one of the best daily science roundups, especially for research highlights. - **Science Magazine** — solid for major findings and research news. - **STAT** — especially good for biotech, medicine, and health science. - **Quanta Magazine** — outstanding for math, physics, and theoretical science storytelling. - **The New York Times Well / Science newsletters** — broad, readable, and easy to keep up with. ### Best all-around picks If you only subscribe to a few: 1. **MIT Technology Review** 2. **Nature Briefing** 3. **Ars Technica** 4. **Quanta Magazine** If you want, I can also give you a **“best free newsletters only”** list or a **“best for AI/news/startups/science”** breakdown.
Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best tech/science newsletters worth subscribing to: ### Tech - **Stratechery** — best for sharp analysis of tech business and strategy. - **The Verge** — good mix of consumer tech news and culture. - **404 Media** — great for internet/tech reporting with edge. - **Platformer** — strong coverage of Big Tech and policy. - **Hacker News** (daily/weekly digests) — best if you like startup/engineering links. ### Science - **Nature Briefing** — excellent daily science roundup. - **Science News** — solid, broad science coverage. - **Quanta Magazine** — great for deep, readable math/physics/CS pieces. - **STAT** — best for biotech, medicine, and health science. - **New Scientist** — broad, accessible science news. ### Best “one or two only” picks - **Stratechery** for tech - **Nature Briefing** for science If you want, I can also give you: 1. the **best free ones only**, or 2. a **newsletter stack** for tech, AI, and science.
Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned
A few of the best tech/science newsletters, in my view: **Tech** - **The Verge’s Command Line** — sharp tech news and platform shifts. - **Stratechery** — best for tech strategy and business analysis. - **Morning Brew Tech** — fast, readable daily tech roundup. - **Wired** — good mix of future tech, security, and culture. - **404 Media** — great for internet culture, platform drama, and digital rights. **Science** - **Nature Briefing** — excellent daily science news. - **Quanta Magazine** — top-tier physics, math, and CS explanations. - **Science magazine newsletters** — strong general science coverage. - **The Transmitter** — especially good if you like neuroscience. - **STAT** — best for biotech, medicine, and health science. **Best overall picks** - **Quanta Magazine** for depth and clarity - **Nature Briefing** for breadth and reliability - **Stratechery** for tech industry analysis - **The Verge’s Command Line** for accessible tech news If you want, I can also give you: 1. **the best free ones only**, or 2. **a shortlist by topic** (AI, space, biotech, gadgets, etc.).
Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned
Here are some of the best tech/science newsletters worth signing up for: - **The Verge — Command Line**: Great for tech news, product launches, and internet culture. - **Ars Technica — Ars Technica Newsletter**: Strong on deep tech, science, and policy coverage. - **MIT Technology Review — The Download**: One of the best for AI, emerging tech, and science innovation. - **Wired — Daily/Politics/Longform newsletters**: Good mix of tech trends, culture, and future-focused reporting. - **Axios — Axios AI+ / Axios Pro Rata**: Very crisp, useful if you want fast industry briefings. - **Nature — Nature Briefing**: Excellent for science research highlights and big discoveries. - **Science — ScienceAdviser**: Good summary of major scientific developments. - **New Scientist — The Essential Guide**: Broad science coverage in a very readable format. - **Quanta Magazine — Newsletter**: Best for math, physics, and foundational science storytelling. - **IEEE Spectrum — The Download**: Great if you like engineering, robotics, and applied tech. If you want the **best overall mix**, I’d start with: 1. **MIT Technology Review: The Download** 2. **Ars Technica newsletter** 3. **Nature Briefing** 4. **Quanta Newsletter** If you want, I can also narrow this down by **AI**, **gadgets**, **science research**, or **startup/business tech**.

All 72 prompts run for Engadget

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Engadget known for?
  • 2 What are Engadget's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Engadget? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Engadget compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Engadget?
  • 6 What is a typical tech & science outlet known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best tech and science outlets for startup founders? discovery
  • 2 Which tech and science publications are best for product managers? discovery
  • 3 What are the best science and tech outlets for engineers? discovery
  • 4 Which tech news sites are good for AI and machine learning updates? discovery
  • 5 What are the best outlets for gadget reviews and tech analysis? discovery
  • 6 Which publications cover consumer tech in depth? discovery
  • 7 What are the best tech and science newsletters for busy professionals? discovery
  • 8 Which outlets are best for science reporting with strong explanations? discovery
  • 9 What are the best publications for tech policy and regulation coverage? discovery
  • 10 Which tech and science outlets are best for founders and investors? discovery
  • 11 What are the top sources for space and astronomy news? discovery
  • 12 Which digital magazines are best for emerging technology trends? discovery
  • 13 What are the best outlets for science stories in plain English? discovery
  • 14 Which tech outlets are good for deep dives and explainers? discovery
  • 15 What are the best outlets for startup funding and business news? discovery
  • 16 Which tech and science publications are best for students? discovery
  • 17 What are the best newsletters for science and innovation news? discovery
  • 18 Which outlets are good for hardware and gadget enthusiasts? discovery
  • 19 What are the best tech and science outlets for professionals who want daily updates? discovery
  • 20 Which publications are best for a mix of tech business and science coverage? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to the leading tech news outlet? comparison
  • 22 Which tech and science outlets are better than the biggest general tech publication? comparison
  • 23 What are the best alternatives to a subscription tech magazine? comparison
  • 24 Which science journalism sites are better than mainstream news coverage? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to a newsletter-first tech outlet? comparison
  • 26 Which outlets are better for in-depth reporting than quick tech headlines? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives to a gadget-focused publication? comparison
  • 28 Which tech and science outlets are better for independent analysis than corporate media? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives to a paywalled science publication? comparison
  • 30 Which outlets are better for startup coverage than general business news sites? comparison
  • 31 How do I find trustworthy tech and science news outlets? problem
  • 32 How do I choose a tech outlet that is not just clickbait? problem
  • 33 How do I stay up to date on science and technology without reading too much? problem
  • 34 How do I find a tech publication with both news and analysis? problem
  • 35 How do I get better startup and innovation coverage in one place? problem
  • 36 How do I find a science outlet that explains complex topics simply? problem
  • 37 How do I keep up with gadget launches and reviews? problem
  • 38 How do I find an outlet with a good daily newsletter on tech? problem
  • 39 How do I avoid missing important AI and software news? problem
  • 40 How do I get reliable science reporting for non-experts? problem
  • 41 What do tech and science outlets cost on average? transactional
  • 42 Are there free tech and science newsletters worth subscribing to? transactional
  • 43 Which tech and science publications have a free tier? transactional
  • 44 How much is a premium tech news subscription? transactional
  • 45 Which science publications offer student discounts? transactional
  • 46 Are tech and science outlet subscriptions worth it? transactional
  • 47 What is the best value tech and science subscription? transactional
  • 48 Which outlets have monthly subscriptions instead of annual plans? transactional
  • 49 Do tech and science newsletters have paid plans? transactional
  • 50 What is included in a premium science news membership? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best tech and science news outlets?
  • 2 Which tech and science publications are most respected?
  • 3 What are the top tech and science outlets for readers?
  • 4 Which digital publications cover both technology and science well? 10/mo
  • 5 What are the most popular tech and science magazines online?
  • 6 What are the best tech news sites with science reporting?
  • 7 Which outlets are good for startup and technology news?
  • 8 What are the most recommended science and tech newsletters?
  • 9 What are the best subscription tech and science publications?
  • 10 Which tech and science outlets are worth paying for?
  • 11 What are the top independent tech and science publications?
  • 12 Which tech and science outlets are best for enthusiasts?
  • 13 What are the best science journalism sites for general readers?
  • 14 What are the leading tech media outlets online?
  • 15 Which tech and science outlets have the best newsletters?