Google announced today that it would enable WebGPU support in its Chrome browser by default starting in version 113, currently in beta. In development since 2017, WebGPU is a next-generation graphics ...
When something does zero-shot image classification, that means it’s able to make judgments about the contents of an image without the user needing to train the system beforehand on what to look for.
With version 148, Mozilla is expanding its browser with central management for AI features and new security APIs for web developers.
WebGPU is quietly reshaping what is possible in a browser window, turning the web into a serious platform for high‑end graphics and compute rather than a thin client for native apps. While support is ...
As the browser becomes more like an operating system, we are seeing more deep features being built into them. For example, you can now do a form of assembly language for the browser. Sophisticated ...
After years of development, Mozilla’s Gfx Team just announced in its latest blog post that Firefox will finally soon support WebGPU, but only in the Windows edition starting with Firefox version 141.