Loading...Genspark "autopilot mode": what it is, what it breaks, and what to copyKonika Dhull, AnkitMar 5, 2026•18 min readGenspark's Autopilot Mode promises autonomous task execution and intelligent web navigation. But what does autonomy actually mean when claims lack independent verification? We examine what makes it work, where it breaks, and what the industry can learn from its design choices.AI & Browser Technology
Loading...Inside a DRM Session: Step‑by‑Step EME → License Server → CDM FlowKonika DhullMar 5, 2026•16 min readDeep dive into how Encrypted Media Extensions (EME) coordinate with Content Decryption Modules (CDMs) and license servers to protect streaming content. Understand the step-by-step flow, privacy risks, and challenges in implementing multi-DRM systems.Security
Loading...The Economics of Enterprise Browsers in 2026: Funding, Pricing, and the ROI StoryKonika DhullMar 5, 2026•18 min readExplore the financial reality of enterprise browser adoption in 2026. Understand market economics, pricing dynamics, ROI challenges, and how organizations navigate the tension between security investments and measurable business value in the enterprise browser market.EnterpriseEconomicsROI
Loading...The Risk of Over‑Centralizing Security in a Single Enterprise BrowserKonika DhullMar 4, 2026•12 min readOver-centralizing security via a single enterprise browser creates blind spots, performance overhead, and user resistance. While dedicated browsers promise zero-trust control, they risk latency, inflexible policies, and unmanaged threats across hybrid environments.Security
Loading...The Browser Speed Wars of 2026: Why 'Fastest' Depends on What You're Actually DoingKonika Dhull, Rohan MehereMar 4, 2026•24 min readThe browser wars of 2026 are no longer about raw Speedometer scores. As web applications move toward heavy AI-integration, WebAssembly-based gaming, and complex SaaS management, 'fast' has become a relative term. A browser that renders instantly might crawl with 50 tabs or 3D CAD models.Browser & Technology
Loading...Why Your Work Browser Feels Slower Than Your Personal One (Even When It's the Same App)Konika Dhull, Rohan MehereMar 4, 2026•22 min readThe 'Work Browser Lag' is a documented phenomenon in 2026, often referred to as the Enterprise Performance Gap. While the application may be the same, the underlying infrastructure, security overlays, and 'agent sprawl' create a vastly different—and slower—execution environment.Browser & Technology
Loading...Gaming, Streaming, or Research: The 'Fastest' Browser Depends on What You Do All DayRohan MehereMar 4, 2026•23 min readIn 2026, the concept of a 'fastest' browser has moved away from raw page-load speeds toward task-specific resource allocation. Whether maximizing frame rates in cloud games, maintaining 4K bitrates, or managing research tabs, the bottleneck is how the browser manages CPU and RAM.Browser & Technology
Loading...The Best Browser on Low‑End Laptops in 2026 Isn't the One With the Highest Benchmark ScoreKonika Dhull, Rohan MehereMar 4, 2026•21 min readHigh synthetic scores like Speedometer 3.0 often hide a massive resource tax that causes thermal throttling and UI lag on budget laptops. Recent research from Magic Lasso, PCMag, and Kahana reveals the gap between peak performance and sustained efficiency on low-end hardware.Browser & Technology
Loading...Chromium on ARM Laptops: Fast, Efficient, or Still in Beta?Rohan MehereMar 4, 2026•20 min readThe transition to ARM-based laptops in 2026 is no longer about 'if' it works, but 'how well' it survives real-world edge cases. With native ARM64 versions of Chrome and Edge now standard, the conversation has moved from basic functionality to performance and driver limitations.Browser & Technology