constant stream of curated content
by Buzzfeed - about 9 minutes
You’re pretty much putting money in your future pockets with these buys.View Entire Post ›
by Buzzfeed - about 24 minutes
You’d get a great cost per wear on these anyway, and it’ll be even lower thanks to these smart savings.View Entire Post ›
by The Verge - about 27 minutes
We’re knee-deep in Amazon’s mega sale. For 2025, Prime Day is lasting through July 11th, making it twice as long as previous years. That’s great news for anyone who’s too busy to look at deals for the next day or two; you have plenty of time to catch up on the biggest discounts. From the thousands of discounts we vetted, just a fraction of them were good enough to tell you about. Check out the best Prime Day deals here. As usual, this space is where we’re collating all the discounts, limited-time promos, and Prime-exclusive deals worth picking up. We’ve also provided a selection of tips so you can stretch your dollar that much further on robot vacuums, OLED TVs, noise-canceling headphones, and a...
by The Verge - about 38 minutes
⠀ Amazon Prime Day is usually a sprint - two hectic days of lightning deals, overflowing shopping carts, and enough browser tabs to crash a laptop. But this year, Amazon is treating it more like a marathon. Instead of wrapping things up after 48 hours, the retailer is giving Prime members two additional days to shop. We're on day three now, yet the deals are just as good now as they were on day one.
Oura's latest smart ring is still $50 off, the 2024 Kindle Paperwhite legis holding steady at $124.99, and handy, budget-friendly gadgets like Anker's Nano travel adapter and the Tile Slim are still available for their lowest prices to date. Plent …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by io9 - about 45 minutes
Edi Gathegi's Mister Terrific and Skyler Gisondo's Jimmy Olsen could get their own shows.
by The Verge - about 1 hour
As The Verge's resident disaster writer, I'm tired of this nonsense. So let's just get into it. What is cloud seeding?
Cloud seeding is basically an attempt to make precipitation fall from clouds. It targets clouds that have water droplets that are essentially too light to fall. Scientists at MIT learned in the 1940s that if you inject a mineral into the cloud that's similar to the crystalline structure of ice - typically silver iodide or salt - those small water droplets start to freeze to the mineral. This creates heavier ice particles that can eventually fall down to the ground. These days, researchers can use radar and satellite image …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by The Verge - about 2 hours
Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey is threatening Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, and Meta with a deceptive business practices claim because their AI chatbots allegedly listed Donald Trump last on a request to “rank the last five presidents from best to worst, specifically regarding antisemitism.” Bailey’s press release and letters to all four companies accuse Gemini, Copilot, ChatGPT, and Meta AI of making “factually inaccurate” claims to “simply ferret out facts from the vast worldwide web, package them into statements of truth and serve them up to the inquiring public free from distortion or bias,” because the chatbots “provided deeply misleading answers to a straightforward historical...
by The Verge - about 2 hours
Hoto’s mini electric screwdriver comes with 25 S2 steel bits and a handy carrying case. | Image: Hoto I was told to be ready for anything before my daughter was born. I didn’t realize that included being at the ready to constantly fix her electronic toys. Do you know the horrors of the eKids Disney Frozen toy microphone? Well, now I’m an expert at tinkering with it. It wouldn’t have been as easy without Hoto’s 3.7V 25-in-1 Mini Electric Screwdriver, which is down to an all-time low of $28.49 (about $22 off) at Amazon.
Hoto Electric Precision Screwdriver ADV Where to Buy: $49.99 $28.49 at Amazon $49.99 $44.99 at Hoto (with code PRIME)
Hoto’s mini electric screwdriver has become indispensable in my...
by io9 - about 2 hours
Watch how the blend of digital effects and real sets makes 'Star Wars' come to life.
by Wired - about 2 hours
We understand the skepticism with Prime Day deals—we only recommend quality gadgets that we’ve spent weeks evaluating to ensure you’re getting a good deal on a great product.
by HackAdAy - about 2 hours
If you’re looking for a long journey into the wonderful world of instrument hacking, [Arty Farty Guitars] is six parts into a seven part series on hacking an existing guitar into a guitar-hurdy-gurdy-hybrid, and it is “a trip” as the youths once said. The first video is embedded below.
The Hurdy-Gurdy is a wheeled instrument from medieval europe, which you may have heard of, given the existence of the laser-cut nerdy-gurdy, the electronic midi-gurdy we covered here, and the digi-gurdy which seems to be a hybrid of the two. In case you haven’t seen one before, the general format is for a hurdy-gurdy is this : a wheel rubs against the strings, causing them to vibrate via sliding friction, providing a...
by New Yorker - about 3 hours
It’s never easy to tell which flip or flop the flip-flopper in the White House means.
by Wired - yesterday at 23:58
DHS is urging law enforcement to treat even skateboarding and livestreaming as signs of violent intent during a protest, turning everyday behavior into a pretext for police action.
by Le Monde - yesterday at 23:25
Les salariés de ces deux enseignes récemment placées en redressement judiciaire se sont rassemblés à Paris jeudi 10 juillet.
by QZ - yesterday at 23:21
After investor pressure and looming Texas legal deadlines, Tesla announced that its annual shareholder meeting will take place on November 6
by QZ - yesterday at 23:21
Wall Street’s favorite bet has crossed a record valuation, driven by its dominance of AI infrastructure as competitors race to catch up
by io9 - yesterday at 23:20
John Stewart's arrival will have a big impact on the DCU's debut Green Lantern.
by BBC - yesterday at 23:09
Eight children were among 15 people reportedly killed while queuing outside a clinic in the central town of Deir al-Balah.
by QZ - yesterday at 23:01
Indeed and Glassdoor, owned by the same Japanese parent company, are cutting 1,300 workers to focus more on AI
by New Yorker - yesterday at 23:00
When an online order goes missing, employees are often blamed. But how should they be punished? Now premium users get to decide.
by Le Monde - yesterday at 22:58
« Je viens de m’entretenir avec le président Trump et je travaille désormais en étroite collaboration avec les Alliés pour apporter à l’Ukraine l’aide dont elle a besoin », a fait savoir Mark Rutte qui a fermement condamné les « attaques massives et continues » de la Russie contre les civils ukrainiens.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 22:57
“Parisians and tourists flocked to take a dip in the Seine River this weekend after city authorities gave the green light for it to be used for public swimming for the first time in more than a century. The opening followed a comprehensive clean-up programme sped up by its use as a venue in last year’s Paris Olympics after people who regularly swam in it illegally, lobbied for its transformation. The outgoing mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, also helped to champion the plans, jumping in the river herself before the Olympics. About 1,000 swimmers a day will be allowed access to three bathing sites on the banks of the Seine for free, until the end of August.” From The Guardian.
The post Paris Reopens Seine...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 22:52
“The state-run Vietnam News Agency reported on Wednesday that the country’s National Assembly unanimously passed an amendment to the Criminal Code that abolished the death penalty for eight criminal offences. Starting from next month, people will no longer face a death sentence for bribery, embezzlement, producing and trading counterfeit medicines, illegally transporting narcotics, espionage, ‘the crime of destroying peace and causing aggressive war’, as well as sabotage and trying to topple the government. The maximum sentence for these crimes will now be life imprisonment, the news agency said… The death penalty will remain for 10 other criminal offences under Vietnamese law, including murder,...
by Wired - yesterday at 22:52
Looking for a new cleaning gadget? Whether it's a Dyson or a dupe, we've found the best deals on vacuums during Prime Day.
by Wired - yesterday at 22:51
If you need to mainline some caffeine, these are the best brewers and concentrates to get that java into your system.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 22:46
“Tajik citizens need no longer fear that they will be imprisoned for clicking ‘like’ on social media posts that the Tajik authorities do not like. Among several laws that Tajik President Emomali Rahmon signed on May 14 was one that decriminalized liking posts on social networks that originate from individuals or organizations the Tajik government considers extremist.” From Times of Central Asia.
The post Reactions to Provocative Social Posts Decriminalized in Tajikistan appeared first on Human Progress.
by io9 - yesterday at 22:41
The podcast king takes a cryptic shot at Trump and the Justice Department, reigniting suspicions of a government cover-up in the Epstein saga.
by QZ - yesterday at 22:40
Tesla is ramping up its robotaxi rollout even as regulators investigate its small-scale launch in Austin
by QZ - yesterday at 22:40
The world’s largest crypto is up 50% from April lows with more gains possible.
by Wired - yesterday at 22:31
We’re professional gear testers and deal trackers, and these are the Prime Day deals we couldn’t stay away from.
by io9 - yesterday at 22:30
Tucker also doesn't think President Trump "likes creepy sex stuff."
by Human Progress - yesterday at 22:23
“Human waste, empty oxygen cylinders, kitchen leftovers and discarded ladders. Sherpas working on Mount Everest carry all that and more — 20 kilograms (44 pounds) per person — navigating a four-hour hike that traverses crumbling glacial ice and treacherous crevasses to bring trash back to base camp. During the most recent climbing season, they had new assistance from two giant SZ DJI Technology Co. drones, which can complete the same journey in six minutes, sharing the task of clearing an expanding volume of refuse piling up on the world’s highest peak… ‘We’re very happy,’ said Lhakpa Nuru Sherpa, a 33-year-old Sherpa at local expeditions firm Asian Trekking who has reached the summit of...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 22:17
“In 2010, there were just 13 million mobile money accounts in the world, fewer than the population of my home country, the Netherlands. By 2023, this had reached more than 640 million. That’s more than twice the total number of Netflix subscriptions worldwide… What’s immediately obvious is how much of this growth has come from Sub-Saharan Africa; it’s home to more than half of the world’s accounts. In 2023, there were over 330 million active mobile money accounts in the region; more than one mobile money account for every four people. What’s changed? One of the obvious drivers of this growth has been the widespread adoption of mobile phones, not just in the richest countries but across the globe....
by Torrentfreak - yesterday at 22:16
Nintendo and other gaming companies are doing everything in their power to stop the public from playing pirated games. This includes sending a steady stream of cease-and-desist notices, as well as filing lawsuits. And in some rare cases, law enforcement agencies are stepping up to help. Feds Seize Gaming Piracy Domains
Today, the FBI seized several domain names linked to well-known game piracy websites, including NSW2U.com, Game-2u.com, Bigngame.com, and ps4pkg.com. Instead of an overview of pirated games, visitors are now greeted with a domain seizure banner. “This domain has been seized by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in accordance with a seizure warrant issued pursuant to 18 U.S.C. §§ 2323 issued...
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 22:00
According to [Casey Connolly], Qualcomm’s release of how to interact with their embedded USB debugging (EUD) is a big deal. If you haven’t heard of it, nearly all Qualcomm SoCs made since 2018 have a built-in debugger that connects to the onboard USB port. The details vary by chip, but you write to some registers and start up the USB phy. This gives you an oddball USB interface that looks like a seven-port hub with a single device “EUD control interface.”
So what do you do with that? You send a few USB commands, and you’ll get a second device. This one connects to an SWD interface. Of course, we have plenty of tools to debug using SWD. In particular, there’s a fork of OpenOCD that knows how to use...
by Le Monde - yesterday at 21:38
Lors de la troisième journée d’audience, des salariés et anciens salariés de l’hebdomadaire, répartis en deux camps opposés, se sont durement affrontés.
by KCRW - yesterday at 21:00
The latest film releases include Superman, Kill the Jockey, Apocalypse in the Tropics, and To A Land Unknown. Weighing in are Christy Lemire, film critic for RogerEbert.com and co-host of the YouTube channel Breakfast All Day, and Witney Seibold, senior writer at SlashFilm and co-host of the podcast Critically Acclaimed Network. Superman Superman (David Corenswet) squares off with tech billionaire Lex Luther (Nicholas Hoult). Seibold: “This is as safe a Superman movie as you can hope to get. It is right up the middle. It's not particularly extraordinary, but it's not doing anything particularly wrong. David Corenswet is serviceable as Superman. This is put together by James Gunn, who had previously made the...
by KCRW - yesterday at 21:00
Right-wing figures who stoked conspiracy theories about alleged sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, and some on the left, aren’t buying the DOJ’s assessment that there’s no further evidence to release.
by KCRW - yesterday at 21:00
Who doesn’t love an ice cream sandwich? They combine two of our favorite treats: cookies and ice cream. And there is something absolutely delicious about licking around the edge of the ice cream as it softens that brings us back to childhood. There are plenty to choose from at the supermarket. Even the simplest, made with soft flat chocolate wafers, are easy to wolf down. But we’re going to make them, so let’s focus on the type where cookies are used to sandwich the ice cream. The benefit of making your own is the variety of flavor and texture combinations you can create. Don’t be intimidated into thinking you need to make your own ice cream, instead concentrate on making the cookies and choosing an...
by KCRW - yesterday at 21:00
Maestro Leonard Slatkin opens up about his family, the story of the Hollywood String Quartet, and how the Summer of Angels festival honors their legacy.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 20:30
When we do textbook analysis, we tend to ignore the real-world concerns for the sake of learning. So, a typical theoretical voltage divider is simply two resistors. But if you examine a low-pass RC filter, you’ll see a single resistor and a capacitor. What if you combine them? That’s what [Old Hack EE] did in a recent video, and you can check it out below.
It helps if you are familiar with Thevenin equivalents and, of course, Ohm’s Law. There’s also a bit of algebra, but nothing too complicated. The example design has a lossy filter at 100 Hz.
Of course, RC filters are easy to understand if you think of them as voltage dividers with a frequency-variable resistance, which is what the math is basically...
by BBC - yesterday at 20:19
The US president's threatened new tariffs are likely to have major political ramifications in the country.
by dwell - yesterday at 20:12
From serene plunge pools to cinematic infinity edge pools, these standout designs turn up the heat on outdoor living.As the weather heats up, few architectural features feel more seductive than a swimming pool. Whether it’s carved into rock, cantilevered over a hillside, or tucked discreetly into an urban courtyard, the best pools offer more than just a place to cool off—they create a dynamic dialogue between architecture and landscape. In this round-up, we dive into some of the most memorable pools featured in Dwell. From a pond-like pool set into a rocky coastal landscape in Mexico to a infinity pool that stretches out over bushland in the hills above Sydney, these projects are a splash of inspiration...
by dwell - yesterday at 19:41
At the turn of the millennium, the Murray Grove development attempted to rebrand modular construction, confronting Britain’s housing woes and heritage hang-ups.As a part of our 25th-anniversary celebration, we’re republishing formative magazine stories from before our website launched. This story previously appeared in Dwell’s April 2001 issue. In a London gripped by a feverish surge of lottery-funded, bread-and-circus building that has given the city everything from the ill-fated Millennium Dome to the Tate Modern, and against a background of an economic boom whose imminent end is now clearly being signaled by a deluge of ultra-high-rise skyscrapers, Murray Grove is so modest as to be almost invisible....
by Courrier International - yesterday at 19:21
Jeudi 10 juillet, la cheffe de la diplomatie européenne, Kaja Kallas, a annoncé avoir trouvé un accord avec les dirigeants de l’État hébreu pour augmenter l’aide humanitaire dans l’enclave palestinienne. Cet accord devrait aussi permettre la réouverture de certains corridors terrestres vers Gaza, fermés depuis longtemps.
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 19:00
Immutable distributions are slowly spreading across the Linux world– but should you care? Are they hacker friendly? What does “immutable” mean, anyway? Immutable means “not subject or susceptible to change” according to Merriam-Webster, which is not 100% accurate in this context, but it’s close enough and the name is there so we’re stuck with it. Immutable distributions are subject to change, it’s just that how you change them is quite a bit different than bog-standard Linux. Will this matter to you? Read on to find out! (Or, if you know the answers already, read on to find out how angry you should be in the comments section.)
Immutability is cloud-based thinking: the system has a known-good...
by BBC - yesterday at 18:38
The prototype of the most famous bag in fashion, made for Jane Birkin in 1985, smashes auction records.
by Courrier International - yesterday at 18:27
Le géant italien de la confiserie, propriétaire entre autres des marques Nutella et Kinder, serait sur le point de racheter l’entreprise américaine de céréales pour le petit déjeuner, rapporte “The Wall Street Journal”.
by Courrier International - yesterday at 18:27
Depuis l’élection de Kaïs Saïed à la présidence, en 2019, la Tunisie intensifie son rapprochement avec l’Iran. De quoi faire naître certaines craintes, dans ce pays majoritairement sunnite, mais un temps gouverné par une dynastie chiite, les Fatimides, d’une “chiisation de la société” sous les auspices du chef de l’État.
by Le Monde - yesterday at 18:14
Dans cet entretien recueilli par écrit – faute de pouvoir être réalisé en présentiel ou en visioconférence pour « des raisons de sécurité » –, le dirigeant iranien reconnaît l’arrestation par le régime du jeune cycliste franco-allemand Lennart Monterlos, disparu depuis le 16 juin.
by BBC - yesterday at 18:08
Ukraine is in danger of being overwhelmed by deadly strikes as Russia sends in swarms of drones.
by Courrier International - yesterday at 17:55
En amont des élections législatives de 2026, certains partis politiques souhaitent l’application d’une loi électorale controversée pour les Libanais de l’étranger. Une loi qui réduirait l’influence de la diaspora libanaise, estiment ses détracteurs.
by Courrier International - yesterday at 17:46
Le magazine musical américain de référence “Rolling Stone” vient de lancer son édition Moyen-Orient et Afrique du Nord, qui consacre sa première une à la chanteuse palestino-jordanienne Zeyne. Artiste émergente en vue dans la région, elle sort son premier album en août.
by Toute l'Europe - yesterday at 17:30
Philipp Lausberg et Georg Riekeles appellent au développement des investissements et des financements de l'Union européenne - Crédits : Olga Yastremska / iStock TRIBUNE. Le manque d'investissement est le principal défi que doit relever l'UE pour faire face aux chocs économiques, technologiques, sociaux, climatiques et sécuritaires qui s'entremêlent aujourd'hui. Pour rester prospère, libre et sûre, l'UE doit surmonter ses énormes déficits de financement et devenir une puissance d'investissement stratégique comme ses principaux concurrents, les États-Unis et la Chine. Tout en s'inspirant de leurs modèles d'investissement, l'UE doit développer une "troisième voie" fondée sur sa propre gouvernance...
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 17:30

by Toute l'Europe - yesterday at 17:19
Une bannière accueillant la Croatie dans l'euro devant le siège de la Commission européenne à Bruxelles - Crédits : Alexandros Michailidis / iStock Le 1er janvier 1999, l'euro est lancé pour la première fois sous forme immatérielle (scripturale) dans 11 États membres de l'Union européenne (Allemagne, Autriche, Belgique, Espagne, Finlande, France, Irlande, Italie, Luxembourg, Pays-Bas et Portugal) : il peut ainsi être utilisé pour les services bancaires, les transferts électroniques ou encore les chèques de voyage. Son objectif est alors de mettre fin à l'instabilité des taux de change entre les différentes monnaies nationales. A partir des années 1970 (fin du système de Bretton Woods),...
by New Yorker - yesterday at 17:12
In the first Trump Administration, “they didn’t say ‘Fuck you’ to the courts,” Erez Reuveni said.
by Langue Sauce Piquante - yesterday at 17:01
Que dire de Nôt, vu dans la cour d’honneur du palais des papes dimanche soir 6 juillet ? Il faut savoir préalablement que ce spectacle est inspiré du conte des Mille et Une Nuits (nôt signifie la nuit, en créole cap-verdien), car rien ne le suggère, sauf peut-être les amoncellements de draps ensanglantés, ceux des épouses que le sultan fait occire chaque matin ? Les Mille et Une Nuits, c’est d’abord un féminicide sans cesse repoussé.
 Et, ledit spectacle, comment le qualifier : pièce, ballet, performance ? Un point positif : on y échappe à la vidéo. De la danse, il y en a peu, au début et à la fin, mais captivante. On en aurait souhaité davantage. La scène d’ouverture...
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 16:46
Procédures accélérées, blocages, motions de rejet… les députés ont adopté plus de lois que lors des deux premières années du quinquennat (2022-2024). Mais les incidents et les blocages se sont également multipliés.
by Zataz - yesterday at 16:44
Un nouveau collectif de pirates informatiques, Scattered Spider, stoppé par les autorités britanniques. Ils étaient présents sur BreachForums....