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Replace Photoshop with a lifetime to this award-winning editor, only $80 for life
TL;DR: Luminar Neo is part photo editing app, part quick AI editor, and it’s only $79.99 for life.
Opens in a new window Credit: Luminar Neo The Award-Winning Luminar Neo Lifetime Bundle $79.99$332 Save $252.01 Get Deal
Good photo editing software usually means a monthly subscription that never stops, even in the months you barely shoot. Luminar Neo works differently. It’s a full photo editor for Windows and Mac, the kind you’d use to retouch portraits, fix landscapes, or clean up a busy shot, except it leans on AI to do the slow parts for you. You pay one time instead of every month, and right now this bundle pairs the editor with a course and a stack of add-ons for $79.99 (reg. $332).
What can you do with Luminar Neo?The AI tools are the reason people switch to Luminar Neo. SkyAI detects the sky in your photo and replaces it in a couple of clicks, so a washed-out gray afternoon becomes a sunset without any masking. RelightAI separates the foreground and background so you can brighten a face without blowing out everything behind it. The Erase tool removes a stray tourist or a power line and fills the gap automatically, and SkinAI smooths and retouches a portrait without making anyone look plastic. If you don’t know where to start, the built-in AI Assistant reads the image and recommends edits based on the objects and colors it finds.
You’ll also be getting a landscape editing course with 20 lessons and nearly three hours of video, plus 35 practice photos to edit along with. On top of that are eight creative packs: Wanderfilm and Fujinon Says presets for film color, Blue Mood and Minimal Nature LUTs for grading, and four sky and overlay sets.
Right now, it’s only $79.99 to get the full Luminar Neo Lifetime Bundle, but it won’t stay that way.
StackSocial prices subject to change.
GMC put five screens in the 2027 Sierra, but it's the one thing getting worse in new vehicles
Full-size trucks have come a long way from being work-only tools. Back then, the cab was sparse by design, with a long bench seat that ran from door to door. AM and FM radio stations were the main sources of infotainment, most of which were country if you grew up in the Midwest. The dashboard was a collection of analog gauges and a few knobs. You did not need to consult a YouTube video to turn up the heat or reset the trip odometer.
New on Disney+ and Hulu in July 2026—Hot picks and everything else coming
June was a pretty solid month on Disney+ and Hulu, and boy, did it go out with a bang. Hulu served up its last course of The Bear, while Disney+ lit up the month with James Cameron's $1.5 billion blockbuster Avatar: Fire and Ash. With June almost in the rear-view mirror, it's time to clear up some space on your watch list for what Disney+ and Hulu have in store for U.S. subscribers in July.
Amazon has travel-worthy cameras from GoPro and Insta360 on sale — save up to $200
We're just a few days away from July which means it's time for summer travel. From a (warm) trip to Europe, a road trip through national parks, or a weekend away at an Airbnb, it's time to think about how you'll capture the highlights of summer vacations.
Prime Day ended last week, but deals on travel-worthy cameras are still going strong. These compact cameras come packed with features that make them ideal for carrying on a day of adventure, leaving your phone's battery topped up.
SEE ALSO: The 4 best power stations for camping keep you both online and off-gridIf you could use a travel-worthy camera before departure, check out these deals at Amazon.
Best Insta360 deal Opens in a new window Credit: Insta360 Insta360 X4 Air Travel Bundle $416.49 at Amazon$489.99 Save $73.50 Get Deal Why we like it
If you're looking for a frustration-free travel camera, the Insta360 X4 Air is an excellent choice. And the travel bundle adds to the convenience. For starters, the camera itself weighs only 165 grams, and it records in 8K with a 360-degree view. The travel bundle adds in an invisible selfie stick for extra easy filming.
Best GoPro deal Opens in a new window Credit: GoPro GoPro Max 2 $299 at Amazon$499.99 Save $200.99 Get Deal Why we like it
On sale for only $299, the GoPro MAX2 is ready to come along on vacation. It's capable of filming a 360-degree view in 8K resolution. From the app, you'll be able to edit footage to find the best angle. Plus, selfie mode automatically does the technical work of capturing a 180-degree view. If you travels will take you near water, the GoPro MAX2 has a durable design and it's waterproof up to 5 meters.
More travel camera deals at AmazonDJI Osmo Action 5 Pro Essential Combo — $288 $339 (save $51)
Insta360 X4 Air Starter Bundle — $324.99 $439.99 (save $115)
DJI Osmo 360 Essential Combo — $389.35 $479 (save $89.65)
The most reliable car in 2026 features a V-6 that is over a decade old
In an era where automakers constantly chase new technology, smaller engines, and electrified powertrains, longevity often comes from something much simpler: sticking with what already works. Proven mechanical components and gradual improvements can sometimes be more valuable than the latest innovations, especially for buyers who plan to keep their cars for the long haul.
3 excellent HBO Max shows to watch this week (June 29-July 5)
If you're an HBO Max subscriber in the U.S., your queue is probably already busy as we wrap up June and leap over into July. House of the Dragon is lighting things up with season 3, finally making good on all those chess moves with the sizzling dragon warfare everyone wanted. And Larry David is off butchering American history for laughs just in time for the country's 250th birthday. HBO Max is great at the headliners, but it's the in-between nights that get you—the ones where you scroll forever before landing on a rerun.
3 Google Apps you're probably not using, but should
There are millions of apps on the Google Play Store, both paid and free, and sometimes it can be a bit overwhelming. You know who makes some pretty great apps? Google. I'm not talking about Gmail or Chrome, but apps made by Google that'll earn you money or transform how you manage files on your phone.
Anthropic finally, officially launches Claude Sonnet 5
Anthropic released Claude Sonnet 5 on Tuesday, confirming months of speculation about an upgrade to its mid-tier AI model.
According to the company's official announcement, the new model is designed to be its "most agentic Sonnet model yet." Meaning it is capable of planning, using tools like browsers and terminals, and operating autonomously — all at a level previously reserved for larger, pricier systems.
SEE ALSO: Claude Mythos 5 is back, but only for a select group of US institutionsAnthropic says Sonnet 5 is a substantial improvement on its predecessor, Sonnet 4.6, across reasoning, coding, and knowledge-work benchmarks, and performs close to the company's flagship Opus 4.8 model while costing significantly less to run.
And in an industry increasingly plagued by sticker shock over the price tokens, Sonnet offers a brief respite. The model launches with introductory pricing of $2 per million input tokens and $10 per million output tokens through August 31, after which the standard pricing of $3 per million input tokens and $15 per million output tokens takes effect.
On safety, Anthropic reports Sonnet 5 shows lower rates of hallucination, sycophancy, and other undesirable behaviors than its predecessor, along with improved resistance to prompt-injection attacks. The company noted the model's cybersecurity capabilities remain well below those of its Opus-class and Mythos-class systems, and Sonnet 5 has launched with cyber safeguards enabled by default as a precaution.
Notably absent from Anthropic's announcement: specific figures on those improvements in hallucination rates. The company offers only a general claim of "lower rates" compared to Sonnet 4.6, rather than benchmark data.
The release also made no mention of the model's energy consumption or environmental footprint, a real problem for the AI industry as models grow more capable and computationally intensive.
SEE ALSO: AI data centers could be wrecking the environment faster than we thoughtSonnet 5 is now available across all Claude plans, including Free, Pro, Max, Team, and Enterprise tiers, as well as via Claude Code and the Claude Platform via the API under the model name claude-sonnet-5.
The release follows weeks of anticipation in the tech press. As we reported in February, reports have been circulating for some time that Anthropic was preparing a Sonnet update positioned to rival Opus-tier performance at a steep discount — a forecast that tracks with Tuesday's official rollout.
The $40K used SUV that remembers what luxury should feel like
Luxury SUVs have become obsessed with being everything at once. Bigger screens, sharper handling, endless drive modes, and ever-more complicated tech seem to matter more than simply making the cabin a relaxing place to spend time.
5 Prime Video shows that defined the streamer's early years (and why they're worth watching again)
In 2026, Prime Video is one of the major powers in streaming. With hits like The Boys, Reacher, and Off Campus, the streamer continues to find new audiences in multiple age ranges. However, its popularity wasn't always there. In the 2010s, Amazon started committing resources to original programming, and it took years of trial and error to figure out what type of shows worked on the platform.
How to watch France vs. Sweden online for free
TL;DR: Live stream France vs. Sweden in the 2026 FIFA World Cup for free on ITVX. Access this free streaming platform from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN, an Official Supporter of the FIFA World Cup 2026.
Just days into the knockout stage of the 2026 FIFA World Cup and we've already been served up some shocking fixtures. And there's more to come, including France vs. Sweden.
France are one of the favorites to win the whole tournament and looked superb in the group stage, winning all three fixtures and scoring a total of 10 goals. Kylian Mbappe and his teammates look unstoppable.
Sweden have been promising under new coach Graham Potter but results at the World Cup have been inconsistent. France will fancy themselves to win this but Sweden have something to prove and boast world-class players in Alexander Isak and Viktor Gyökeres.
If you want to watch France vs. Sweden in the 2026 FIFA World Cup from anywhere in the world, we have all the information you need.
When is France vs. Sweden?France vs. Sweden in the 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off at 5 p.m. ET on June 30. This fixture takes place at New York New Jersey Stadium.
How to watch France vs. Sweden for freeFrance vs. Sweden in the 2026 FIFA World Cup is available to live stream for free on ITVX.
ITVX is geo-restricted to the UK, but anyone can access this free streaming platform with a VPN. These tools can hide your real IP address (digital location) and connect you to a secure server in the UK, meaning you can unblock ITVX to live stream the 2026 World Cup for free from anywhere in the world.
Live stream France vs. Sweden for free by following these simple steps:
Subscribe to a streaming-friendly VPN (we recommend ExpressVPN)
Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)
Open up the app and connect to a server in the UK
Visit ITVX
Watch France vs. Sweden for free from anywhere in the world
The best VPNs for streaming are not free, but most do offer free-trials or money-back guarantees. By leveraging these offers, you can access free live streams of the 2026 World Cup without actually spending anything. This obviously isn't a long-term solution, but it does give you enough time to stream France vs. Sweden (plus more World Cup fixtures) before recovering your investment.
ExpressVPN's regular 30-day money-back guarantee is not available for any subscriptions purchased during the FIFA World Cup between June 10 and July 11. ExpressVPN remains our top pick for sport, but you will need to pay the monthly rate. Alternatively, Proton VPN still offers that all-important money-back guarantee.
What is the best VPN for ITVX?ExpressVPN is the best choice for bypassing geo-restrictions to stream live sport on ITVX, for a number of reasons:
Servers in 105 countries including the UK
Easy-to-use app available on all major devices including iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, and more
Strict no-logging policy so your data is secure
Fast connection speeds free from throttling
Up to 10 simultaneous connections
A two-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for $68.40 and includes an extra four months for free — 81% off for a limited time. Alternatively, you can get a one-month plan for just $12.99. That covers you for the duration of the World Cup.
Live stream France vs. Sweden in the 2026 FIFA World Cup for free.
Everyone says PowerToys should be included with Windows—here's why it isn't
There are plenty of things I use PowerToys for, and it replaces many tools. However, it seems weird that it is not a default tool on Windows. The separation isn't an oversight; it's actually a really good business move. Looking at the pros and cons of making it the default, Microsoft's choice makes a lot of sense.
Best 4th of July sales 2026: Deals on Ninja appliances, TVs, pool inflatables, tools, bedding, and much more
It doesn't matter if Prime Day runs for a singular day or nearly 100 hours like the 2026 sale last week — it's easy to get overwhelmed and forget to buy something. Luckily, Prime Day 2026's unusual timing means we get to flow directly into 4th of July sales.
If there are any items still lingering on your summer shopping list, you have quite the host of July 4th sales to shop in the days preceding July 4th on Saturday. As always, home gear like bedding and mattresses, countertop appliances, and tools are major 4th of July themes, as well as the outdoor items that come to mind when you think "fun in the sun": inflatables, kayaks, fire pits, and more are on sale.
Below, we're tracking the best 4th of July deals through the holiday weekend. More will be added to the list as sales go live, so check back before your festivities start.
Home dealsAirDoctor: Save up to $709 on air purifier bundles
Buffy: Save up to 25% sitewide
Caraway Home: Save up to 15% on cookware and bakeware
Cozy Earth: Save 20% when you buy three or more items
Crate & Barrel: Save up to 60% on dinnerware and drinkware, 35% on kitchen brands, and 30% on furniture
Ecobee: Save 25% on smart home thermostats
Home Depot: Save up to 30% on home appliances, living room and patio furniture, up to $165 on power tools, and up to $250 on grills
IKEA: Save up to 50% on furniture and storage, home textiles, pillows, and more
Joybird: Save up to 45% off on bestselling furniture and 35% sitewide
KitchenAid: Save up to 25% on select countertop appliances
Lovesac: Save 40% sitewide
Lowe's: Save up to 45% on select major appliances, up to 40% on lighting and ceiling fans, up to 30% on gardening products, and more
Mellow Sleep: Save up to 50% sitewide
Michael's: Save 50% on all red, white, and blue party decor, up to 60% on summer party and craft supplies, BOGO frames and shadow boxes, plus save 30% on all regular price purchases
Nest New York: Save 25% sitewide on Limited Editions
Nutribullet: Save up to 44% on blenders and ice cream makers
Pluto Pillow: Save $25 on a custom pillow + pillow case set
Pottery Barn: Save up to 70% on select outdoor furniture, bathroom accessories, quilts, and more, plus an extra 20% on select styles
Revival Rugs: Save 20% sitewide
Rugs Direct: Save up to 80% sitewide on brands like Safavieh, Chris Loves Julia, Loloi, Rifle Paper Co., and Rugs USA
SharkNinja: Save up to 30% on Ninja kitchen appliances and Shark vacuums, hair tools, and fans
Target: Save up to 25% on sunscreen, up to 20% on inflatable pools and water toys, and more
Wayfair: Save up to 70% on indoor and outdoor rugs, umbrellas, gazebos, mattresses, pillows, and more
Avocado: Save up to 15% on organic mattresses
Bear: Save 35% sitewide
Brooklyn Bedding: Save 30% sitewide
DreamCloud: Save up to 60% on mattresses and 66% on bundles
Eight Sleep: Save up to $500 on Pods and accessories
Tuft & Needle: Save 25% on all bundles
Purple: Save up to $800 on a mattress and base
Saatva: Save up to $650 on mattresses or up to $750 on bundles
Zinus: Save up to 60% off, plus get an additional 20% off
Baloo: Save $30 on weighted throw blanket + cotton duvet cover bundle
Brooklinen: Save 25% sitewide
Coyuchi: Save up to 40% sitewide
Cozy Earth: Save 20% on bedding bundles
Ettitude: Save up to 25% sitewide and up to 70% on final sale
Naturepedic: Save 20% on organic bedding + get a free muslin blanket
Silk & Snow: Save 20% on all sheets
For even more 4th of July TV deals, check out our story of the best Prime Day TV deals — almost every model is still at its Prime Day price as of June 30.
Insignia 55-inch F50 Series 4K TV — $179.99 $349.99 (save $170)
LG 55-inch 75B QNED 4K TV — $379.99 $599.99 (save $220)
Hisense 50-inch E7 Cinema Mini LED QLED 4K Fire TV — $398.99 $699 (save $300.01)
Hisense 55-inch U6 Pro Mini LED QLED 4K Fire TV — $529.99 $849.99 (save $320)
Hisense 50-inch S7N Canvas QLED 4K Art TV — $649.99 $1,299.99 (save $650)
Samsung 55-inch S90F OLED 4K TV — $997.99 $1,397.99 (save $400)
Hisense 65-inch U6 Pro Mini LED QLED 4K Fire TV — $698.99 $1,099.99 (save $401)
Hisense 65-inch S7N Canvas QLED 4K Art TV — $799.99 $1,299.99 (save $500)
TCL 65-inch QM8K Mini LED QLED 4K TV — $997.99 $1,499.99 (save $502)
Samsung 65-inch S90F OLED 4K TV — $1,199.99 $2,499.99 (save $1,300)
Hisense 65-inch UR8 RGB Mini LED 4K TV — $1,299.99 $1,999.99 (save $700)
LG 75-inch 75B QNED 4K TV — $699.99 $999.99 (save $300)
Hisense 75-inch U6 Pro Mini LED QLED 4K TV — $848.99 $1,399.99 (save $249.01)
TCL 75-inch QM8K Mini LED QLED 4K TV — $1,397.99 $1,999.99 (save $602)
Hisense 75-inch S7N Canvas QLED 4K Art TV — $1,398.99 $2,499.99 (save $1,101)
Hisense 75-inch UR8 RGB Mini LED 4K TV — $1,699.99 $2,499.99 (save $800)
LG 77-inch C5 OLED 4K TV — $1,999.99 $3,699.99 (save $1,700)
Insignia 85-inch QF QLED 4K TV — $659.99 $1,099.99 (save $440)
Hisense 85-inch QD6 Mini LED QLED 4K TV — $749.99 $1,099.99 (save $350)
Dyson: Save up to $130 on the Dyson Airwrap i.d., Airstrait, and Supersonic Nural
FabFitFun: Get a free Bonus Box worth $250 when you sign up for a membership
L'ange: Save up to 50% sitewide
Bote: Save up to 20% on Hangout inflatables, kayaks and paddle boards, and more
Diadem Sports: Save up to 50% sitewide on pickleball paddles, grips, and more
Dick's Sporting Goods: Save up to 50% on bikes, running shoes, kayaks, swimsuits and swim trunks, and more
Funboy: Save 25% sitewide
HOVERAir: Save up to 50% sitewide
Oru Kayak: Save 20% sitewide
Solo Stove: Save 20% on select fire pits and pizza ovens
TGW: Save up to 50% on select golf cart bags, golf stands, clothing and shoes, and drivers
Garmin: Save $50 on the Venu 4, $100 on the Forerunner 70, $40 on the Vívofit Jr. 3, $100 on the Tread 2 Overland Edition, and more
Best Buy: Save up to 45% on select TVs, up to $400 on select MacBooks and iPads, up to $600 on select Windows devices, and more
HP: Save up to 72% on OmniBook laptops, Omen gaming PCs, All-in-One desktops, and more
LG: Save up $1,300 on wall ovens, washers and dryers, and more
Tile: Save up to 30% on trackers
Best 4th of July sales 2026: Deals on Ninja appliances, TVs, pool inflatables, tools, bedding, and much more
It doesn't matter if Prime Day runs for a singular day or nearly 100 hours like the 2026 sale last week — it's easy to get overwhelmed and forget to buy something. Luckily, Prime Day 2026's unusual timing means we get to flow directly into 4th of July sales.
If there are any items still lingering on your summer shopping list, you have quite the host of July 4th sales to shop in the days preceding July 4th on Saturday. As always, home gear like bedding and mattresses, countertop appliances, and tools are major 4th of July themes, as well as the outdoor items that come to mind when you think "fun in the sun": inflatables, kayaks, fire pits, and more are on sale.
Below, we're tracking the best 4th of July deals through the holiday weekend. More will be added to the list as sales go live, so check back before your festivities start.
Home dealsAirDoctor: Save up to $709 on air purifier bundles
Buffy: Save up to 25% sitewide
Caraway Home: Save up to 15% on cookware and bakeware
Cozy Earth: Save 20% when you buy three or more items
Crate & Barrel: Save up to 60% on dinnerware and drinkware, 35% on kitchen brands, and 30% on furniture
Ecobee: Save 25% on smart home thermostats
Home Depot: Save up to 30% on home appliances, living room and patio furniture, up to $165 on power tools, and up to $250 on grills
IKEA: Save up to 50% on furniture and storage, home textiles, pillows, and more
Joybird: Save up to 45% off on bestselling furniture and 35% sitewide
KitchenAid: Save up to 25% on select countertop appliances
Lovesac: Save 40% sitewide
Lowe's: Save up to 45% on select major appliances, up to 40% on lighting and ceiling fans, up to 30% on gardening products, and more
Mellow Sleep: Save up to 50% sitewide
Michael's: Save 50% on all red, white, and blue party decor, up to 60% on summer party and craft supplies, BOGO frames and shadow boxes, plus save 30% on all regular price purchases
Nest New York: Save 25% sitewide on Limited Editions
Nutribullet: Save up to 44% on blenders and ice cream makers
Pluto Pillow: Save $25 on a custom pillow + pillow case set
Pottery Barn: Save up to 70% on select outdoor furniture, bathroom accessories, quilts, and more, plus an extra 20% on select styles
Revival Rugs: Save 20% sitewide
Rugs Direct: Save up to 80% sitewide on brands like Safavieh, Chris Loves Julia, Loloi, Rifle Paper Co., and Rugs USA
SharkNinja: Save up to 30% on Ninja kitchen appliances and Shark vacuums, hair tools, and fans
Target: Save up to 25% on sunscreen, up to 20% on inflatable pools and water toys, and more
Wayfair: Save up to 70% on indoor and outdoor rugs, umbrellas, gazebos, mattresses, pillows, and more
Avocado: Save up to 15% on organic mattresses
Bear: Save 35% sitewide
Brooklyn Bedding: Save 30% sitewide
DreamCloud: Save up to 60% on mattresses and 66% on bundles
Eight Sleep: Save up to $500 on Pods and accessories
Tuft & Needle: Save 25% on all bundles
Purple: Save up to $800 on a mattress and base
Saatva: Save up to $650 on mattresses or up to $750 on bundles
Zinus: Save up to 60% off, plus get an additional 20% off
Baloo: Save $30 on weighted throw blanket + cotton duvet cover bundle
Brooklinen: Save 25% sitewide
Coyuchi: Save up to 40% sitewide
Cozy Earth: Save 20% on bedding bundles
Ettitude: Save up to 25% sitewide and up to 70% on final sale
Naturepedic: Save 20% on organic bedding + get a free muslin blanket
Silk & Snow: Save 20% on all sheets
For even more 4th of July TV deals, check out our story of the best Prime Day TV deals — almost every model is still at its Prime Day price as of June 30.
Insignia 55-inch F50 Series 4K TV — $179.99 $349.99 (save $170)
LG 55-inch 75B QNED 4K TV — $379.99 $599.99 (save $220)
Hisense 50-inch E7 Cinema Mini LED QLED 4K Fire TV — $398.99 $699 (save $300.01)
Hisense 55-inch U6 Pro Mini LED QLED 4K Fire TV — $529.99 $849.99 (save $320)
Hisense 50-inch S7N Canvas QLED 4K Art TV — $649.99 $1,299.99 (save $650)
Samsung 55-inch S90F OLED 4K TV — $997.99 $1,397.99 (save $400)
Hisense 65-inch U6 Pro Mini LED QLED 4K Fire TV — $698.99 $1,099.99 (save $401)
Hisense 65-inch S7N Canvas QLED 4K Art TV — $799.99 $1,299.99 (save $500)
TCL 65-inch QM8K Mini LED QLED 4K TV — $997.99 $1,499.99 (save $502)
Samsung 65-inch S90F OLED 4K TV — $1,199.99 $2,499.99 (save $1,300)
Hisense 65-inch UR8 RGB Mini LED 4K TV — $1,299.99 $1,999.99 (save $700)
LG 75-inch 75B QNED 4K TV — $699.99 $999.99 (save $300)
Hisense 75-inch U6 Pro Mini LED QLED 4K TV — $848.99 $1,399.99 (save $249.01)
TCL 75-inch QM8K Mini LED QLED 4K TV — $1,397.99 $1,999.99 (save $602)
Hisense 75-inch S7N Canvas QLED 4K Art TV — $1,398.99 $2,499.99 (save $1,101)
Hisense 75-inch UR8 RGB Mini LED 4K TV — $1,699.99 $2,499.99 (save $800)
LG 77-inch C5 OLED 4K TV — $1,999.99 $3,699.99 (save $1,700)
Insignia 85-inch QF QLED 4K TV — $659.99 $1,099.99 (save $440)
Hisense 85-inch QD6 Mini LED QLED 4K TV — $749.99 $1,099.99 (save $350)
Dyson: Save up to $130 on the Dyson Airwrap i.d., Airstrait, and Supersonic Nural
FabFitFun: Get a free Bonus Box worth $250 when you sign up for a membership
L'ange: Save up to 50% sitewide
Bote: Save up to 20% on Hangout inflatables, kayaks and paddle boards, and more
Diadem Sports: Save up to 50% sitewide on pickleball paddles, grips, and more
Dick's Sporting Goods: Save up to 50% on bikes, running shoes, kayaks, swimsuits and swim trunks, and more
Funboy: Save 25% sitewide
HOVERAir: Save up to 50% sitewide
Oru Kayak: Save 20% sitewide
Solo Stove: Save 20% on select fire pits and pizza ovens
TGW: Save up to 50% on select golf cart bags, golf stands, clothing and shoes, and drivers
Garmin: Save $50 on the Venu 4, $100 on the Forerunner 70, $40 on the Vívofit Jr. 3, $100 on the Tread 2 Overland Edition, and more
Best Buy: Save up to 45% on select TVs, up to $400 on select MacBooks and iPads, up to $600 on select Windows devices, and more
HP: Save up to 72% on OmniBook laptops, Omen gaming PCs, All-in-One desktops, and more
LG: Save up $1,300 on wall ovens, washers and dryers, and more
Tile: Save up to 30% on trackers
4 more useful Samsung Galaxy Watch features that aren’t enabled by default
When you buy a Samsung device, you know you’re getting a bunch of features and customization options. This is best showcased on Galaxy phones, but it also applies to the Galaxy Watch. However, Samsung doesn’t enable all the best stuff for you.
House passes KIDS Act, advancing child online safety legislation
The House passed sweeping kids' online safety legislation Monday night in a 267-117 vote (with 47 members abstaining), but the bill's path forward is far from settled.
The legislation, known as the KIDS Act (Kids Internet and Digital Safety Act), emerged as a bipartisan compromise out of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, according to POLITICO. It would, among other policies, restrict minors' use of disappearing messages, require AI chatbots to disclose that they aren't human, and mandate age verification for platforms hosting pornographic content. Age-verification mandates typically require proof of age, such as submitting one's government ID or a facial scan.
SEE ALSO: Roblox launches accounts for kids and teens globallyThe KIDS Act packages portions from 14 digital safety bills, The Hill reported, including the long-debated Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA). This version of KOSA omits the "duty of care" provision central to the Senate's version, which would require platforms to actively prevent and mitigate harm to minors related to issues like self-harm, eating disorders, and substance abuse. Child safety advocates and senators from both parties are critiquing the absence, including the ranking member of the Senate Commerce Committee, Democratic Sen. Maria Cantwell, and the original KOSA co-sponsor, Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn, POLITICO reported.
KOSA itself has long been a flashpoint. In 2023, Blackburn said in an interview that protecting children from "the transgender [sic] in this culture and that influence" should be a top conservative priority, comments made shortly before she discussed KOSA — fueling concerns from LGBTQ advocates that the bill could be used to target queer content online even without saying so explicitly. Digital civil liberty groups, including the Electronic Frontier Foundation, have also argued for years that KOSA endangers online rights. EFF's Jason Kelley called KOSA's age-verification mechanism a "giant censorship machine that also is privacy invasive" at the time.
In May 2026, a coalition of 45 state attorneys general also warned that the broader House package could limit states' authority to enact stronger child safety protections of their own, a concern that "weighed heavily" on Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who ultimately voted against the bill, according to POLITICO.
Age verification in the KIDS ActBeyond the political fight over KOSA's text, the KIDS Act's reliance on age verification faces a more fundamental challenge.
Initial data suggest that age-verification laws simply don't accomplish what lawmakers intend. In a 2025 working paper (since published in the Journal of Law & Empirical Analysis), researchers analyzed Google Trends data across several states with age-verification laws already in effect. Researchers found a 51 percent drop in searches for Pornhub, the largest platform complying with such regulations. But that decline didn't reflect reduced demand — it reflected migration. Searches for XVideos, a major non-compliant platform, rose 48.1 percent in those same states, while searches for VPNs, commonly used to bypass geographic restrictions, climbed 23.6 percent.
Pornhub's parent company, Aylo, told Mashable at the time that traffic in Louisiana, one of the few states where it still operates while complying with verification rules, dropped roughly 80 percent. "These people did not stop looking for porn," the company stated. "They just migrated to darker corners of the internet that don't ask users to verify age, that don't follow the law, that don't take user safety seriously, and that often don't even moderate content."
Its authors acknowledged limitations, including an inability to isolate the search behavior of minors specifically — the population the laws are actually meant to protect — but another study published in Nov. 2025 reached similar conclusions.
As POLITICO notes, with the House and Senate still divided over which kids' safety proposal to advance, and Aug. recess narrowing the legislative window, it remains unclear whether the KIDS Act will pass in the Senate in its current form — or if concerns over its missing duty-of-care provision and its age-verification approach will force further changes.
House passes KIDS Act, advancing child online safety legislation
The House passed sweeping kids' online safety legislation Monday night in a 267-117 vote (with 47 members abstaining), but the bill's path forward is far from settled.
The legislation, known as the KIDS Act (Kids Internet and Digital Safety Act), emerged as a bipartisan compromise out of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, according to POLITICO. It would, among other policies, restrict minors' use of disappearing messages, require AI chatbots to disclose that they aren't human, and mandate age verification for platforms hosting pornographic content. Age-verification mandates typically require proof of age, such as submitting one's government ID or a facial scan.
SEE ALSO: Roblox launches accounts for kids and teens globallyThe KIDS Act packages portions from 14 digital safety bills, The Hill reported, including the long-debated Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA). This version of KOSA omits the "duty of care" provision central to the Senate's version, which would require platforms to actively prevent and mitigate harm to minors related to issues like self-harm, eating disorders, and substance abuse. Child safety advocates and senators from both parties are critiquing the absence, including the ranking member of the Senate Commerce Committee, Democratic Sen. Maria Cantwell, and the original KOSA co-sponsor, Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn, POLITICO reported.
KOSA itself has long been a flashpoint. In 2023, Blackburn said in an interview that protecting children from "the transgender [sic] in this culture and that influence" should be a top conservative priority, comments made shortly before she discussed KOSA — fueling concerns from LGBTQ advocates that the bill could be used to target queer content online even without saying so explicitly. Digital civil liberty groups, including the Electronic Frontier Foundation, have also argued for years that KOSA endangers online rights. EFF's Jason Kelley called KOSA's age-verification mechanism a "giant censorship machine that also is privacy invasive" at the time.
In May 2026, a coalition of 45 state attorneys general also warned that the broader House package could limit states' authority to enact stronger child safety protections of their own, a concern that "weighed heavily" on Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who ultimately voted against the bill, according to POLITICO.
Age verification in the KIDS ActBeyond the political fight over KOSA's text, the KIDS Act's reliance on age verification faces a more fundamental challenge.
Initial data suggest that age-verification laws simply don't accomplish what lawmakers intend. In a 2025 working paper (since published in the Journal of Law & Empirical Analysis), researchers analyzed Google Trends data across several states with age-verification laws already in effect. Researchers found a 51 percent drop in searches for Pornhub, the largest platform complying with such regulations. But that decline didn't reflect reduced demand — it reflected migration. Searches for XVideos, a major non-compliant platform, rose 48.1 percent in those same states, while searches for VPNs, commonly used to bypass geographic restrictions, climbed 23.6 percent.
Pornhub's parent company, Aylo, told Mashable at the time that traffic in Louisiana, one of the few states where it still operates while complying with verification rules, dropped roughly 80 percent. "These people did not stop looking for porn," the company stated. "They just migrated to darker corners of the internet that don't ask users to verify age, that don't follow the law, that don't take user safety seriously, and that often don't even moderate content."
Its authors acknowledged limitations, including an inability to isolate the search behavior of minors specifically — the population the laws are actually meant to protect — but another study published in Nov. 2025 reached similar conclusions.
As POLITICO notes, with the House and Senate still divided over which kids' safety proposal to advance, and Aug. recess narrowing the legislative window, it remains unclear whether the KIDS Act will pass in the Senate in its current form — or if concerns over its missing duty-of-care provision and its age-verification approach will force further changes.
The most controversial LGBTQ movie of the year is now streaming
The most acclaimed LGBTQ movies of the 2020s — All of Us Strangers, I Saw the TV Glow, Fire Island, Leviticus, even Tár — have little in common with Blue Film. Yet writer/director Elliott Tuttle’s Blue Film holds a 95 percent on Rotten Tomatoes, even with two very flawed characters and a subject matter most audiences would run from.
Unlike most of the aforementioned films, Blue Film contains no romance or sweetness. While Blue Film's characters are as complicated as Lydia Tár, they are not exceptional performers like she is, nor do they have any of the trappings of success, like money, partners, or kids. Blue Film is about one person who has done unspeakable things and another who humiliates lonely people for cash. Not only are the characters difficult to identify with, but their disclosures and interactions throughout the movie make it intentionally uncomfortable for the audience.
While Blue Film was adored by critics, it hasn't yet found a wide audience. Now that it's been released on streaming, it may find more people willing to confront its difficult story.
I recently connected with Tuttle and the movie's stars, Reed Birney and Kieron Moore, about Blue Film. One thing I wanted to know was what Birney and Moore thought of Tuttle's script. Both actors said they were fascinated by the characters, thought of them as challenges, but weren't sure anyone would actually see such a movie.
"What are the odds of a low-budget movie about a pedophile having an audience?," Birney, a Tony winner who also executive produced Blue Film, said. "For it to come out and be greeted so rapturously and so seriously, I'm still in complete disbelief... even when people don't like it, I understand why they don't like it."
SEE ALSO: The big question LGBTQ daters are asking, according to Hinge What's Blue Film about?The movie's protagonist, Aaron Eagle (Moore), is an LA-based queer camboy who performs for a gay male audience. He’s hostile to his online audience, peppering them with slurs, which seems to be what they want. A pathological liar, Aaron refuses to be honest about his life before he became a cam boy. He's also insecure, posturing an extreme version of masculinity by taking up as much space as possible and using his formidable size to intimidate. He’s pretty hard to like, at least in his current incarnation.
Aaron may have been more endearing before heartbreak — and life in LA — hardened him. The movie’s plot kicks into gear when Aaron heads to the home of a fan who's offered $50,000 for a night with him. Answering the door in a ski mask is Hank (Birney), and just like that Blue Film shifts into horror-thriller territory. The shocks will soon arrive, but there are no weapons, per se.
See, Hank is no stranger. He was one of his teachers back in Maine. Recently released from prison for trying to sexually assault one of his students, Hank is now in Los Angeles specifically to see Aaron, whom he believes he was in love with. That's news to Aaron.
What follows is an all-night conversation between the two men as Hank works to break down Aaron’s defenses and extract some truths from him. Hank is hiding a lot, too, but he seems more adept at opening up and offering up some version of his past, even if it’s filled with delusional thinking and bullshit justifications. Hank is a pedophile, and he seems too oddly comfortable with that fact. Some viewers will recoil at that, others will stay to see what happens.
Blue Film is a dark movie, with a hopeful ending.Hank is a deeply damaged man who has hurt children, but is superficially a much nicer person than Aaron — while Aaron broods and deflects, Hanks smiles and inquires. Thanks to Aaron's youth and the fact that he’s never done anything remotely as evil as Hank, the younger man seems salvageable in comparison. Because the movie is bookended with Aaron, Tuttle seems to indicate his Blue Film is not about redeeming Hank or making the audience sympathize with a pedophile. Yet Hank is an unexpected force for good to grown Aaron.
At one point, Hank talks about the two men as children and asks Aaron if he ever feels pity for his younger self. It’s a question at the heart of the film — do we ever offer compassion to our earlier versions, our innocent childhood selves eventually beaten into cynicism by life? Can we ever drop our adult armor and get back some of that joy and wonder? Hank reminds Aaron of the earlier self he's discarded; a likable kid who loved to sing. At the end of the encounter, Aaron is humming to himself in the shower and then napping peacefully, with the weight of his double identities seemingly sloughing off his shoulders. This suggests Aaron may have a chance at reclaiming some of his more innocent, joyful self.
Tuttle says he began journaling before the script came together. He was writing about his own adolescent sexuality and the story "became this whole other thing about loneliness and the way we explain ourselves to ourselves," he told Mashable.
Blue Film offers no easy answers.The conversation that constitutes the majority of Blue Film is occasionally interrupted by beer guzzling, weed smoking, and flashes of sex that end almost as fast as they begin; in that regard, there are some similarities between Blue Film and the 2011 gay classic Weekend, which explored how a short, chance encounter between two men can lead to a deep connection; maybe even a relationship. But, unlike Weekend, there is no climactic kiss in Blue Film, or even an indication its characters will ever see each other again.
Still, both movies speak to the queer experience of adopting personas to shed identities that no longer suit us. While Weekend used a sexy, confident twink as a foil for its repressed/depressed protagonist, Tuttle utilizes a pedophile to the same end. It’s a bold choice, and certainly not for everyone.
"It gave me a great reassurance of how intelligent audiences are," Moore said of the response to his film debut. "People want to watch things and pick them apart and decide how it makes them feel rather than being told how to feel."
Blue Film is available to stream on Apple TV and Prime Video.
The most controversial LGBTQ movie of the year is now streaming
The most acclaimed LGBTQ movies of the 2020s — All of Us Strangers, I Saw the TV Glow, Fire Island, Leviticus, even Tár — have little in common with Blue Film. Yet writer/director Elliott Tuttle’s Blue Film holds a 95 percent on Rotten Tomatoes, even with two very flawed characters and a subject matter most audiences would run from.
Unlike most of the aforementioned films, Blue Film contains no romance or sweetness. While Blue Film's characters are as complicated as Lydia Tár, they are not exceptional performers like she is, nor do they have any of the trappings of success, like money, partners, or kids. Blue Film is about one person who has done unspeakable things and another who humiliates lonely people for cash. Not only are the characters difficult to identify with, but their disclosures and interactions throughout the movie make it intentionally uncomfortable for the audience.
While Blue Film was adored by critics, it hasn't yet found a wide audience. Now that it's been released on streaming, it may find more people willing to confront its difficult story.
I recently connected with Tuttle and the movie's stars, Reed Birney and Kieron Moore, about Blue Film. One thing I wanted to know was what Birney and Moore thought of Tuttle's script. Both actors said they were fascinated by the characters, thought of them as challenges, but weren't sure anyone would actually see such a movie.
"What are the odds of a low-budget movie about a pedophile having an audience?," Birney, a Tony winner who also executive produced Blue Film, said. "For it to come out and be greeted so rapturously and so seriously, I'm still in complete disbelief... even when people don't like it, I understand why they don't like it."
SEE ALSO: The big question LGBTQ daters are asking, according to Hinge What's Blue Film about?The movie's protagonist, Aaron Eagle (Moore), is an LA-based queer camboy who performs for a gay male audience. He’s hostile to his online audience, peppering them with slurs, which seems to be what they want. A pathological liar, Aaron refuses to be honest about his life before he became a cam boy. He's also insecure, posturing an extreme version of masculinity by taking up as much space as possible and using his formidable size to intimidate. He’s pretty hard to like, at least in his current incarnation.
Aaron may have been more endearing before heartbreak — and life in LA — hardened him. The movie’s plot kicks into gear when Aaron heads to the home of a fan who's offered $50,000 for a night with him. Answering the door in a ski mask is Hank (Birney), and just like that Blue Film shifts into horror-thriller territory. The shocks will soon arrive, but there are no weapons, per se.
See, Hank is no stranger. He was one of his teachers back in Maine. Recently released from prison for trying to sexually assault one of his students, Hank is now in Los Angeles specifically to see Aaron, whom he believes he was in love with. That's news to Aaron.
What follows is an all-night conversation between the two men as Hank works to break down Aaron’s defenses and extract some truths from him. Hank is hiding a lot, too, but he seems more adept at opening up and offering up some version of his past, even if it’s filled with delusional thinking and bullshit justifications. Hank is a pedophile, and he seems too oddly comfortable with that fact. Some viewers will recoil at that, others will stay to see what happens.
Blue Film is a dark movie, with a hopeful ending.Hank is a deeply damaged man who has hurt children, but is superficially a much nicer person than Aaron — while Aaron broods and deflects, Hanks smiles and inquires. Thanks to Aaron's youth and the fact that he’s never done anything remotely as evil as Hank, the younger man seems salvageable in comparison. Because the movie is bookended with Aaron, Tuttle seems to indicate his Blue Film is not about redeeming Hank or making the audience sympathize with a pedophile. Yet Hank is an unexpected force for good to grown Aaron.
At one point, Hank talks about the two men as children and asks Aaron if he ever feels pity for his younger self. It’s a question at the heart of the film — do we ever offer compassion to our earlier versions, our innocent childhood selves eventually beaten into cynicism by life? Can we ever drop our adult armor and get back some of that joy and wonder? Hank reminds Aaron of the earlier self he's discarded; a likable kid who loved to sing. At the end of the encounter, Aaron is humming to himself in the shower and then napping peacefully, with the weight of his double identities seemingly sloughing off his shoulders. This suggests Aaron may have a chance at reclaiming some of his more innocent, joyful self.
Tuttle says he began journaling before the script came together. He was writing about his own adolescent sexuality and the story "became this whole other thing about loneliness and the way we explain ourselves to ourselves," he told Mashable.
Blue Film offers no easy answers.The conversation that constitutes the majority of Blue Film is occasionally interrupted by beer guzzling, weed smoking, and flashes of sex that end almost as fast as they begin; in that regard, there are some similarities between Blue Film and the 2011 gay classic Weekend, which explored how a short, chance encounter between two men can lead to a deep connection; maybe even a relationship. But, unlike Weekend, there is no climactic kiss in Blue Film, or even an indication its characters will ever see each other again.
Still, both movies speak to the queer experience of adopting personas to shed identities that no longer suit us. While Weekend used a sexy, confident twink as a foil for its repressed/depressed protagonist, Tuttle utilizes a pedophile to the same end. It’s a bold choice, and certainly not for everyone.
"It gave me a great reassurance of how intelligent audiences are," Moore said of the response to his film debut. "People want to watch things and pick them apart and decide how it makes them feel rather than being told how to feel."
Blue Film is available to stream on Apple TV and Prime Video.
Google launches Nano Banana 2 Lite and Gemini Omni Flash. How to try them now
Google has some new AI tools for users to mess around with.
The company announced in a blog post on Tuesday that Nano Banana 2 Lite and Gemini Omni Flash are now available. These are a couple of new toys that live within Google's suddenly very expansive AI ecosystem, both serving a different purpose.
SEE ALSO: Google confirms death of its Nest speaker lineupFor starters, Nano Banana 2 Lite is a speedy, cost-effective image generator that Google says is designed for people who currently use the original Nano Banana model. It can apparently spit out images four seconds after text inputs, making it ideal for prototyping. According to Google, this model is now available in Google AI Studio, other developer-centric tools like Gemini API, and consumer-facing places like the Gemini app and AI Mode in Google Search.
On top of that, Gemini Omni Flash is now available in a public preview in Google AI Studio and Gemini API, as well as in the Gemini app and Google Flow. This tool is designed for video generation and editing, allowing users to use natural language, video, and text inputs to get the results they want with Omni Flash. However, there are limitations: Videos can only be 10 seconds long, and Google says character consistency in scene changes is problematic at the moment.
Feel free to go check these out whenever you have a moment.


