Blogroll
Stop complaining about your USB-C cables: These 6 weird formats prove how bad things used to be
USB-C feels like the sensible ending to a long story, and not all of that story made a whole lot of sense. USB took plenty of strange detours before getting there, and some ideas were genius, while others didn't stand the test of time.
Avatar: The Last Airbender headlines the list of everything coming to Netflix in June
Summer is kicking in with full force, and with the temperature rising, Netflix's summer slate of releases, too, picks up heat. It's time for your watch list to get a new look, whether you're looking forward to a cozy romance watch or an addictive new series.
This Korean sedan undercuts the Lexus IS by thousands—and it's actually the better car
If you’re shopping for an affordable luxury sports sedan, the usual answer has always been a compact Lexus. However, rising prices and a shrinking lineup have opened the door for a newer rival to steal the spotlight. In 2026, one Korean sedan stands out by offering sharper performance, a richer interior, and a lower starting price than its Japanese competitor.
If you didn't buy your phone this year, it likely won't get Gemini Intelligence (Update)
Google has set steep requirements for Android 17's marquee Gemini Intelligence feature. They rule out most existing phones, to the point where some of the company's own Pixel 9 devices might not support the agentic AI.
Stop using your router's default settings—here's what attackers are looking for
Your router is literally the gateway between the internet and every phone, laptop, camera, and smart device in your home. If you leave the default settings alone, everything else on your network is significantly less secure.
This is the app that finally convinced me to give up Gmail on Android
I've been a Gmail user for almost two decades. It took one app to change that—and honestly, I didn't see it coming. If your Gmail app feels like a chore, Spark is a serious upgrade. It's fast, smart, and earns your trust quickly—with a few privacy tradeoffs worth knowing upfront.
How to watch Crystal Palace vs. Rayo Vallecano online for free
TL;DR: Live stream Crystal Palace vs. Rayo Vallecano in the Conference League final for free on SRF or TRT1. Access these free streaming platforms from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN.
Aston Villa secured an impressive victory in the Europa League final last week, and now the attention turns to the Conference League final. OK, most neutrals are probably looking further ahead to the resolution of the Champions League, but try telling that to fans of Crystal Palace and Rayo Vallecano. For this dedicated bunch, this is the one that really matters.
It's really difficult to pick a winner from this contest. Crystal Palace haven't enjoyed the most fruitful domestic campaign, but they've saved their best for this competition. Ray Vallecano finished in the top half of La Liga, and beat a strong Starsbourg team to make it to this showpiece event. It's going to be a real battle at the Red Bull Arena, and you can follow all the action without spending anything.
If you want to watch Crystal Palace vs. Rayo Vallecano in the Conference League final from anywhere in the world, we have all the information you need.
When is Crystal Palace vs. Rayo Vallecano?Crystal Palace vs. Rayo Vallecano in the Conference League final kicks off at 3 p.m. ET on May 27. This fixture takes place at the Red Bull Arena.
How to watch Crystal Palace vs. Rayo Vallecano for freeCrystal Palace vs. Rayo Vallecano in the Conference League final is available to live stream for free on SRF or TRT1.
SRF and TRT1 are geo-restricted to Switzerland and Turkey respectively, but anyone can access these free streaming platforms with a VPN. These tools can hide your real IP address (digital location) and connect you to a secure server in Switzerland or Turkey, meaning you can unblock SRF and TRT1 to stream the Conference League for free from anywhere in the world.
Live stream Crystal Palace vs. Rayo Vallecano for free by following these simple steps:
Subscribe to a streaming-friendly VPN (like 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 Switzerland or Turkey
Watch Crystal Palace vs. Rayo Vallecano 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 Conference League final without actually spending anything. This obviously isn't a long-term solution, but it does give you enough time to stream Crystal Palace vs. Rayo Vallecano before recovering your investment.
What is the best VPN for sport?ExpressVPN is the best choice for bypassing geo-restrictions to stream live sport on SRF and TRT1, for a number of reasons:
Servers in 105 countries including Switzerland and Turkey
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
30-day money-back guarantee
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. This plan includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a generous 30-day money-back guarantee. Alternatively, you can get a one-month plan for just $12.99 (with money-back guarantee).
Live stream Crystal Palace vs. Rayo Vallecano in the Conference League final for free with ExpressVPN.
Add a Google Pixel Watch 4 to your wrist for $40 off
SAVE $40: As of May 27, get the Google Pixel Watch 4 for $309.99 at Amazon, down from its usual price of $349.99. That's a discount of 11%.
Opens in a new window Credit: Amazon Google Pixel Watch 4 $309.99 at Amazon$349.99 Save $40 Get Deal
There are plenty of smartwatches out there, but if you're ready to pick one out today, you can get a great deal on one that can pull double duty as a fitness tracker. The Google Pixel 4 is up for grabs at a significant discount, so it's a good time to go ahead and take the plunge, especially if you're a Pixel or Android phone user.
As of May 27, get the Google Pixel Watch 4 for $309.99 at Amazon, down from its usual price of $349.99. That's a discount of 11%.
SEE ALSO: The 7 best smartwatches of 2025 include some surprisesThis smartwatch has plenty of features, whether you're looking to track your runs, keep an eye on your sleep quality, or manage your day. It has a bright, large Actua 360 domed display with scratch-resistant Gorilla Glass, and a comfortable band that's perfect for wearing while working out, going out, or just living your life.
It features over 40 exercise modes with real-time stats you can check at any time, heart rate tracking, SpO2 metrics, and much more. Plus, it offers 30 hours of battery life, or up to 48 hours on Battery Saver mode.
Mashable's Senior Culture Reporter and resident marathon runner Christianna Silva praised the Pixel Watch 4 for its brighter domed display than its predecessor, clearer speaker audio, smoother interface, and faster charging as well as its "serviceable design".
If you're ready to upgrade your current smartwatch or get one outright, now's the time to pick up a Pixel Watch 4. Be sure and grab it while it's discounted to save some serious cash.
This affordable Honda SUV is all most drivers really need
Compact crossovers have basically become the default new car for Americans. They’re easier to live with than larger SUVs, cheaper to run, and now come packed with tech and comfort features that used to feel reserved for pricier vehicles.
Province of Canada is releasing the Heated Rivalry fleece on June 3. Heres how to pre-order.
It might be cold in Saskatchewan but now we have the Heated Rivalry fleece to keep us warm! We asked (begged, relentlessly) for a brand to make the Canada fleece we all fell in love with from the hit HBO/Crave show, and Canadian brand Province of Canada was listening. After months of waiting, we finally have pre-order information. Here's everything we know so far ahead of the launch on June 3.
View this post on Instagram How to score the limited-edition Heated Rivalry fleece jacketSet your alarm, tell work you're busy, hire a sitter, because pre-orders go live at Province of Canada on June 3 at noon ET. Since the brand expects high demand, they're limiting pre-orders to one fleece per customer.
In June, Province of Canada met with Heated Rivalry costume designer Hanna Puley to design the fleece as a "collectible piece for fans of the series," according to the brand's press release. As of now, we don't have photos that depict the final fleece design. That information will become available on June 3.
It's worth mentioning that while pre-orders go live on June 3, the brand expects to ship all fleece jackets sometime between October 1 and 15. So we won't be wearing the fleece at the cottage this summer. Fall is a more appropriate time for a fleece anyway, right?
How much will the fleece cost with shipping to the U.S.?So far, we don't have pricing information for the Heated Rivalry fleece. Province of Canada says that information will go live during pre-order launch on June 3. We do, however, have shipping information. Orders heading to the U.S will have a shipping fee of $25 CAD, which works out to about $18 USD with the exchange rate as of May 27.
Hoodies listed on Province of Canada's site sell for about $100 USD and some sweatshirts and fleece overshirts go up to about $150 USD. Since the fleece is limited edition, we wouldn't be surprised to see it selling for more than average.
Province of Canada is donating 10% of net profits from the fleece to support You Can Play, a nonprofit that works with LGBTQ+ inclusion in sports. In addition, both the NHL and NHLPA are matching these donations up to $25,000 CAD each, for a potential total of an extra $50,000 CAD.
Sizing and return informationWe're thrilled to see Province of Canada will be making the fleece in sizes that range from XS to 5XL. You can check out the size chat here to get an idea of which size will work best. Keep in mind, all sales on the fleece are considered final sale. Province of Canada says that, due to demand, the fleece won't be eligible for returns or exchanges.
How to order official Heated Rivalry merch before June 3If you can't wait until June 3 to pre-order the fleece or for it to arrive in October, check out the official Heated Rivalry merch store. What was completely sold out for months is now stocked with t-shirts, hats, and accessories.
5 entertaining Netflix miniseries you can finish on a plane ride
Now that Memorial Day weekend has passed, let the summer festivities begin. For many of you, that will include a vacation that might involve a plane ride. Some people love to sleep on planes, while others prefer to pull out a book and read. For me, I use my time on a plane to watch movies and TV shows. If I'm stuck on a plane for several hours, why not catch up on some shows I missed?
DJIs 4K Osmo Action 4 camera just dropped to $209
SAVE 30%: As of May 27, you can get the DJI Osmo Action 4 for $208.98 at Amazon, down from $299. That's a 30% discount or $90.02 savings.
DJI Osmo Action 4 $208.98 at Amazon$299 Save $90.02 Get Deal at Amazon Get Deal at Amazon Get Deal at B&H Photo Video
If you've ever tried to awkwardly hover your phone over a swimming pool or hang it out of a moving vehicle just to get a good vacation video, it's probably time to invest in an action camera.
As of May 27, you can get the DJI Osmo Action 4 for $208.98 at Amazon, down from $299. That's a 30% discount or $90.02 savings. It's also the lowest price we've tracked and a great price point for beginners who literally can't afford to put their phone in danger anymore.
SEE ALSO: The DJI Power 1000 V2 is a near-perfect portable power station for content creatorsThe Osmo Action 4 shoots 4K video at 120fps and features a 155-degree ultra-wide field of view. It also has a 1/1.3-inch sensor that handles low light well enough to keep your underwater and evening clips from getting grainy.
Extending Human Intelligence Through AI
- Modern AI systems are powerful not because they replicate human intelligence, but because they presuppose it, by extending structures already present in human cognition and language.
- This perspective helps explain both AI’s remarkable capabilities and its recurring boundaries, including hallucinations and breakdowns in reasoning.
- This research argues that AI safety is a system-level challenge, shifting attention from “rogue AI” narratives toward harnessing engineering and governance.
- Understanding AI as an extension of human intelligence—not a replacement for it—offers a more grounded path for building trustworthy AI systems.
AI systems today can write essays, generate code, summarize complex ideas, and carry on conversations with remarkable fluency. Yet those same systems still struggle with tasks humans find intuitive: reliably tracking objects through change, reasoning compositionally in unfamiliar situations, or distinguishing truth from plausible fiction. These contradictions have fueled polarized debates about AI. Some see current systems as early forms of human-like intelligence; others dismiss them as sophisticated autocomplete.
In recent interdisciplinary work – including Adam Frank, Marcelo Gleiser, and Evan Thompson’s The Blind Spot (opens in new tab) and DeepMind researcher Alexander Lerchner’s The Abstraction Fallacy (opens in new tab) – a different picture is emerging. Rather than asking whether AI systems are becoming intelligent in the human sense, these approaches ask a more basic question: What if AI systems work because they rely on structures that are rooted in human cognition? This shift in perspective, which draws on the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl, helps make sense of both the capabilities and the limits of modern AI.
In our recent paper, The Origins of Artificial Intelligence in Natural Intelligence, we argue that modern AI systems are best understood neither as human minds nor as trivial statistical tricks. Instead, they extend structures that originate in human cognition itself. Further drawing on the phenomenology of Husserl, the paper proposes that language already contains sedimented structures of human understanding —structures that AI systems learn to model and extend. This perspective helps explain both the capabilities and the boundaries of contemporary AI.
Human perception is not simply passive reception of sensory data. We experience the world as stable things unfolding through change: a cup remains the same cup as we move around it; a melody remains recognizable even as individual notes pass away. Language emerges by expressing these stable structures in conceptual form. Words like “red,” “round,” or “larger than” articulate relationships that originate in lived experience.
Large language models learn statistical relationships within this linguistic world. They capture how concepts tend to relate across enormous bodies of human writing. This explains why AI systems can produce coherent responses across many domains. But it also explains why they hallucinate. Humans remain answerable to the world: experience continually corrects our expectations and beliefs. AI systems, by contrast, extend patterns within text itself. They can continue a line of reasoning with remarkable fluency, but they lack the lived engagement with the world that anchors meaning and truth.
AI Extends Human CognitionThis framework helps explain several recurring challenges in AI research. One is the “compositionality gap”—the tendency for language models to perform well on familiar reasoning patterns while failing when asked to combine concepts in genuinely novel ways. Research increasingly shows that larger models improve fluency and factual recall much faster than they improve true compositional reasoning. From our perspective, this is not simply an engineering limitation but a structural boundary: AI systems can extend patterns already sedimented in language, but they do not possess the world-directed understanding that allows humans to generate genuinely new conceptual relations.
A similar pattern appears in multimodal systems that combine language and vision. These systems can often label images correctly while still failing at robust reasoning about objects and their parts. They learn correlations between visual patterns and language rather than perceiving stable objects unfolding through time in the way humans do. The result is systems that can appear impressively fluent while remaining surprisingly brittle outside familiar patterns.
This perspective also reframes debates about AI safety. Public discussion often swings between fears of “rogue superintelligence” and claims that AI poses little meaningful risk. Our research suggests that both extremes misunderstand the nature of current systems. The most immediate risks arise not because AI possesses human-like intentions, but because it can extend patterns of reasoning without reflective responsibility to the world. Systems can generate persuasive but ungrounded outputs, automate flawed decisions at scale, or execute harmful actions if embedded in poorly governed environments.
This helps explain why AI safety is increasingly shifting from model safety to system safety. In practice, organizations already rely on layered safeguards—what the industry increasingly calls “harnesses”—to constrain, validate, and monitor AI behavior. Rather than temporary patches, our paper argues that these mechanisms reflect something fundamental about AI architecture itself: trustworthy behavior emerges from the work of builders of AI systems responsible for their behavior, a responsibility that cannot be delegated to or shared with models.
This interpretation aligns closely with how enterprises increasingly approach trustworthy AI deployment. Organizations need systems that can extend human intelligence while remaining governable, auditable, and aligned with human oversight. Understanding AI as a derived form of intelligence clarifies why layered governance, evaluation, and operational controls matter so deeply.
video series
On Second ThoughtA video series with Sinead Bovell built around the questions everyone’s asking about AI. With expert voices from across Microsoft, we break down the tension and promise of this rapidly changing technology, exploring what’s evolving and what’s possible.
Explore the series Opens in a new tabLooking ahead, we believe phenomenology offers more than a critique of AI—it offers a framework for understanding its promise. AI systems reveal something profound about human cognition itself: that meaning can be formalized, extended, and scaled in powerful new ways. The central societal risk of AI thus turns out to be kicking away the ladder of its origins in human experience and cognition – misinterpreting AI as a rival intelligence that diminishes our humanity and thus, in turn, diminishes the true promise of AI itself.
The question, then, is not whether AI will replace human intelligence. It is how we can responsibly build systems that extend human understanding while remaining grounded in the world from which that understanding arises. If we mistake AI systems for autonomous minds, we risk over-trusting them. If we dismiss them as trivial tricks, we risk overlooking one of the most important technological developments of our time. A more grounded interpretation recognizes both truths at once: AI is a genuine extension of human intelligence—and precisely because of that, humans remain responsible for how it is understood, governed, and used.
Opens in a new tabThe post Extending Human Intelligence Through AI appeared first on Microsoft Research.
Extending Human Intelligence Through AI
- Modern AI systems are powerful not because they replicate human intelligence, but because they presuppose it, by extending structures already present in human cognition and language.
- This perspective helps explain both AI’s remarkable capabilities and its recurring boundaries, including hallucinations and breakdowns in reasoning.
- This research argues that AI safety is a system-level challenge, shifting attention from “rogue AI” narratives toward harnessing engineering and governance.
- Understanding AI as an extension of human intelligence—not a replacement for it—offers a more grounded path for building trustworthy AI systems.
AI systems today can write essays, generate code, summarize complex ideas, and carry on conversations with remarkable fluency. Yet those same systems still struggle with tasks humans find intuitive: reliably tracking objects through change, reasoning compositionally in unfamiliar situations, or distinguishing truth from plausible fiction. These contradictions have fueled polarized debates about AI. Some see current systems as early forms of human-like intelligence; others dismiss them as sophisticated autocomplete.
In recent interdisciplinary work – including Adam Frank, Marcelo Gleiser, and Evan Thompson’s The Blind Spot (opens in new tab) and DeepMind researcher Alexander Lerchner’s The Abstraction Fallacy (opens in new tab) – a different picture is emerging. Rather than asking whether AI systems are becoming intelligent in the human sense, these approaches ask a more basic question: What if AI systems work because they rely on structures that are rooted in human cognition? This shift in perspective, which draws on the phenomenology of Edmund Husserl, helps make sense of both the capabilities and the limits of modern AI.
In our recent paper, The Origins of Artificial Intelligence in Natural Intelligence, we argue that modern AI systems are best understood neither as human minds nor as trivial statistical tricks. Instead, they extend structures that originate in human cognition itself. Further drawing on the phenomenology of Husserl, the paper proposes that language already contains sedimented structures of human understanding —structures that AI systems learn to model and extend. This perspective helps explain both the capabilities and the boundaries of contemporary AI.
Human perception is not simply passive reception of sensory data. We experience the world as stable things unfolding through change: a cup remains the same cup as we move around it; a melody remains recognizable even as individual notes pass away. Language emerges by expressing these stable structures in conceptual form. Words like “red,” “round,” or “larger than” articulate relationships that originate in lived experience.
Large language models learn statistical relationships within this linguistic world. They capture how concepts tend to relate across enormous bodies of human writing. This explains why AI systems can produce coherent responses across many domains. But it also explains why they hallucinate. Humans remain answerable to the world: experience continually corrects our expectations and beliefs. AI systems, by contrast, extend patterns within text itself. They can continue a line of reasoning with remarkable fluency, but they lack the lived engagement with the world that anchors meaning and truth.
AI Extends Human CognitionThis framework helps explain several recurring challenges in AI research. One is the “compositionality gap”—the tendency for language models to perform well on familiar reasoning patterns while failing when asked to combine concepts in genuinely novel ways. Research increasingly shows that larger models improve fluency and factual recall much faster than they improve true compositional reasoning. From our perspective, this is not simply an engineering limitation but a structural boundary: AI systems can extend patterns already sedimented in language, but they do not possess the world-directed understanding that allows humans to generate genuinely new conceptual relations.
A similar pattern appears in multimodal systems that combine language and vision. These systems can often label images correctly while still failing at robust reasoning about objects and their parts. They learn correlations between visual patterns and language rather than perceiving stable objects unfolding through time in the way humans do. The result is systems that can appear impressively fluent while remaining surprisingly brittle outside familiar patterns.
This perspective also reframes debates about AI safety. Public discussion often swings between fears of “rogue superintelligence” and claims that AI poses little meaningful risk. Our research suggests that both extremes misunderstand the nature of current systems. The most immediate risks arise not because AI possesses human-like intentions, but because it can extend patterns of reasoning without reflective responsibility to the world. Systems can generate persuasive but ungrounded outputs, automate flawed decisions at scale, or execute harmful actions if embedded in poorly governed environments.
This helps explain why AI safety is increasingly shifting from model safety to system safety. In practice, organizations already rely on layered safeguards—what the industry increasingly calls “harnesses”—to constrain, validate, and monitor AI behavior. Rather than temporary patches, our paper argues that these mechanisms reflect something fundamental about AI architecture itself: trustworthy behavior emerges from the work of builders of AI systems responsible for their behavior, a responsibility that cannot be delegated to or shared with models.
This interpretation aligns closely with how enterprises increasingly approach trustworthy AI deployment. Organizations need systems that can extend human intelligence while remaining governable, auditable, and aligned with human oversight. Understanding AI as a derived form of intelligence clarifies why layered governance, evaluation, and operational controls matter so deeply.
PODCAST SERIES
The AI Revolution in Medicine, RevisitedJoin Microsoft’s Peter Lee on a journey to discover how AI is impacting healthcare and what it means for the future of medicine.
Listen now Opens in a new tabLooking ahead, we believe phenomenology offers more than a critique of AI—it offers a framework for understanding its promise. AI systems reveal something profound about human cognition itself: that meaning can be formalized, extended, and scaled in powerful new ways. The central societal risk of AI thus turns out to be kicking away the ladder of its origins in human experience and cognition – misinterpreting AI as a rival intelligence that diminishes our humanity and thus, in turn, diminishes the true promise of AI itself.
The question, then, is not whether AI will replace human intelligence. It is how we can responsibly build systems that extend human understanding while remaining grounded in the world from which that understanding arises. If we mistake AI systems for autonomous minds, we risk over-trusting them. If we dismiss them as trivial tricks, we risk overlooking one of the most important technological developments of our time. A more grounded interpretation recognizes both truths at once: AI is a genuine extension of human intelligence—and precisely because of that, humans remain responsible for how it is understood, governed, and used.
Opens in a new tabThe post Extending Human Intelligence Through AI appeared first on Microsoft Research.
Lawn care for less: Save $500 on the Mova LiDAX Ultra 2000 robot lawn mower
SAVE $500: As of May 27, the Mova LiDAX Ultra 2000 robot lawn mower is on sale for $1,299 at Amazon. That's nearly 30% off its list price of $1,799 and its lowest price on record.
Opens in a new window Credit: Mova Mova LiDAX Ultra 2000 robot lawn mower $1,299 at Amazon$1,799 Save $500 Get Deal
Still pushing a heavy lawn mower through your yard? It may be time to consider a robot lawn mower. Similar to robot vacuums, these battery-powered, AI-boosted machines are a low-maintenance alternative to traditional gas mowers. Not to mention, they're better for the environment and can give you hours of your time back this summer. If you're ready to make the jump, the Mova LiDAX Ultra 2000 robot mower is a solid all-rounder and is on sale for $500 off.
As of May 27, the Mova LiDAX Ultra 2000 robot lawn mower is on sale for $1,299 at Amazon. That's nearly a 30% price drop from its $1,799 list price and marks its best price on record.
While most robot mowers are marketed towards specific types of lawns, the Ultra 2000 is designed to be an all-rounder. Of course, if you have an extremely complex, large, or hilly yard, you may want to adjust your expectations. It packs 360-degree 3D Lidar and AI vision to accurately auto-map your yard and cut with precision, while avoiding obstacles along the way. It also has UltraTrim, a precision-focused edge-trimming feature that cuts within two inches of walls, hedges, and raised edges. It can also handle 45% grade terrain and overcome obstacles up to 1.6 inches high.
Using the app, you can adjust the cutting height between 1.2 inches and 3.9 inches, set mowing zones and schedules, switch up the mowing style and efficiency, and even design custom mowing patterns for your lawn.
If lawn care is the bane of your existence and you have over $1,000 to put towards outsourcing it to a robot, the Mova LiDAX Ultra 2000 robot lawn mower is a solid deal at $500 off.
Laser engravers just got cheap enough to beat 3D printers—and they're way easier to use
Are you looking for a new satisfying hobby to pick up? Let me introduce you to laser engraving. I've been laser engraving for many years, but there's never been a better time to pick up the hobby than now.
COSMIC desktop does display scaling and tiling better than GNOME and KDE
For years, most of us have treated Linux display scaling as one of those problems you learn to work around rather than solve. You buy a high-resolution monitor, set scaling to something reasonable like 125% or 150%, and then wait for the compromises to appear. One app looks sharp, another looks slightly smeared, and you can’t read text.
A Samsung phone price increase could be on the way. Thank RAMageddon.
Stop us if you've heard this before: A popular tech brand is increasing the price of some of its products because of the ongoing RAM shortage. That's right, RAMageddon strikes again.
This time, the culprit is Samsung. Greek outlet TechManiacs (via Android Authority) reported that Samsung will increase the prices of flagship phones in Greece starting in June. These price hikes will apply to Galaxy S series phones, the Galaxy Z Flip and Z Fold 7 devices, and Galaxy FE handsets. All of those devices will see their prices go up by roughly the equivalent of $116 USD, but versions with higher storage capacities could see even bigger price increases.
SEE ALSO: Can Samsung and Gentle Monster finally make smart glasses cool?While these price hikes are limited to the Greek market at this point in time, they could very well spill over to the rest of Europe and even the U.S. over time.
Samsung already applied slight price increases to the Galaxy S26 lineup in the U.S. earlier this year. Motorola recently hiked prices on some of its phones by 50 percent, and the new Motorola Razr Ultra arrived this month with a $200 price increase. With the next Galaxy Unpacked event scheduled for July, more Samsung price increases could be coming this summer.
The global shortage of memory (which is widely attributed to the high demand for RAM and memory components in AI data centers) has prompted several major tech companies, such as Lenovo, Nintendo, and Dell to raise prices on their products throughout this year, a trend that will likely continue into 2027.
So, if you want a flagship Samsung device, now might be the time to go grab one.
The DJI Power 1000 V2 portable power station is on sale at Amazon for under $390
SAVE $312.90: The DJI Power 1000 V2 is on sale at Amazon for $386.10, down from the list price of $699 at DJI. That's a 45% discount.
Opens in a new window Credit: DJI DJI Power 1000 V2 $386.10 at Amazon$699 Save $312.90 Get Deal
Sure, the calendar doesn't say it's summer, but we all know the unofficial start of summer was last weekend. That means it's time to dig out the camping gear, hope to get a campsite reservation, and take off for the great wilderness. Pack the bug spray. But instead of dealing with dead phone batteries this year, upgrade to a portable power station. There's a great model on sale today at Amazon.
As of May 27, the DJI Power 1000 V2 is on sale for $386.10 at Amazon, marked down from the normal price of $$386.10, marked down from the list price of $699 at DJI. That's a 45% discount.
I've tested dozens of portable power stations over the last few years, and it's clear that DJI is making great models for content creators. The SDC port is unique to DJI and means those with DJI drones can quick-charge drone batteries, getting them back into the air with less time on the ground recharging.
SEE ALSO: Memorial Day sales are over but the DJI Mic Mini is still sitting at a record-low priceHowever, if you're not out flying drones, the DJI Power 1000 V2 is still a noteworthy option. That's especially true since today's sale price brings the station down to under $400. By comparison, the Anker Solix C1000 is on sale at Amazon for $449.99 and the Jackery Explorer 1000 V2 is $449. Both of those have similar battery capacity to the Power 1000 V2.
The DJI Power 1000 V2 comes with 1,024Wh of battery with a stable output rated at 2,600W. It has four standard AC ports, two USB-A, and two USB-C ports, in addition to dual SDC. I also found the station to be relatively easy to carry thanks to the side handles.
If you're a content creator needing extra off-grid power or you're taking the family camping this summer, consider this low price on the DJI Power 1000 V2. Order it soon and it might even arrive before your next adventure.
Samsung hid the Galaxy Watch's best notification settings three menus deep
Samsung Galaxy Watches offer a wide array of options that put them a rung above other Wear OS devices. The only bad thing about this is that you might be missing some of the best features that aren’t enabled by default. This is especially true when it comes to notifications.


