Blogroll

I ditched smart bulbs years ago, but this one feature pulled me back in

How-To Geek - 1 hour 20 min ago

I have always had a rocky relationship with smart bulbs. I never really saw much benefit beyond the initial novelty, which wore off rather quickly.

Categories: IT General, Technology

These 5 open-source apps are Windows-only, and Linux users are missing out

How-To Geek - 1 hour 50 min ago

When you hear "open source" it's natural to immediately think of Linux, but what software license an application uses has nothing to do with which operating system it runs on.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Temporary location access is Android 17's best privacy feature nobody's using yet

How-To Geek - 2 hours 5 min ago

Android 17 is the year’s big version update, but it’s admittedly not the most exciting one we’ve seen in recent years. That’s not to say there’s been nothing useful added, though. One of the quieter new features will make location access a much more locked-down permission.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Why I don’t trust Windows copy for big files—and what I use instead now

How-To Geek - 2 hours 6 min ago

Copying around a couple of small files, like screenshots or documents, is, for the most part, normally fine. They’re normally small files, and you won’t have much trouble moving them around. The problem, however, comes when you actually have to move around a file that’s several gigabytes in size, or worse, several of them—using the regular tools meant for that purpose, your PC will be struggling.

Categories: IT General, Technology

I ditched my eero router for UniFi, and the best feature didn't cost me a dime

How-To Geek - 2 hours 20 min ago

While UniFi used to be seen as an SMB or enterprise-only networking option, it has increasingly become a more consumer-friendly networking platform. Here are four features that make UniFi a real alternative to Amazon's eero platform.

Categories: IT General, Technology

This open-source Lightroom alternative processes RAW files locally and never asks for a subscription

How-To Geek - 2 hours 50 min ago

Lightroom is still the go-to editor for many people who shoot RAW photos. But it comes with an expensive subscription and the desktop version feels increasingly neglected in favor of its cloud-based companion. If you’d rather keep your files on your own computer instead of syncing everything online, darktable is one of the best free alternatives.

Categories: IT General, Technology

The Raspberry Pi still crushes an ESP32 at these 5 things

How-To Geek - 3 hours 20 min ago

ESP32 boards have become a popular choice for hobbyist projects and smart home sensors. For many projects, they can be a better choice than a Raspberry Pi, since they're cheaper, use less power, and are still very capable. For some things, however, the Raspberry Pi still wins.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Seth Meyers reacts to Trumps touching tribute for Lindsey Graham

Mashable - 3 hours 41 min ago

Following the death of U.S. senator Lindsey Graham, Donald Trump called up Fox & Friends to talk about his friend — and it was quite the eulogy.

Like Jon Stewart on The Daily Show and Jimmy Kimmel Live! guest host Ike Barinholtz, Seth Meyers reacted to Trump's comments about the South Carolina Republican, which included statements like, "He'd call me all the time, I'd say, 'Stop calling me, Lindsey.'"

"What a touching tribute," said Meyers. "Very rare for the person giving the eulogy to say, 'I wish I'd talked to him less.'"

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Categories: IT General, Technology

How Lindows almost destroyed Microsoft's Windows trademark

How-To Geek - 3 hours 49 min ago

Ever since Linux distributions gained a cult following among computer users in the '90s, they dreamed of overtaking Windows as the most widely used desktop OS. One company tried to do it by creating a distro that was as Windows-like as possible. This effort, Lindows, attracted the ire of Microsoft, but a trademark lawsuit almost backfired on the software giant.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Seth Meyers 5-minute recap of the last 3 weeks of news is pure chaos

Mashable - 3 hours 49 min ago

Sometimes so much news is happening that time itself becomes difficult to keep track of.

That's certainly the sense you get watching Seth Meyers' Late Night return monologue above, in which he rattles through the headlines for the past few weeks while becoming increasingly out of breath.

"Everyone thought Mitch McConnell was dead because he disappeared, and then Lindsey Graham said he was gonna go check on him when he was off, and then Graham died?" pants Meyers. "Trump intervened to get a red card in a World Cup match overturned while admitting he didn't know what a red card was, and then when Belgium beat the U.S. they made fun of Trump by doing his stupid dance?"

It goes on like that for five full minutes with barely any breaks, and Meyers struggling to finish a sentence before moving on to the next headline.

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Categories: IT General, Technology

The ASUS ROG Swift 4K OLED gaming monitor has hit its best-ever price at Amazon — save over $400

Mashable - 3 hours 58 min ago

TL;DR: The ASUS ROG Swift 32-inch 4K OLED gaming monitor (PG32UCDMR) is on sale for $899 at Amazon, down from its $1,299.99 list price.

Opens in a new window Credit: ASUS ASUS ROG Strix 32-inch 4K OLED Gaming Monitor (PG32UCDMR) $899 at Amazon
$1,299.99 Save $400.99 Get Deal

Putting 4K, OLED, and a 240Hz refresh rate together usually sends a gaming monitor well past the $1,000 mark, but Amazon has now dragged one of ASUS’ premium ROG Swift displays below $900 for a limited time. 

As of July 14, the ASUS ROG Swift 32-inch 4K OLED gaming monitor (PG32UCDMR) is on sale at Amazon for $899. That cuts $400.99 from its $1,299.99 list price, taking 31% off the high-end display. It's also the monitor’s lowest-ever price on Amazon, as we confirmed when checking price tracker camelcamelcamel.

At the time of writing, this monitor — sold and shipped directly by Amazon — can be delivered to you for free as soon as Sunday, 19 July. You can get it even sooner if you're a Prime member.

The PG32UCDMR pairs a 31.5-inch 4K QD-OLED panel with a 240Hz refresh rate and 0.03ms response time. It is also G-SYNC Compatible, giving players another way to keep fast movement smooth when frame rates fluctuate, both in multiplayer hits like Fortnite and awesome single-player adventures like Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced.

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For colour and HDR, the display covers 99% of the DCI-P3 gamut, supports true 10-bit colour, and carries VESA DisplayHDR 400 True Black certification. That makes it not only useful for more vivid gaming, but also for creative work, like editing photos and video on the same setup. 

Alongside the usual reliable connectivity options (DisplayPort 2.1, HDMI 2.1, and USB-C with 90W Power Delivery), ASUS has also included its OLED Care Pro features — including a Neo Proximity Sensor that detects when you step away and switches the panel to a black screen to help reduce burn-in risk.

For a final flourish for peace of mind, the monitor is covered by a three-year warranty with burn-in protection. The box includes DisplayPort, HDMI, USB-C, and USB 3.2 cables, a VESA mount kit, ROG pouch, and other setup essentials.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Kimmel guest host Ike Barinholtz examines Trumps reaction to Lindsey Grahams death

Mashable - 4 hours 3 min ago

Following the death of U.S. senator Lindsey Graham, many public statements have been made about the South Carolina Republican and close Donald Trump ally.

Trump himself made a call to Fox & Friends to talk about Graham, and the comments were a mixed bag, from taking light jabs at the senator's golf skills to getting in a few comments about "rigged elections."

Like Jon Stewart on The Daily Show and Late Night's Seth Meyers, Jimmy Kimmel Live! guest host Ike Barinholtz examined Trump's wide-ranging eulogy.

"We all grieve in different ways," said The Studio star in his monologue. "There's stages to grief: it's denial, anger, spacing out, pissing yourself, forgetting what you were talking about, and then changing the subject completely."

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Categories: IT General, Technology

The Lego Animal Crossing Blathers’s Museum Collection has hit a new low price at Amazon — save over $15

Mashable - 4 hours 8 min ago

SAVE OVER $10: As of July 14, the Lego Animal Crossing Blathers’s Museum Collection has dropped to a new record-low price of $61.10 at Amazon. That's $18.89 off its full price of $79.99.

Opens in a new window Credit: Lego Lego Animal Crossing Blathers’s Museum Collection (77056) $61.10 at Amazon
$79.99 Save $18.89   Get Deal

If you're a fan of both Lego and Animal Crossing, Amazon has quite the treat for you right now. The delightful Lego Animal Crossing Blathers’s Museum Collection has officially hit a new low price at Amazon, though not for long.

As of July 14, this cute Lego set has dropped from its list price of $79.99 to $61.10, saving you just over $18. However, there's a bar in the top right corner that shows this build is quickly being claimed (89%, as of the time of this writing). So if you want to take advantage of this offer, you'll want to be quick to grab it before it's gone.

SEE ALSO: Lego's Olivia Rodrigo collab just dropped: Where to buy, preorder details, price

With 543 pieces, this Lego set of Blathers’s Museum Collection sees you creating the museum alongside some exhibits that are customizable. There's also fun extras like a fountain and the Roost café, alongside two minifigures of Lily the frog and Blathers the owl (the museum's curator).

Again, this deal is going quick. Act fast to save on the Lego Animal Crossing Blathers’s Museum Collection set at Amazon. Looking for more great Lego to work on this year? Check out our roundup of the 10 best Lego sets of 2026 so far to see some of our favorites.

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Categories: IT General, Technology

Is ChatGPT ruining your attraction to your partner?

Mashable - 4 hours 10 min ago

Beth, 27, had been on four dates with a man we’ll call Matt* when the pair passed a modern relationship milestone. 

Matt followed Beth on Instagram. She followed him back. They continued to chat over WhatsApp and planned their next date. 

But the next day, Beth spotted something alarming. On Matt’s Instagram stories, he had partaken in a trend to use generative AI to create a doll-like figure of himself, complete with themed accessories. Beth was immediately repulsed. 

“It was cringe on multiple levels,” Beth told me in aghast tones over spicy margaritas in cans. “Firstly that he took part in a lame social media trend – and late, might I add – secondly that he thought the result was interesting enough to share, but mostly that he used AI to do it, and had no hesitation in admitting that. Bring back shame.” 

“It was cringe on multiple levels."

Beth went sleuthing through Matt’s grid and found that some of the captions – not all – had a whiff of AI about them. She scrolled back through their initial chats on Hinge and suddenly, all his charming lines seemed suspicious. “There weren’t em dashes or anything like that, but his opener felt off; it didn’t sound like him.” 

She began to spiral. Just how much of their apparent connection had been forged by the likes of ChatGPT and Claude? Had he used AI to choose the specific pub they went to for date number two, which had been strangely central rather than in their respective locales of east and south London? Had he fed their conversations to a bot to craft a smooth response? 

SEE ALSO: Companion AI use is a dating dealbreaker, Match survey says

Along with that suspicion came another feeling, which Beth acknowledges could be seen as superficial: that AI is embarrassing, thus Matt was embarrassing, and she was significantly less attracted to him than she was before. She ghosted him. 

Beth is far from alone in experiencing the AI ick. Many daters have negative views of AI use, according to research by Match Group, which owns dating apps including Tinder, Hinge, and OkCupid. Fifty one percent of women aged 18 to 24 say they would refuse to date someone who uses an AI companion app, per the research. Generally, studies point to negative feelings about AI outweighing positive emotions, so it’s little surprise that these sentiments are carrying over into our romantic relationships. 

These negative views of AI are rubbing up against increased use of it for, well, everything, Ofcom research says more than half (54 percent) of UK adults use AI tools, and this jumps up to 79 percent among those aged 16-24 and 74 percent for 25-34s. The data suggests we’re using AI in increasingly personal areas of our lives.   The most common use of generative AI in both 2026 and 2025 was therapy and companionship, according to 2026’s AI In The Wild report. The 7th most common use (out of 100 on the list) was "relationship advice," per the findings.

AI isn’t only intruding in the early dating world. The AI ick is affecting long-term relationships, too –  Wired journalist Alessandra Ram coined “the sad wives of AI” to describe the many women disgruntled by their partner’s overreliance on the tech. Men are more likely to use generative AI than women, so it’s unsurprising that when I asked people for stories of the AI ick, only women in heterosexual relationships reported experiencing the issue. 

We haven’t yet seen a wave of AI-prompted divorces or ‘AI widows’, but couples’ therapists tell me they’ve heard clients mentioning AI’s impact, which can range from irritation to the consideration of a breakup. Amy*, 34, has been with her husband for eight years and doubts AI will result in their divorce, but she admits (anonymously) that she has concerns about her partner’s AI use. 

"I worry how it's impacting his critical thinking."

“He uses it to help him make decisions – where to buy a used car, how to write a sternly worded email to the council, what smart shoes to buy for a wedding,” she explains. “I'd say he uses it weekly, sometimes more. I try not to judge him for it because I know so many people are doing the same, and nowadays thanks to AI overview, it's not too dissimilar to plugging a question into Google. But I worry how it's impacting his critical thinking; if Chat is making every decision for him (sometimes incorrectly – AI is rife with misinformation). Not to mention the impact it's having on the job market and the environment.”

Amy has raised the topic with her husband, but says “he doesn’t see it as a problem”. It’s worth noting that Amy is not a total AI refusenik, having turned to it for advice with legal matters and tax, which does make her feel like “a bit of a hypocrite”. But even so, each time she learns her husband has used AI for something, the AI ick arrives – “to an extent you can get ‘the ick’ when you’re married!”

Similarly, Nara*’s boyfriend of three years, Sam*, has an “almost daily” AI habit that causes frustration, especially when he uses it to win arguments or prove her wrong. “I don’t like when he uses AI as a primary source of research on a topic,” says Nara. “It’s such a shallow way to understand something. What I find more frustrating is if I buy him a book on a topic, he won’t read the book but he’ll just use AI.” Asked what she would change in their relationship if he had a non-AI magic wand, Nara said: “Magically make him seek information from a variety of sources.” 

While the AI ick in casual dating tends to be more about simply our perception of the type of person who uses AI, in more serious relationships it can emerge from a deeper hurt – that caused by a partner turning away from you and towards a third party, in this case AI. “If AI is used as an ally or as a kind of ammunition in an argument, this could be quite inflammatory,” says Joanna Harrison, a couples' therapist and the author of Five Arguments All Couples (Need To) Have. “It leaves the other person feeling more defensive and less likely to engage. If AI is tending to be sycophantic, and making one person feel that their view is the ‘right’ one, then this is going to make them less curious in their partner’s point of view – and that’s what really matters, rather than who is right, that both people are interested in each other.” 

SEE ALSO: Why 'Love Island' feels like the most accurate show about dating today

AI can act as an unintentional wall in the middle of connection. People praise AI because it makes things easier and quicker, requiring less effort from the human. But in a relationship, effort goes a long way. We want our partners to try in order to show that they care. "Our intimate couple relationships are the place we long to be seen, to be understood, to be known in a special way," Harrison continues. "Intimacy builds when a partner shows that they have understood something of us, or shows that they are really trying to understand who we are, as well as at the same time being open themselves to being seen and trying to express themselves. When AI is the substitute for this, the sense of a special intimate connection can be broken," she adds. 

“Take a present or a date planned and chosen by a partner’s imagination. There’s a sense of effort going into it, thought going into it, a kind of love ‘work’ that has gone on to try to curate something bespoke. If AI has chosen the gift or planned the evening, does it feel so intimate?” 

Experts are united in their belief that the answer to the AI ick and the woes caused by it does not lie in pretending not to see the ghostly online presence in the room. Jane James, a couples' therapist of 18 years, says: “Ignoring it is the worst thing to do.” 

Instead, conversation is needed. And as soon as possible. “The more a habit, such as more tech use, becomes embedded, the harder it is to raise the subject and the more it feels like conflict or criticism,” James notes. “The topic needs to be identified and discussed early on. Talk about AI generally together. What are your opinions? Do you use it? What for? Do friends use it? Raise it as a subject like everything else.”

Agreeing on ground rules is wise, but these shouldn’t be a blanket ban on AI use. We’re aiming for compromise, not control. A boundary might be that AI shouldn’t be used during quality time together. Or conversely, you might agree that it can be used for relationship purposes as long as both partners are involved in the prompts. “Using AI together for planning, investigating, and research is an excellent idea,” suggests James. “Sharing what you find out and using the information for activities etc is positive and helpful.” 

AI isn’t doomed to have a negative impact on your relationship – it’s all about how you use it. Harrison says: “If it helps a couple turn towards each other, not away from each other, and supports them to listen to each other more, and see each other's perspective, then this could be a positive. If on the other hand it puts up a barrier between them or polarises them then I see it as something less helpful.” 

Finally, if you’re the partner who’s using AI more frequently, be conscious of how it might shape how your partner sees you. Carolina*, 45, says that her ex’s excessive use of AI “may have cost the relationship”. They’ve broken up now but his AI posts give her the retroactive ick. Over the course of our conversation, she uses the following words to describe how his AI use makes her view him: “narcissistic, wanky, embarrassing, so fake, and so desperate.” Her ending note is simply to describe him as “so cringe”. Unless these are words you would like a partner to use to describe you, perhaps proceed with caution. 

Critical thinking, an appreciation of human creativity, typos in place of perfection – these are things that have never been sexier.

*Names have been changed

Categories: IT General, Technology

The MSI Katana 15 HX is back to its record-low price at Amazon — save $181 on this beast

Mashable - 4 hours 20 min ago

SAVE $181: As of July 14, the MSI Katana 15 HX Gaming Laptop is down to $1,133.67 at Amazon. That saves you $181.33 on its typical $1,315 price.

Opens in a new window Credit: MSI MSI Katana 15 HX Gaming Laptop $1,133.67 at Amazon
$1,315 Save $181.33   Get Deal

Prime Day may be over, but one of its best gaming laptop prices is sticking around a little longer. The MSI Katana 15 HX has dropped back to its Prime Day record-low price of $1,133.67 at Amazon, saving you $181.33 off its typical price. If you've been waiting for an RTX 5060 gaming laptop to dip closer to the $1,100 mark, now's your chance to buy.

The MSI Katana 15 HX pairs an Intel Core i7 processor with Nvidia's new GeForce RTX 5060 graphics card, giving you plenty of power for modern games, multitasking, and demanding apps. It supports features like ray tracing and DLSS 4, which help compatible games look better and run more smoothly while putting less strain on the hardware.

SEE ALSO: I tested the Arc G3 Extreme inside MSI’s spendy Claw 8 EX AI+ handheld

There's a 15.6-inch QHD display with a 165Hz refresh rate, so games look sharper than they would on a standard Full HD screen, and fast-moving action feels much smoother. The display also covers 100% of the DCI-P3 color gamut, making colors look richer whether you're gaming, watching movies, or editing photos.

MSI also packs in a dual-fan cooling system to help maintain steady performance during longer gaming sessions, plus a four-zone RGB keyboard if you like a little customization. You also get WiFi 6E, USB-C, HDMI, and Ethernet, so connecting extra monitors, accessories, or a wired internet connection is easy.

Grab the MSI Katana 15 HX on Amazon before this gaming deal respawns at full price.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Fujifilms Instax Square Link Smartphone Printer is over $30 off at Amazon

Mashable - 4 hours 29 min ago

SAVE OVER $30: As of July 14, the Fujifilm Instax Square Link Smartphone Printer is on sale for $129.95 at Amazon. That's $34 off its full price of $163.95.

Opens in a new window Credit: Fujifilm Fujifilm Instax Square Link Smartphone Printer $129.95 at Amazon
$163.95 Save $34   Get Deal

If your phone's camera roll is full of summer memories that you want to keep outside of a digital collection, it's always worth printing them out. That way, you can hang them up around your house or even add them to a photo album.

The Fujifilm Instax Square Link Smartphone Printer is one way to do it, allowing you to print film photos right from your phone, and it's even on sale right now at Amazon.

As of July 14, the Fujifilm Instax Square Link Smartphone Printer — both in midnight green and ash white — has dropped to $129.95 at Amazon. This is $34 off its full price of $163.95, though it may not stay on sale for long. Since it has a "limited time deal" tag, now is the time to make a move before its discount disappears.

SEE ALSO: Amazon is packed with outdoor deals for summer from Coleman

The Fujifilm Instax Square Link is a fun way to print out your favorite photos from your phone. They pop out on instant film, which is a great way to capture these memories without dropping money on an instant film camera. However, it is worth noting that the specific Instax Square instant film for this smartphone printer is sold separately.

It also has a small, lightweight build that makes it easy to take along in a bag. And connecting to your phone is done quickly via Bluetooth, then you'll just need the free Instax Square Link app to get started. From there, you'll be able to add stickers, frames, and more to your photos as well before printing them out.

This limited-time deal may not last long. Act fast to save on the Fujifilm Instax Square Link Smartphone Printer at Amazon.

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Categories: IT General, Technology

Magic: The Gathering Reality Fracture Play Booster Box preorders are on sale — now under $155 at Amazon

Mashable - 4 hours 36 min ago

TL;DR: The Magic: The Gathering Reality Fracture Play Booster Box is available to pre-order for $154.99 at Amazon, down from its $164.70 list price.

Opens in a new window Credit: Magic: The Gathering Magic: The Gathering Reality Fracture Play Booster Box $154.99 at Amazon
$164.70 Save $9.71 Get Deal

Reality Fracture does not arrive in the world of Magic: The Gathering until October, but you can already save almost $10 on the set’s Play Booster Box, bringing the 30-pack display of trading cards below $155 before launch. 

As of July 14, the Magic: The Gathering Reality Fracture Play Booster Box is available to pre-order at Amazon for $154.99. That is $9.71 off its $164.70 list price, taking 6% off the sealed box altogether. 

This Play Booster Box is also covered by Amazon’s popular preorder price guarantee. Keep in mind that although Reality Fracture isn’t out until Oct. 2, your free delivery of this box won’t arrive until at least Oct. 5 at the time of writing. All sales are final and returns are not an option. 

At this price (its lowest ever, confirmed via camelcamelcamel), each of the 30 Play Boosters works out at roughly $5.17 before tax. That is not the cheapest preorder deal available, though. TCGplayer has unopened listings starting from a much cheaper $133.88 with shipping included, which is even lower than its current market price of $134.44.

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This expansion centres on Jace Beleren pushing reality to breaking point, with an alternate Multiverse of his own creation threatening to replace the existing one. In terms of lore, the set explores Jace’s Echoverse, including twisted reflections of familiar Magic legends and the dystopian school of Hexhaven.

Inside the box, you get 30 Reality Fracture Play Boosters, with 14 Magic cards in each pack. Every booster contains one to five cards of Rare rarity or higher and at least one Traditional Foil card, while a Traditional Foil Land appears in 20% of packs. Each pack also includes a Legendary card alongside its Echoverse alternate, giving you more than 60 Legendary cards across a full box.

For packs from other sets, you can also buy MTG’s 30-pack Marvel Super Heroes Play Booster Box at $80 off. Plus, you can score the Marvel Super Heroes Draft Night Box at a record-low price on Amazon

Categories: IT General, Technology

Jon Stewart breaks down Trumps confusing reaction to Lindsey Grahams death

Mashable - 4 hours 45 min ago

Following the death of Lindsey Graham, Donald Trump called in to Fox & Friends to share his thoughts on the senator's passing — and, unsurprisingly, it was a somewhat strange listening experience.

Jon Stewart certainly had some thoughts. During his Daily Show monologue above, the host breaks down some of the president's more unexpected comments — starting with Trump saying, "He'd call me all the time, I'd say, 'Stop calling me, Lindsey.'"

"I'll never forget the way that I always let him go to voicemail," says Stewart, in Trump impression mode. "It was our thing."

SEE ALSO: 'Kimmel' guest host Ike Barinholtz examines Trump's reaction to Lindsey Graham's death

Stewart goes on to play a clip of Trump saying Graham played golf but "wasn't a great striker of the ball" and was a "total workaholic politician" but "some people don't call that work, some people call that a lot of talking."

Stewart's response? "The president has zoomed through the first five stages of grief, and gone straight to number six: 'F*** that guy.'"

Elsewhere on late night, Late Night's Seth Meyers and Jimmy Kimmel Live! guest host Ike Barinholtz also reacted to Trump's comments.

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Categories: IT General, Technology

Amy Poehler and Will Ferrell unpacking first jobs is a fun time

Mashable - 4 hours 47 min ago

Amy Poehler and Will Ferrell have been buddies for an age, so the latest episode of Good Hang is exactly that.

The Saturday Night Live alums reconnected for Poehler's podcast, unpacking their 2017 comedy flop The House, Ferrell's new golf comedy The Hawk, being captain of his high school basketball team, and more.

Ferrell weaves a great tale of his first jobs, which included working for one day at Disneyland in the ticket kiosks, then leaving for a surf shop gig. Needing to provide a reason for quitting, Ferrell said he got creative:

"Somewhere there's a file at Disney corporate that says, 'Will Ferrell worked for one day. Reason for leaving: tryout with the Dallas Cowboys football team.'"

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Categories: IT General, Technology

How to watch Backrooms: When is the A24 horror hit streaming?

Mashable - 5 hours 4 min ago

I would've never guessed that a movie based on a viral YouTube found-footage series based on an unsettling old 4chan post would become the highest-grossing film in A24's history, but here we are. Backrooms took the box office by storm this summer, earning over $350 million worldwide on a $10 million budget.

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Directed by 21-year-old rising filmmaker Kane Parsons, Backrooms stars Chiwetel Ejiofor, Renate Reinsve, Mark Duplass, Finn Bennett, and Lukita Maxwell.

"Parsons has managed to prove himself as an incredibly talented emerging filmmaker while also establishing the first chapter in what will surely end up becoming a brand new horror franchise," Mashable's reviewer writes.

If you're intrigued by the liminal space internet lore and have yet to check out Backrooms, or if you can't wait to watch it again, it's now officially available to watch at home. Here's a breakdown of everything you need to know to watch it comfortably from your couch.

What is Backrooms about?

Set in the '90s in Santa Clara Valley, California, Backrooms follows aspiring architect turned furniture shop owner Clark (Ejiofor), who has been staying in the shop temporarily after his recent separation. One night, he discovers a hidden doorway in the basement of the store, leading to the titular Backrooms — an endless stretch of eerie liminal space. Naturally, he enters the portal and starts exploring.

Check out the official trailer for a taste of the Backrooms:

How to watch Backrooms at home Credit: A24

As of July 14, you can officially watch Backrooms at home. While we're still waiting on streaming details, you can buy it or rent it via digital-on-demand retailers. We've broken down the details below.

Buy or rent on digital

Backrooms makes its at-home debut via digital-on-demand retailers on July 14, 2026. You can either buy the film for your digital library for $24.99 or rent it for $5 less. Note: If you choose the rental option, you'll get access for 30 days, but only 48 hours once you start watching. Pro tip: If you wait a few weeks to buy or rent, these prices will drop significantly.

Quick links to buy/rent Backrooms on digital:

Stream it on HBO Max (at a later date)

A24 recently renewed its output deal with Warner Bros. Discovery, which means new A24 theatrical releases will exclusively stream on HBO Max before anywhere else. Following the same theater-to-streaming schedule as other recently released A24 movies (Marty Supreme, The Drama, and Bring Her Back), we can make an educated guess that Backrooms will make its streaming debut on HBO Max sometime in late September or early October (just in time for Halloween!). We'll update this story with the latest information when we know more.

HBO Max subscriptions start at $10.99 per month. However, there are some ways you can save money on your plan. Check out the best HBO Max streaming deals below.

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A monthly plan with ads typically costs $10.99 per month, but a full year costs $109.99, which breaks down the monthly cost to only $9.17. Want to go ad-free? The annual HBO Max Standard or Premium plans will also save you about 16% over their monthly equivalents. Standard subscriptions cost either $18.49 per month or $184.99 per year (which breaks down to $15.42 per month). Premium subscriptions cost $22.99 per month or $229.99 per year (about $19.17 per month). While both are ad-free plans, only the Premium option will unlock 4K Ultra HD video quality, Dolby Atmos, and the ability to download more offline content.

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The Disney+ bundle deal, which includes HBO Max and Hulu, is one of the best deals in streaming. For just $19.99 per month, you'll get all three streaming libraries with ads, which is about $15 cheaper than paying for each one separately. Want to go ad-free? It'll run you $32.99 per month as opposed to $56.47 for all three. That's up to 42% in savings.

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If you're a Verizon customer on the Unlimited Welcome, Unlimited Plus, or Unlimited Ultimate plan, you can add the Netflix and HBO Max bundle (with ads) to your plan for only $13 per month. A $19.98 per month value, that's about $7 in savings each month. Once you enroll in the promo, you'll have to complete the account setup separately for each service. Check out Verizon's support page for all the eligibility details, terms, and FAQs.

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