IT General
DJI drones are flying off shelves — here’s where to get yours before a potential ban
TL;DR: The DJI Mini 4K drone is available to purchase for $299 on Amazon.
Opens in a new window Credit: Amazon DJI Mini 4K Drone $299 at AmazonShop Now
DJI is one of the biggest names in drones, with a strong reputation for creating incredible aerial shots. The DJI product range is the top choice of TikTokers, YouTubers, and filmmakers. That being said, we were surprised to see the DJI Mini 4K drone as one of the best-sellers over Prime Day. We knew these drones were popular, but surely not as popular as AirPods?
Then the real reason hit us like a drone to the head.
President Donald Trump has signed two executive orders aimed at helping the U.S. drone industry and shoring up protections against malicious drone activity. The measures don't actually order a full ban on Chinese-made drones (yet), but talk of a ban on DJI drones has been doing the rounds for a while now. That uncertainty is clearly causing an uptick in sales.
SEE ALSO: The DJI Power 2000 portable power station means business, and it’s great for DJI drone ownersThe good news for anyone hoping to get ahead of a potential ban is that you can still find the DJI Mini 4K drone on Amazon, listed for $299 right now. It's being sold by AeroTech Hubs at the time of writing. We generally don't recommend third-party sellers, but they have decent reviews and times are tough right now.
The DJI Mini 4K is full of helpful features for beginners and advanced users alike. It has one-tap takeoff options and a return to home function. But perhaps most importantly for content creators is the three-axis gimbal and 4K quality, as well as advanced wind resistance and extended battery life. It's a step up from the DJI Neo Mini 4K that we think creators will appreciate.
Get the DJI Mini 4K drone for under $300 at Amazon.
NYT Mini crossword answers, hints for August 8, 2025
The Mini is a bite-sized version of The New York Times' revered daily crossword. While the crossword is a lengthier experience that requires both knowledge and patience to complete, The Mini is an entirely different vibe.
With only a handful of clues to answer, the daily puzzle doubles as a speed-running test for many who play it.
So, when a tricky clue disrupts a player's flow, it can be frustrating! If you find yourself stumped playing The Mini — much like with Wordle and Connections — we have you covered.
SEE ALSO: Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more: Play games on MashableHere are the clues and answers to NYT's The Mini for Friday, August 8, 2025:
AcrossPiece of bread atop 4-AcrossThe answer is Bun.
The answer is Cheese.
The answer is Burger.
The answer is Shroud.
The answer is TPS.
The answer is Begot.
The answer is Use up.
The answer is Nerds.
The answer is CBS.
The answer is Huh.
The answer is Err.
If you're looking for more puzzles, Mashable's got games now! Check out our games hub for Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more.
Featured Video For You The Wordle Strategy used by the New York Times' Head of GamesAre you also playing NYT Strands? See hints and answers for today's Strands.
Not the day you're after? Here's the solution to the latest Mini Crossword.
Boys Go to Jupiter review: An animated gem about oranges, aliens, and the gig economy
Welcome to the weird world of Boys Go to Jupiter, where aliens hang out with delivery boys, juice factories house mutant fruits grown from moon rocks, and funky electronic songs lurk around every corner.
This world isn't some new planet or alternate dimension: It's just suburban Florida. Yet in the hands of director and 3D animator Julian Glander, Boys Go to Jupiter's Florida becomes a strange, magical place where the absurd and the mundane co-exist as nonchalant bedfellows. Bizarre, hilarious, and boasting refreshingly distinct animation, Boys Go to Jupiter is a wonderfully absurd experience.
SEE ALSO: 'Fixed' red band trailer: Animated dog comedy is so NSFW, you have to see it to believe it What's Boys Go to Jupiter about? Credit: Tribeca Film FestivalBoys Go to Jupiter centers on high school dropout Billy 5000 (voiced by Jack Corbett), who's hustling his way to $5,000 by delivering food through the app Grubster. Along the way, he befriends Donut, a gelatinous, blue, donut-shaped alien who's being hunted by juice mogul Dr. Dolphin (voiced by Janeane Garofalo).
The pieces are in place for a boy-saves-alien film in the vein of E.T., but Boys Go to Jupiter take a more chill, meandering approach. Billy often stumbles into strange vignettes, including an unexpectedly philosophical encounter with a hot dog stand manager on the side of a highway, or a mini music video about the power of eggs. Glander holds on these vignettes for a while, painting Billy's world as a collage of oddities he'd rather avoid entirely in favor of getting back on his grind.
SEE ALSO: Animation overload: The 10 best anime series on HuluOf course, that grind comes with its fair share of setbacks, as Boys Go to Jupiter takes a staunchly anti-capitalist tack. Small details like how Grubster workers are not allowed to engage with customers and must repeat "grubby" catchphrases paint Billy's job as a dull dystopia. Elsewhere, Glander gets less subtle, such as when Dr. Dolphin's daughter, aspiring radical Rozebud (voiced by singer Miya Folick), hands Billy a book all about capitalism which he promptly absorbs.
Boys Go to Jupiter is strange, and proud of it.While Billy exists as a cog in the hustle culture machine, the movie he's in works to break out of any mold and establish its own individuality. Take the voice cast, which includes singular comedians like Sarah Sherman, Julio Torres, and Cole Escola. Then there's Glander's signature animation style, a series of neon CG renderings ranging from blobby to plasticky. Characters and locations come to resemble toys or video game settings. The intentional artifice is welcome, creating a sense of play that sets Boys Go to Jupiter apart from other more photo-realistic CG animated movies.
SEE ALSO: Tilda Swinton and Julio Torres reveal 'Problemista's unexpected common groundGlander builds on the distinct look of his film with some lo-fi musical numbers, like an ode to side hustles or a catalog of an alien's favorite Florida delicacies. These add to the winding quality of the film, building out space for diversions that are often unexpected but never unwelcome. While you could fault Boys Go to Jupiter for a loss of focus as it nears its finish line, the journey to get there remains worth taking.
Boys Go to Jupiter opens in theaters Aug. 8.
UPDATE: Aug. 5, 2025, 9:31 a.m. Boys Go to Jupiter was reviewed out of its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival on June 11, 2024. This article has been updated to include the latest release information.
Weapons review: Youre not ready for Zach Creggers wild new horror film
The last thing I ever want to do is overhype a movie, but just trust me when I say: You are not ready for Weapons.
SEE ALSO: New 'Weapons' trailer deepens the mystery in a violent and creepy wayI don't mean that in a "This is the scariest horror movie you'll ever see!" way, although writer-director Zach Cregger (Barbarian) stirs up plenty of frights that had my whole theater hollering. Instead, I mean it more in the sense that Weapons is a wonderfully surprising film. Whatever you think it's going to throw at you, chances are you aren't prepared for what it actually lobs your way.
What is Weapons about? One of the 17 missing children in "Weapons." Credit: Warner Bros. PicturesOpening narration by a young girl (Scarlett Sher) clues us into the chilling premise of Weapons. One night, at 2:17 a.m., 17 children from the same third grade class at Maybrook Elementary ran from their houses, arms outstretched in the exact same way, never to be seen again. Only one child, Alex (Cary Christopher), remains.
The image of the kids charging into nothingness is an eerie one, contrasted with Sher's matter-of-fact voiceover relaying the story two years after the fact. Cregger peppers her monologue with fillers like "I guess" or "like that," small beats that make you feel like you're in the room with her as she relays a story that's clearly been passed around the community it impacted.
SEE ALSO: 'Together' review: Dave Franco and Alison Brie get grossly close in a body-horror nightmareThat community is the main focus of Weapons, which splits its time between various non-linear viewpoints, including Justine (Julia Garner), the missing kids' teacher, and Archer (Josh Brolin), father to one of the missing children.
Weapons tells a relevant story of a community in crisis. Julia Garner in "Weapons." Credit: Warner Bros. PicturesBoth Justine and Archer are focused on the disappearance to the point of obsession. Justine tries time and again to contact Alex, even though Maybrook Elementary Principal Marcus (Benedict Wong) forbids her from doing so. He says she's putting herself first and not caring about the pain Alex must be going through. Meanwhile, Archer pesters other worried parents for information about the night their kids disappeared, even if they're not comfortable revisiting that loss. He and Justine pick incessantly at open wounds in their search for answers, their actions spiraling out into broader Maybrook.
Maybrook's sense of communal grief over the loss of the 17 children calls to mind the aftermath of school shootings, tragedies that are all too common in the U.S. As if the foreboding title Weapons weren't enough of a tie-in, Cregger also accentuates this connection through some surreal gun imagery, along with the potent image of a makeshift memorial for the kids outside Maybrook Elementary. The memorial's message of "Maybrook strong" echoes responses to other U.S. school shootings, such as "Uvalde strong" and "MSD strong."
SEE ALSO: KallMeKris and Celina Spooky Boo talk making a horror film after a career as creatorsWith Weapons, Cregger also speaks to broader anxieties about the role of parents within the American education system. The Maybrook parents, including Archer, immediately turn on Justine. They wonder what malevolent work she was doing in her classroom to make their kids disappear. Their fearmongering about Justine gestures out to real-world discussions about parents' rights over their kids' education, often used to push conservative agendas hoping to erase the teaching of anything related to race, sexual orientation, or gender identity.
These are heady topics, ones Cregger most overtly examines in the first half of the film. However, Weapons' examination of grief is far from dour. After all, this is Cregger we're talking about, the man who brought us the sometimes funny, sometimes gory, always twisty Barbarian. He brings those same qualities to Weapons, creating a veritable horror roller coaster.
Weapons' scares and twists are shocking — and a whole lot of fun. Julia Garner and Josh Brolin in "Weapons." Credit: Warner Bros. PicturesWith the help of Weapons' many different points of view, Cregger creates a layered tale where each new perspective adds further depth and context to what came before. (Cregger has cited Paul Thomas Anderson's Magnolia as an inspiration for the film, and there are touches of Rashomon in the structure as well.) Each new perspective does the vital work of further building out the town of Maybrook, but they also take Weapons in increasingly unexpected directions. Remember when Barbarian cut from a horrifying monster encounter in a darkened basement to Justin Long driving blissfully along the California coast? Weapons pulls that kind of switch several times over, each more discombobulating than the last. And don't just take it from me. Take it from the woman in my theater who kept screaming every time Cregger looped in a new perspective.
Each new point of view brings with it a different kind of horror. Since Justine lives alone in a large house and keeps receiving threatening messages, her opening section feels somewhat like a slasher film, where a murderous stalker could leap out at any moment. A section of the film focused on policeman Paul (Alden Ehrenreich) reads as more grounded, a portrait of a psychological spiral seemingly removed from Weapons' biggest scares. (Don't worry, Cregger always finds a way to connect everything.)
Elsewhere, elements of body horror and the psycho-biddy subgenre surface, with Cregger happy to alternate between heart attack-inducing jump scares and slower burn frights at a moment's notice. Occasionally, Weapons undercuts its own terrors with well-placed comedic beats, offering us catharsis amidst the ever-escalating mayhem. When Josh Brolin yells, "What the fuck?" after an especially distressing encounter, we're right there with him.
By Weapons' end, though, we've moved into something far different from what the film's opening few minutes would have you expect. Each step of the way there makes sense, but you'd never have thought to take that step in the first place had Weapons not set you on that path.
That's the fun of Weapons, though. The best way to prepare for its thrills is to simply not prepare at all. Instead, sit back, and let yourself be pulled along for the riotous, unforgettable ride.
See the moon, sun, and planets using just your phone — the Hestia telescope is now $40 off
TL;DR: The Hestia makes astronomy more accessible by transforming your smartphone’s camera into a telescope to explore the cosmos. Grab it with a tripod, case, solar filter, and more for less than $260.
Capturing clear, detailed images of the night sky usually requires investing in a bulky telescope and learning how to use it. The Hestia changes that by turning the camera on your smartphone into a surprisingly capable tool for astronomy. Right now, you can get this unique smartphone-based telescope for $259.99— that’s $40 off the regular price of $299.99.
Designed for casual astronomers, beginners, or anyone interested in skywatching, the Hestia removes most of the friction that usually comes with telescopes. Instead of lenses and eyepieces, it uses your phone’s optics and sensors, paired with a patented six-lens optical system and a dedicated app to help you capture celestial objects, from the moon and sun to planets and even some deep-sky targets (a UFO, perhaps?).
There’s no need to learn manual alignment or spend time calibrating. Just place your phone in the dock, open the Gravity by Vaonis app, and follow on-screen guidance to start exploring the cosmos from Earth. With the app, you can select items like day mode to monitor the sun, night mode to follow the moon’s phases, or flip through the catalog of deep sky objects.
This Hestia deal is for the Ultimate Pack, which includes a carbon fiber tripod for stable viewing, a durable hard shell case for travel and storage, and a high-quality solar filter and solar pointer for safely observing sunspots and eclipses. All accessories are designed to keep the setup portable and easy to use on the go, whether you’re enjoying constellations from your backyard or celebrating the eclipse from the park.
While the Hestia isn’t a replacement for high-end telescopes, it’s not trying to be. This kit is built for convenience and accessibility, and it’s a simpler way to engage with astronomy using a tool you already own: your smartphone. It’s especially well-suited for educational use, family nights, or anyone who wants to experiment with astrophotography without struggling with a steep learning curve.
See the beauty of the cosmos more clearly with this device that turns your smartphone into a telescope — grab the Hestia Ultimate Pack for $259.99 while inventory lasts.
StackSocial prices subject to change.
Opens in a new window Credit: VAONIS Hestia: First Ever Smartphone-Based Telescope (Ultimate Pack) $259.99$299 Save $39.01 Get Deal
This handheld retro arcade is currently just $65 + free shipping
TL;DR: The Retropian Color handheld retro gaming console brings 10,000+ classic games to your pocket with a bright 3.5″ screen, 6-hour battery, and multiplayer support—all for $64.97 with free shipping through September 7.
Remember blowing into cartridges and button-mashing your way through side-scrolling glory? Now you can relive those pixel-perfect memories — minus the bulky TV and tangled cords.
Introducing the Retropian Color, quite possibly your new favorite throwback toy, disguised as a compact, modern handheld gaming console. For just $64.97 (along with free shipping), you’ll get access to 10,000+ classic games spanning 20+ legendary systems, including NES, SNES, Game Boy, PlayStation 1, Sega Genesis, Dreamcast, and more. It’s like carrying an entire vintage game store in your pocket.
The vibrant 3.5″ IPS display delivers surprisingly sharp graphics, while the six-hour battery keeps the fun going long after your phone dies. Whether you’re reliving arcade-style beat-’em-up games or sneaking in a level of Castlevania on your lunch break, this Linux-based console makes everything run smoothly.
And if you’re feeling social? Bluetooth and Wi-Fi support make two-player games a possibility — no cables or adapters needed.
In a world of subscription gaming and cloud saves, this handheld retro gaming device is refreshingly simple: pay once, plug in, and play forever. It’s nostalgia done right, for less than the cost of a new release.
Get the Retropian Color while it’s on sale for just $64.97 (MSRP: $129) through September 7 with free shipping.
StackSocial prices subject to change.
Opens in a new window Credit: Retropian Retropian Color Retro Handheld Gaming Console $64.97$129 Save $64.03 Get Deal
This $20 tool lets you livestream your earwax removal in HD
TL;DR: Change up your ear cleaning routine with the Smart Camera Ear Cleaning Tool, now just $19.97 (reg. $39.99).
Opens in a new window Credit: StackSocial Smart Camera Ear Cleaning Tool $19.97$39.99 Save $20.02 Get Deal
It’s 2025, and it’s time to stop scooping ear wax with a cotton swab.
Elevate your ear cleaning routine with the Smart Camera Ear Cleaning Tool, a handy gadget that lets you wirelessly stream the whole process. Right now, this tool can be yours for just $19.97 (reg. $39.99).
This ear cleaner shows you what you’re doing in real timeMake sure you have the cleanest ears in town with some help from the Smart Camera Ear Cleaning Tool, an earwax cleaner that offers a 360-degree wide-angle view inside your ear that you can wirelessly stream to your smartphone in 1080p HD resolution. It’s not only cooler than cotton swabs, it’s also safer, as cotton swabs can actually increase the risk of an ear infection.
See your ear canal up close and personal from any angle thanks to this smart cleaning device. Once you see where wax is hiding, the silicone ear spoons offer a more comfortable and pain-free way to remove it with no scratching involved.
The Smart Camera Ear Cleaning Tool is great for kids and adults alike. It also lets you get a closer view of teeth, your nasal cavity, throat, scalp roots, and other hard-to-see body parts.
A 350mAh battery keeps this cleaner working for 1.5 hours continuously, which equates to about 45 days of use without having to charge it back up. Clean it easily with water or alcohol, with no worries thanks to its IP7 waterproof-grade lens. And it comes with a storage box that lets you store both the cleaning tool and the six included spoons conveniently.
Banish ear wax easily with the Smart Camera Ear Cleaning Tool, now only $19.97 (reg. $39.99).
StackSocial prices subject to change.
See what happens after dark with night vision binoculars, now $70 off
TL;DR: Make unforgettable memories this summer and beyond with the Mini Night Vision Binoculars, now just $89.99 (reg. $159.99).
Opens in a new window Credit: StackSocial Mini Night Vision Binoculars with 2.4-inch Screen, 4x Zoom & 32GB Card $89.99$159.99 Save $70.00 Get Deal
Want to squeeze a little more fun out of the summer? Maybe it’s time to make memories after dark, with a little help from the mini digital night vision binoculars. This handy gadget lets you see the world at night, with visibility up to 1,000 feet in total darkness, and they’re on sale just in time for late summer adventures for only $89.99 (reg. $159.99).
Don’t miss a moment after dark with these binocularsWhether you’re heading out for a moonlit hike, camping under the stars, or just want to see what the nocturnal animals are up to, make sure you’ve packed these mini digital night vision binoculars. They give you superhuman vision at night, with the ability to see 1,000 feet away in pitch black.
Though they seem magical, these special binoculars are equipped with an 850nm infrared illuminator that allows you to check things out in the dark. And the 10x optical magnification ensures you’re seeing it all in sharp detail.
If you discover something you have to see to believe, don’t worry. The binoculars also have a built-in HD camera that takes 1080p full HD photos and videos for proof. See what you’re capturing on the 2.4-inch HD screen, adjust the brightness, or choose from one of the color effects, black and white, luminous green, infrared, or color.
A 2,260mAh capacity built-in lithium battery keeps you powered for hours. The binoculars also come with a 32GB memory card to store your unforgettable moments. And they’re ready to tag along anywhere, thanks to their pocket-sized stature.
Don’t leave home without the Mini Night Vision Binoculars, now only $89.99 (reg. $159.99).
StackSocial prices subject to change.
Amazon is dropping prices on iPads — get the iPad Air with M3 chip for $150 off
SAVE $150: As of August 7, get the Apple iPad Air with M3 chip for $449 and save $150. That knocks 25% off its $599 price tag.
Opens in a new window Credit: Apple Apple iPad Air, 11-inch (M3 chip, 128 GB, WiFi) $449 at Amazon$599 Save $150 Get Deal
The line between Apple's tablets and laptops is becoming strikingly thin. Now that the brand has put its M series of chips into both iPads and MacBooks, both devices offer similar processing speeds. So if you're looking for a new laptop or tablet as you head back to school, iPads are a great candidate, especially the iPad Air. And there are plenty of deals on Apple iPad models today.
As of August 7, get the iPad Air with M3 chip for just $449. That knocks $150 off its list price of $599 for 25% off. This isn't the first iPad deal we've spotted this week, as Amazon has dropped the price on the 10th generation model down to $349 and the iPad Mini is down to $399. But what makes the iPad Air so special?
SEE ALSO: Shop Apple's most affordable iPad for its lowest price yetAmong the iPads currently on sale, the iPad Air is the most expensive. It's just about the same size as the iPad 10th generation, but it has a much better core processor. The iPad 10th generation and iPad Mini both use Apple's A series chips, which are zippy and great but made for iPhones. Meanwhile, the iPad Air is using the M3 chip, which goes into the brand's MacBooks. That more advanced processor means you can get more work done. It's a better fit for creatives looking to edit photos and video or do graphic design work on the tablet.
Right now, get the iPad Air with M3 chip, a tablet built for creatives, for just $449 and save $150.
Shop Apples most affordable iPad for its lowest price yet
SAVE $150: As of August 7, get Apple's 10th generation iPad (A14 chip, 256 GB, WiFi) for just $349 and save $150. That saves 30% off its $499 price tag.
Opens in a new window Credit: Apple Apple iPad, 10th generation (A14 chip, 256 GB, WiFi) $349 at Amazon$499 Save $150 Get Deal
As the summer winds down and we think about heading back to school, it might be time to think about a new device for the school year. If you're looking for a tablet for note-taking, or even to use as a laptop alternative, iPads are the everyman tablet, fit for both work and play. Even the most affordable model, the iPad 10th generation that was released in 2022, allows you to run multiple apps at once so you can multitask. And right now, it just dropped to its lowest price ever.
As of Aug. 7, the Apple iPad, 10th generation (A14 chip, 256 GB, WiFi) just dropped down to $349. That's the tablet's lowest price ever — even cheaper than it was during Prime Day. That shaves $150 off of its $499 list price for a 30% discount.
SEE ALSO: Need a new tablet? The Samsung Galaxy Tab A9+ is under $160.The Apple iPad usually starts at 64 GB of storage, but this upgraded model comes with 256 GB, plenty of space to download music, shows, and photos. If you're planning on using the device as a laptop, with the Magic Keyboard Folio, it makes it easy to type up notes fast and on-the-go. Better yet? The Magic Keyboard Folio is 20% off at Amazon, bringing it down to $199.
Shop the Apple iPad, 10th generation with 256 GB of storage for $349 now and save $150.
Trump executive order allows cryptocurrency in 401(k) retirement funds
President Donald Trump has signed an executive order to make it easier to include cryptocurrency in Americans' 401(k) retirement funds. It's a potentially risky move that has been criticised by financial experts.
SEE ALSO: Stablecoin bill advances in U.S. Senate as Trump critics call to end his crypto dealingsAnnounced on Thursday, Trump's new executive order instructs the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) to reexamine its guidance regarding 401(k) plans' investment in alternative assets such as cryptocurrency, real estate, and private equity. Trump's order further directs the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to revise regulations and guidance in order to facilitate such alternative asset investment.
In short, this means that the U.S. government may soon overhaul regulations in order to help 401(k) funds invest in crypto. Cryptocurrency prices surged in the wake of Trump's executive order, with investors anticipating it will lead to more widespread adoption of the currency.
While 401(k) plans weren't explicitly banned from investing in cryptocurrency previously, in 2022 the DOL cautioned that those considering doing so should "exercise extreme care." Expressing "serious concerns" about the wisdom of such investments, the DOL warned of a slew of hazards associated with cryptocurrency, including that such assets are highly speculative, extremely volatile, and face issues regarding recordkeeping and valuation.
The Trump administration subsequently rescinded this guidance this May, claiming that the DOL's advice to be careful with highly risky financial investments was a case of "overreach" by the previous Biden administration. Instead, Trump's DOL stated that it had a neutral stance toward 401(k) plans investing in cryptocurrency.
Thursday's executive order to revise regulations now indicates a more supportive view of 401(k) cryptocurrency investment, with Trump pledging to transform the U.S. into the "crypto capital of the world."
Though the White House claims assets such as cryptocurrency "offer competitive returns and diversification benefits," financial experts have warned against relying on such assets to fund your retirement. Alicia H. Munnell, a senior advisor at Boston College's Center for Retirement Research, called such 401(k) investment a "terrible idea," likening it to gambling and noting that it is unlikely to improve returns.
"Participants don’t understand the product, it’s a speculative and volatile investment, straying from traditional investments is unlikely to enhance returns, and it’s probably not a prudent option for 401(k)s," Munnell wrote in response to the DOL's withdrawal of its 2022 guidance. "DOL should not be opening the door to this type of activity."
Numerous cautionary tales of nosediving values, scams, hacks, and heists have made it clear that cryptocurrency is far from a safe investment. Despite this, tales of swift, dramatic gains continue to tempt investors and build significant hype. Trump's executive order may encourage more people to venture into cryptocurrency, but whether it will be to their benefit remains to be seen.
One AI image generator lets you create NSFW art, and it’s only £37 for life
TL;DR: Create anything, even NSFW art, with a lifetime subscription to Imagiyo for only £36.50.
Opens in a new window Credit: Imagiyo Imagiyo AI Image Generator: Lifetime Subscription (Standard Plan) £36.50£368.69 Save £332.19 Get Deal
Digital creativity has never been more accessible, yet many of us remember the days when crafting a single image meant wrestling with layers and plugins for hours on end. Now there’s a way to generate stunning visuals in seconds simply by typing a description of what you have in mind.
Imagiyo uses Stable Diffusion AI alongside FLUX AI to turn text prompts into high-quality images ready for commercial use, and there aren’t many limits to what you can create. Here’s what that means.
What art can you make with ImagiyoWhat do you want to make first? It only takes a brief description to put Imagiyo’s advanced algorithms to work, and unlike other image generators, Imagiyo actually lets you really follow your creativity. Craft stunning landscapes, visualise characters from books, or go for something a little more daring. Imagiyo supports NSFW content creation. Just set your prompts to private and let your mind run wild.
Imagiyo’s commercial-use license means you can take some of the images you generate and incorporate them into client projects, social media campaigns, or personal portfolios without fear of copyright issues.
Each month, you receive 500 image-generation credits and can submit up to two prompts at once. Unused credits roll over, so you never lose access to your creative potential. Best of all, Imagiyo delivers your purchased engine updates and feature improvements automatically, ensuring you always work with the latest AI models.
Get an Imagiyo AI Image Generator lifetime subscription for £36.50.
StackSocial prices subject to change
Hurdle hints and answers for August 8, 2025
If you like playing daily word games like Wordle, then Hurdle is a great game to add to your routine.
There are five rounds to the game. The first round sees you trying to guess the word, with correct, misplaced, and incorrect letters shown in each guess. If you guess the correct answer, it'll take you to the next hurdle, providing the answer to the last hurdle as your first guess. This can give you several clues or none, depending on the words. For the final hurdle, every correct answer from previous hurdles is shown, with correct and misplaced letters clearly shown.
An important note is that the number of times a letter is highlighted from previous guesses does necessarily indicate the number of times that letter appears in the final hurdle.
If you find yourself stuck at any step of today's Hurdle, don't worry! We have you covered.
SEE ALSO: Hurdle: Everything you need to know to find the answers Hurdle Word 1 hintA hauler.
SEE ALSO: Apple’s new M3 MacBook Air is $300 off at Amazon. And yes, I’m tempted. Hurdle Word 1 answerMOVER
Hurdle Word 2 hintTo brag.
SEE ALSO: Wordle today: Answer, hints for August 4, 2025 Hurdle Word 2 AnswerBOAST
Hurdle Word 3 hintSignaling.
SEE ALSO: NYT Connections Sports Edition today: Hints and answers for August 4 SEE ALSO: NYT Connections hints today: Clues, answers for August 4, 2025 Hurdle Word 3 answerCUING
Hurdle Word 4 hintVery good.
SEE ALSO: NYT Strands hints, answers for August 4 Hurdle Word 4 answerDANDY
Final Hurdle hintNot a nephew.
SEE ALSO: Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more: Games available on Mashable Hurdle Word 5 answerNIECE
If you're looking for more puzzles, Mashable's got games now! Check out our games hub for Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more.
Moon phase today: What the moon will look like on August 8, 2025
We're a day away from the full moon, so let's see what's happening in the current lunar cycle.
This is a series of eight unique phases of the moon's visibility. The whole cycle takes about 29.5 days, according to NASA, and these different phases happen as the Sun lights up different parts of the moon whilst it orbits Earth.
So, what's happening with the moon tonight, Aug. 8?
What is today’s moon phase?As of Thursday, Aug. 8, the moon phase is Waxing Gibbous. According to NASA's Daily Moon Observation, the moon will be 99% lit up tonight, we're so close!
So, what can you spot when you look up tonight? With no visual aids, you'll be able to see lots on the moon's surface, namely the Mare Imbrium, the Kepler Crater, and the Mare Vaporum.
With binoculars, you'll also be able to see the Mare Humorum, the Endymion Crater, and the Posidonius Crater. Add a telescope to see the Descartes Highlands, the Schiller Crater, and the Rupes Altai.
When is the next full moon?The next full moon will be on August 9. The last full moon was on July 10.
What are moon phases?According to NASA, moon phases are caused by the 29.5-day cycle of the moon’s orbit, which changes the angles between the Sun, Moon, and Earth. Moon phases are how the moon looks from Earth as it goes around us. We always see the same side of the moon, but how much of it is lit up by the Sun changes depending on where it is in its orbit. This is how we get full moons, half moons, and moons that appear completely invisible. There are eight main moon phases, and they follow a repeating cycle:
New Moon - The moon is between Earth and the sun, so the side we see is dark (in other words, it's invisible to the eye).
Waxing Crescent - A small sliver of light appears on the right side (Northern Hemisphere).
First Quarter - Half of the moon is lit on the right side. It looks like a half-moon.
Waxing Gibbous - More than half is lit up, but it’s not quite full yet.
Full Moon - The whole face of the moon is illuminated and fully visible.
Waning Gibbous - The moon starts losing light on the right side.
Last Quarter (or Third Quarter) - Another half-moon, but now the left side is lit.
Waning Crescent - A thin sliver of light remains on the left side before going dark again.
Weapons twisty ending, explained: What happened to the missing kids?
Warning: This contains spoilers for the ending of Weapons.
Well, that was intense, wasn't it?
Zach Cregger's Weapons is every bit as twisty and horrific as the trailers have suggested, with an ending that answers many questions while leaving others a bit more open-ended.
SEE ALSO: 'Weapons' review: You're not ready for Zach Cregger's wild new horror filmFrom the missing children to the whole "weapons" motif, we've tried to unpack everything below.
What's Weapons about?The Barbarian writer/director's new film has one hell of a premise: A town is thrown into chaos after an entire class of school children — minus one boy — goes missing on the same night at the exact same time. Doorbell camera footage shows the children leaving their homes seemingly of their own free will, running out into the night with their arms held out at the sides in a kind of creepy flying V. Nobody knows where they've gone, or why they've gone.
The aftermath of this incident leaves the townsfolk blaming each other as they look for answers. The film follows a few of these struggling figures, including the class teacher — and now town pariah — Justine (Julia Garner); a father of one of the missing boys, Archer (Josh Brolin); school principal Marcus (Benedict Wong); and Alex (Cary Christopher), the only member of Justine's class that didn't disappear.
What happens at the end of Weapons? Justine and Archer, on the trail of the missing kids. Credit: Warner Bros.As the film progresses we learn that the figure responsible for the missing children is a witch named Gladys (Amy Madigan), Alex's aunt who has been using a mysterious potted tree — combined with personal effects and her own blood — to control the people around her. Gladys, who is terminally ill when she moves in with Alex's parents, is in some way able to restore herself back to full health by using the people she takes hold of. After Alex returns from school with name tags taken from his classmates' cubbyholes, she incorporates these into a ritual that draws all of the children to their house at once. Gladys keeps them down in the basement, then continues using the tree to cover up what she's done while Alex is forced to help her.
In the end, though, she underestimates those around her. Justine and Archer trace the missing children back to her house, and Alex is able to use her own tree against her: He escapes from his room and uses the stick that controls his classmates to turn them on her, with the children chasing her down in the street and literally ripping her to pieces. Archer rescues his son, Alex has his parents back, and the town is able to return to some version of normal.
Are the kidnapped children safe at the end? Poor little Alex doesn't have a great time in "Weapons." Credit: Warner Bros.Yes and no. On the plus side, all of the children are found alive and are able to return home. We can tell from the blank looks on their faces after they've killed Gladys, however, that they haven't immediately reverted to their old selves. There is clearly residual trauma from the spell they've been placed under.
The movie's voiceover at the very end reenforces this. We hear that Alex is living with a new family and that his parents still eat soup (the food Gladys forced him to feed them while they were under her spell), and that the missing kids are back with their parents — and "some of them even started talking this year."
The implication seems to be that anyone placed under Gladys' control has been badly damaged, but there may still be some hope of recovery.
What's the deal with the rifle in the sky? And the title Weapons?In one strange but memorable dream sequence in the movie, Archer sees a giant assault rifle hanging in the sky over his house while he's out looking for his son. It's a moment that reminds us the film is in fact called Weapons, even though the presence of literal weapons in the movie is somewhat limited.
So what's the deal with the title? Well, there are a couple of arguments you could make. The film's focus on the collective grief of a town after a class full of children is suddenly erased has an undeniable echo of the many school shootings plaguing America. There's also an exploration of the parental fear that comes with not being able to fully protect your children from the outside world, along with the terror of them being brainwashed into violence — a topic that was explored in grim detail in Netflix's brilliant miniseries Adolescence. This second point is emphasized by Archer saying the children seem like they've been "weaponized," and comparing them to heat-seeking missiles — a reminder that Gladys is quite literally using her victims as weapons.
Additional reporting by Belen Edwards.
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Dreames summer vacuum launch is the biggest vacuum drop of 2025 so far
The biggest vacuum drop so far this year has just happened — over half a year after CES. Dreame unveiled a total of 16 new vacuums at a press event on Aug. 6, doubling iRobot's March drop of eight new Roombas.
Dreame's summer 2025 drop officially consists of the following: Seven robot vacuums (the Matrix10 Ultra, Aqua10 Roller, Aqua10 Ultra Roller, L50s Ultra, L40s Ultra, L40s Ultra AE, and L40s Ultra CE), four wet/dry vacuums (the H15 Pro CarpetFlex, H15 Pro Heat, H12 Pro FlexReach, and G10 Pro), and five stick vacuums (the R10 Pure, R20 Pure, Z30, Z30 Station, and Z30 Essential). Shipping will begin in September for some and October for others, with pricing info on the way. I'll update this guide with prices once they're announced.
SEE ALSO: As an anxious cat mom, I love my robot vacuum with a livestream cameraSeveral of the vacuums fall under the same "series" and have small differences, like docking stations. But amid all of these enigmatic names are some pretty cool features that could make several tricky aspects of floor cleaning more practical on a daily basis.
While I wait to get my hands on these new vacuums for at-home testing, let’s take a quick look at my four standouts from this dreamy drop:
Dreame Aqua 10 Roller and Aqua 10 Ultra Roller Credit: Timothy Beck Werth / Mashable Credit: Timothy Beck Werth / MashableThe most unique addition to the Dreame robotic vacuum cleaner family is the Aqua10 Roller series. Here, Dreame ditched the spinning mopping pads (that just about every hybrid vacuum and their mother have nowadays) for a paint roller-esque roller mop that rinses itself as it cleans. This is meant to mitigate any possible spreading of a spill while the vacuum goes back and forth over the whole floor — exciting news for someone (me) who has watched a robot vacuum drag ranch dressing across the entire kitchen. This feels like an even more sanitary approach than the robotic mops that go back to the dock mid-cleaning session to rinse their mops, and should cut mopping time down significantly. To me, this is a much more practical fancy flex than the robotic arm on the Roborock Saros Z70.
SEE ALSO: Robot vacuum brands are losing the plot with the latest 'innovations' Dreame Matrix10 Ultra Credit: Timothy Beck Werth / MashableThe Matrix10 Ultra is another new flagship in the lineup. Its claim to fame has to do with mopping pad maintenance: The Multi-Mop Switching Dock can store three sets of double spinning mopping pads of varying textures, which the robot vacuum can switch between depending on the floor it's about to clean. The two rotating mops can also be lifted and pressed down at different heights simultaneously, ensuring closer scrubbing of uneven flooring (like the thresholds in doorways where hardwood changes to tile or carpet).
Both of these new flagship robot vacuums clean with 30,000 Pa of suction power, beating the 20,000 and 22,000 Pa of my beloved Roborock Saros 10 and Saros 10R. And, speaking of thresholds between floor types, several of the new robot vacuums are outfitted with Dreame's ProLeap system: A set of retractable legs on either side of the vacuum that hoist it over obstacles a few inches tall (up to 3.15 inches with the Aqua10 Roller series). I first experienced ProLeap when testing the Dreame X50 Ultra that was announced at CES 2025, and to be fully transparent, the use case felt quite limited. Actual stair climbing is still out of the question, but it could be helpful if your floors have any height changes, or if you need a robot vacuum to cross sliding door tracks.
Dreame H15 Pro CarpetFlex Credit: DreameIf you're strictly in the "I'll do it myself" camp when it comes to cleaning, the H15 Pro CarpetFlex is a... well, dream. It's Dreame's first hard floor and carpet cleaning combo vacuum, which adds heated wet roller mops to the traditional vacuum cleaning head for carpet stain liquefaction. Inside the vacuum head also lies the TangleCut system to prevent hair from wrapping around the roller. The H15 Pro CarpetFlex even washes and dries its wet cleaning system on the charging dock.
Dreame Z30 Credit: DreameWhile Dreame gives Roborock a run for its money in the premium robot vacuum department, it's coming for Dyson with these new cordless stick vacuums. The Dreame Z30, in particular, has strong potential to make the next cut of my best cordless vacuums list. Why? Because, on paper at least, it's more powerful than the most powerful Dyson — it shells out 310AW of suction power compared to the Dyson Gen5outsize's 250AW.
Dreame's new CelesTect Dust Reveal Technology also poses another inevitable Dyson comparison. Dreame describes the illumination on the Z30's cleaning head as LEDs on the multi-surface brush that "effectively detect and expose tiny dust particles in hard-to-reach corners or dimly lit areas." I'll be pumped if another vacuum brand finally gets on the level of Dyson's green dust-highlighting laser, but the mention of LEDs is just giving lightbulbs. Time (and testing in my apartment) will tell.