Technology
Why pay $5,000 more for a BMW X1 when this British SUV is just as fun
Luxury subcompact SUVs are getting incredibly expensive, with many mainstream buyers now questioning whether premium badges are still worth the extra money. In a segment where pricing can climb past $45,000 surprisingly quickly, value is becoming just as important as performance, technology, and cabin quality. That is exactly why one compact British crossover is beginning to stand out against some much more expensive rivals.
This Android feature is the secret to easier Wi-Fi at hotels and Airbnbs
Travel can be stressful and annoying even under the best circumstances, and one of my least favorite activities is getting everything connected to the Wi-Fi wherever I'm staying. Will there be a captive portal? Is the captive portal going to work correctly on all devices? How many devices can I connect to the Wi-Fi?
Stop thinking Linux apps only work on Linux—here's what I run on Windows instead
While Linux is a great OS, and getting better on the desktop all the time, you don't have to run it to get the benefit of some great open-source apps. Many open-source programs that are popular on Linux distros have native Windows versions. Here are some of my favorites.
Never use a single name for your Wi-Fi network
In most cases, having a single SSID (Service Set Identifier) that combines all available Wi-Fi bands on your router is the way to go. But sometimes, it’s better to create multiple SSIDs for one reason or another. I’ve used two SSIDs on my network for years, and I’m not going back. Here’s why you should consider doing the same.
A popular academic journal is coming down hard on AI-generated submissions
We're still in the early stages of the AI revolution, but there's already plenty of evidence that it won't be purely a blessing. Generative AI has made writing exponentially faster, if not necessarily better, and the result has been a massive increase in submissions of novels, newspaper pieces, and even academic journals, with one publication even warning of a coming "swamp of slop."
Now, however, the journals are fighting back. ArXiv, one of the largest open-access repositories of preprint academic research, is issuing a one-year ban on all authors who submit "obviously AI-generated work," according to 404media. Moreover, if the offending author wishes to return to the good graces of ArXiv, they will have to first submit to a "reputable peer-reviewed review venue," according to Thomas Dietterich, chair of the publication's computer science division.
SEE ALSO: The fierce battle over AI in schoolsHe recently took to X to not only clarify the new rules but also place the onus on authors to use LLMs responsibly: "If generative AI tools generate inappropriate language, plagiarized content, biased content, errors, mistakes, incorrect references, or misleading content, and that output is included in scientific works, it is the responsibility of the author(s). We have recently clarified our penalties for this. If a submission contains incontrovertible evidence that the authors did not check the results of LLM generation, this means we can't trust anything in the paper."
Faulty, misleading references, plagiarism, and invented citations are not the only issues with AI; however, there are others. In November of 2025, ArXiv was forced to shut down its entire computer science review section due to the overwhelming volume of AI-generated submissions, most of which did not even introduce new research results, according to a press statement.
A funny, counterintuitive consequence of AI-enabled hyperefficiency is the evaluation bottleneck. If, in any given month, there are 100 academic papers submitted for review, it's not too hard to find and publish the best work, but if there are a thousand submissions, even the best-funded journals can't keep up.
Expect the backlash to grow even fiercer as the power of AI increases and the costs of using it decrease.
How to watch the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest online for free
TL;DR: The 2026 Eurovision Song Contest is available to live stream for free on BBC iPlayer. Access this free live stream from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN.
The Eurovision Song Contest has a reputation for delivering truly memorable performances, and not always in a good way. Rules and convention go out the window with Eurovision, resulting in some absolutely unmissable moments.
Want to watch the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest for free from anywhere in the world? We have all the information you need.
What is Eurovision?The Eurovision Song Contest is an international song competition organised annually by the European Broadcasting Union. This competition primarily features entries from European countries, with each participating nation submitting an original song to be performed on live TV. Competing countries cast votes to pick a winner.
Where is the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest?The 2026 Eurovision Song Contest is the 70th edition of the event. This year's competition will take place in Vienna.
When is the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest?The full schedule for the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest is as follws:
First Semi-Final — 9 p.m. CEST on May 12
Second Semi-Final — 9 p.m. CEST on May 14
Grand Final — 9 p.m. CEST on May 16
The 2026 Eurovision Song Contest is available to live stream for free on BBC iPlayer.
BBC iPlayer is geo-restricted to the UK, but anyone can access with a VPN. These tools can hide your real IP address (digital location) and connect you to a secure server in the UK, meaning you can access BBC iPlayer to live stream Eurovision for free from anywhere in the world.
Live stream the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest for free by following these simple steps:
Subscribe to a streaming-friendly VPN (like ExpressVPN)
Download the app to your device of choice
Open up the app and connect to a server in the UK
Visit BBC iPlayer
Live stream the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest for free from anywhere in the world
The best VPNs for streaming are not free, but they do tend to offer free trials or money-back guarantees. By leveraging these offers, you can live stream Eurovision without actually spending anything. This is not a long-term solution, but it gives you plenty of time to stream the event before recovering your investment.
What is the best VPN for BBC iPlayer?ExpressVPN is the best service for accessing free streaming services from around the world, for a number of reasons:
Servers in 105 countries
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 eight 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).
Stream the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest for free with ExpressVPN.
These 5 books on Kindle Unlimited made me a reader again (and will do the same to you)
Reading in your twenties as a young woman is familiar: you loved it as a kid, burned out after high school, and now books are big again. Most of us were former readers trying to rekindle our love of reading.
Freeze battery-draining apps without rooting your Android phone
Back in the early days of Android, it was common to root your phone so you could "hibernate" or "freeze" battery-killing apps. They wouldn't be able to wake up the device's CPU or consume any system resources. These days, Android has built-in features to stop battery-leeching apps, but you can still freeze apps, and you don't even need root access to do it anymore.
5 new Netflix documentaries to watch in May
Netflix's documentary catalog is something I can never get enough of, and when I begin my streaming session for the weekend, I am never out of fresh documentaries to binge-watch. Be it true crime, sports, biographies, or science, Netflix's documentary collection is never-ending.
Your old gaming PC is the ultimate homelab NAS
I happen to have a lot of old gaming PC parts scattered around the drawers and bins of my office. This comes from years of building PCs professionally, but it also meant that I could simply repurpose my old gaming desktop into a home server instead of buying a dedicated NAS.
I let a local LLM take control of my video doorbell—it's probably the future of smart cameras
Some Ring doorbells can use AI features to interact with visitors when you're not home. I ditched my Ring doorbell for a Reolink doorbell that runs fully locally, but I wondered if I could recreate a similar feature using a local LLM. I was partially successful.
California lawmakers explore ways to preserve access to online games
California lawmakers are deliberating a proposed bill, known as the "Protect Our Games Act," that would require publishers to continue offering access to online games even after developers stop supporting them, according to Ars Technica.
The bill is part of a wider initiative by the Stop Killing Games preservation movement, which has been active in Europe for some time now. Their mission statement describes them as a "global coalition of gamers, consumer advocates, and developers" seeking to "end the intentional destruction of our digital media" through a combination of class-action lawsuits, formal petitions, and engagement with lawmakers, and they make their stance very clear: "Games are art and have grown into a huge influence for our society. Deliberately rendering them unplayable is the destruction of cultural heritage."
SEE ALSO: eBay rejects GameStop offer: 'neither credible nor attractive'But as currently written, the Protect Our Games Act would place some serious requirements on game publishers and "digital game operators," including offering a 60-day advanced warning when "services necessary for the ordinary use of the digital game will cease," and even to compensate gamers with either a full refund or a software patch that would continue to make the game accessible in some form. If passed, however, the laws would only apply to game titles released after January 1, 2027, so existing online games would be exempt.
This question is part of a broader discussion consumers are having about ownership rights in the age of digital media, as both games and movies are increasingly sold not in hard-copy formats (the cartridges, cassettes, and DVDs of the past) but as files downloadable from servers. The problem is especially acute in online gaming, since if the infrastructure supporting it (the servers and software that enable it) is compromised, its functionality might also be compromised.
Put differently, the question might be posed this way: are games a product consumers buy or a software they lease? Up until very recently, gamers the world over were under the impression they owned a product, with an unlimited right to do with it as they please, but in the era of digital media, gaming companies have been pushing for a subscription model that treats games as a service with a finite and conditional duration.
Whatever decision the California lawmakers reach, don't expect these questions or the people posing them to disappear anytime soon. As of this writing, the StopKillingGames subreddit has more than 14,000 followers, and momentum is on the side of the consumer.
Google's "Magic" photo editing tool isn't exclusive to Pixel anymore—here's how to use it everywhere
The camera experience has always been a big part of what sets Pixel phones apart from other Android devices. While some features are genuinely exclusive, others aren’t as stuck in the walled garden as you might think. For example: Magic Eraser.
That old 128GB NVMe SSD in your junk drawer has 5 better uses than storage
If you were an early NVMe adopter or just like pulling apart old laptops for parts, you’ve probably got one or two tiny 64GB or 128GB NVMe SSDs lying around. They’re too small to realistically use as primary storage in a modern desktop or laptop, but it’s also hard to justify leaving them unused in a drawer—and they don’t exactly make for good "cold" storage anyway.
Stop paying Netflix: Here's how I built my own media library without self-hosting
I've started purchasing physical media and digitizing it to build my own media library. I could put this all on a Plex or Jellyfin server, but I decided to purchase an Open Source Media Center box instead—and this has been the single best TV upgrade I've ever made.
I built a 100TB homelab, then realized the cloud was better for these 3 things
I'm a self-hosting machine, running over half a dozen servers with dozens of virtual machines and over 100TB of local storage. However, even with all that hardware and storage, I stopped self-hosting three services and pushed them back to the cloud—here's why.
This is how they know you're using a VPN
As governments and companies around the world seem to be on a bit of an internet censorship binge, many people are turning to VPNs (Virtual Private Networks) to get around these restrictions—only to be caught out!
Stop using Home Assistant automations for everything — here's when scripts and scenes are better
When you're using Home Assistant, it's easy to fall into the trap of assuming that you need to create an automation for everything. Automations aren't the only option, however. Sometimes using a script or a scene can be a better choice.
I asked ChatGPT and Gemini to rank the 10 greatest movies of all time. Here's what I would change
What are the 10 greatest movies of all time? For a movie lover like myself, it's an impossible question. Could I name 10 movies that I believe to be great? Absolutely. The only problem is that I will regret my answers within five minutes of posting this article. I'll forget about an all-time movie that deserves to be on this list and get mad at myself for not putting it on. I feel the same anxiety when ordering at a restaurant — as soon as the waiter walks away, I want to change my selection.
Replit launches the newest version of its popular vibe coding app
Good news for vibe coders everywhere: Apple has lifted its temporary ban on Replit updates, enacted earlier this year, and the company has officially released Agent 4, first teased in March.
CEO Amjad Massad took to X to celebrate the good news: "We worked things out with Apple, and just published our app for the first time in 4 months. Thanks to all our customers and creators who helped out. It’s been a journey, but we never give up and stay winning! Enjoy the updates! Lots of new things coming."
SEE ALSO: Apple boots vibe coding app Anything from App StoreThe Agent 4 update brings powerful new upgrades to the platform, including the introduction of parallel agents to allow you to work on multiple ideas simultaneously, the ability to collaborate on projects by merging flows, and the ability to view your projects across multiple workspaces.
Though it isn't exactly clear what compromise or agreement Apple managed to reach with Replit and other AI-based software creators, the original dispute involved a long-standing clause in Apple's App Review Guidelines, specifically 2.5.2: "Apps should be self-contained in their bundles, and may not read or write data outside the designated container area, nor may they download, install, or execute code which introduces or changes features or functionality of the app, including other apps."
Because Replit's Agent app is capable of programming apps, Apple argued that it violated the "self-containment" clause, thereby bypassing the App Store.
Whether Apple ultimately changed its mind about its interpretation of Agent 4, or whether Replit compromised in some respect, remains unclear, but you can now download and run the latest version of Agent 4 on the iPhone or iPad to try it out for yourself.


