Technology

Stop defending binge model streaming and start embracing the weekly release

How-To Geek - 1 hour 5 min ago

In season 1 of Community, there's a scene where Donald Glover's Troy Barnes learns a valuable lesson while eating a giant cookie. The more Troy eats the cookie, the worse he feels. Troy pondered, "How can something that's delicious make me sick?" It's at this exact moment that the light goes off in his head. "Unless too much of a good thing ... is actually a bad thing," Troy said. Unfortunately, I'm not eating a cookie right now. However, the cookie represents my relationship with streaming, in particular, the binge model.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Nissan's no-transmission hybrid for 2027 is different from every RAV4 and CR-V

How-To Geek - 1 hour 35 min ago

Nissan revealed the next phase of its U.S. hybrid and electrification strategy during the 2026 New York International Auto Show, debuting the 2027 Rogue Hybrid e-POWER. With the e-POWER variant, Nissan will introduce a unique series-hybrid powertrain into its North American lineup, a technology that sets it apart from the parallel-hybrid systems used by its primary competitors.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Google Meet is on Apple CarPlay so you can pretend to work while driving

How-To Geek - 2 hours 1 min ago

You might hop into your car to escape work, but now you can act like you're productive while on the road. Google Meet calls are now available through Apple CarPlay on iPhones connected to supporting vehicles.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Why the Lincoln Corsair feels more luxurious than its price suggests

How-To Geek - 2 hours 35 min ago

Lincoln has been Ford’s luxury wing for more than a century, turning out some truly legendary cars along the way. Think of the early ’60s Continental, the sleek Zephyr, or the old-school Town Car that ruled the ’90s.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Stop pointing your router antennas straight up—the secret to positioning them for perfect Wi-Fi coverage

How-To Geek - 3 hours 5 min ago

Routers are easily forgotten, placed once and only remembered when they stop working. In doing this, a lot of people overlook the antennas, often leaving them pointing in random directions or arranged on a whim. It's a waste: you need to arrange them properly to maximize your network efficiency.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Samsung's 2026 OLED and The Frame Pro TV prices give it an edge over LG

How-To Geek - 3 hours 12 min ago

Samsung's 2026 OLED and The Frame Pro TVs are now available a few months after their CES debut, and the pricing may be more reasonable than you think. There are some missing offerings at this stage, however.

Categories: IT General, Technology

6 awesome ways to upcycle an old Raspberry Pi

How-To Geek - 3 hours 27 min ago

If you've bought a new Raspberry Pi, or just got your hands on an older model that someone else didn't want, there are many ways to put that little computer to good use, and here are six of them.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Raspberry Pi projects to try this weekend (April 3 - 5)

How-To Geek - 4 hours 5 min ago

Grab your Raspberry Pi out of the drawer it’s sat in for far too long, dust it off, and get ready to tackle some fun projects this weekend. Today, I’m going to show you how to build your own addressable LED strip, an AI failure detection system for your 3D printer, and even how to access your Calibre server from anywhere in the world.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Kia just had its best first quarter ever—but its EV momentum is fading

How-To Geek - 4 hours 35 min ago

Kia has opened 2026 on a high note, posting the strongest first-quarter sales performance in its history. Strong demand for core SUVs, hybrids, and family-focused models has helped push the brand to a new milestone, proving its mainstream lineup continues to resonate with buyers.

Categories: IT General, Technology

7 Android features that iPhones still don't have in 2026

How-To Geek - 4 hours 50 min ago

The iPhone may have more in common with Android than ever—the reverse is true, too. However, iOS still lacks several basic features that have been a core part of Android for years. While some of these may never make the jump, a few could be coming sooner than you think.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Stop falling for the "Dolby Atmos" label on soundbars—it's almost always a lie

How-To Geek - 5 hours 5 min ago

Ever since its release in 2012, Dolby Atmos has built a history of being the solid, industry-standard name for the very best in cinematic audio. This level of precision naturally turned the technology into a fancy marketing term for high-end quality, leading many, including myself, to actively look for the Dolby Atmos logo when buying equipment for a home theater.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Homelab projects to try this weekend (April 3 - 5)

How-To Geek - 5 hours 20 min ago

It’s that time of the week again—time to break out the terminal and upgrade your homelab with some new projects! This weekend, I’ll show you how to deploy a self-hosted certificate authority, a recursive DNS platform, and a Notion replacement with real-time collaboration.

Categories: IT General, Technology

These are my 10 favorite open-source Android apps

How-To Geek - 5 hours 32 min ago

Open-source apps can have a mixed reputation. They're often seen as being very powerful but lack the polish of their closed-source counterparts. But it doesn't have to be like that. Some of the best apps I use every day on my Android phone are open-source.

Categories: IT General, Technology

AMD stopped being the underdog—now we need to stop treating it that way

How-To Geek - 5 hours 33 min ago

I'm getting tired of the narrative that paints AMD as this forever underdog. It used to be true, and in some ways, it still is true, but AMD isn't the weak non-entity some people keep treating it as, and it's important that we let go of that mindset completely.

Categories: IT General, Technology

The Guess Who? Pokémon Edition game just dropped. Heres where to buy it before it sells out.

Mashable - 5 hours 35 min ago

There's a new screen-free way to dive into the joy of Pokémon. Freshly introduced today, the two-player Guess Who? Pokémon Edition Game is up for grabs at Amazon.

Opens in a new window Credit: Hasbro Guess Who? Pokémon Edition $24.99 at Amazon
  Get Deal

The Pokémon version of Guess Who? plays like the standard version, but instead of asking, "Is your person bald?" you'll get to ask fun questions like, "Is your Pokémon a water type?" The first player to guess five mystery Pokémon's first is crowned the champion.

Credit: Habro Credit: Hasbro

Each game comes with two double-sided sheets full of characters to guess, totaling 48 Pokémon and eight types. A round of Guess Who? usually takes about 15 minutes to complete which makes this a great quick game for road trips or when the kids have a friend over.

So far, the game is exclusively available at Amazon, but we'll keep this page updated if we see it pop up at other retailers. Happy guessing!

Categories: IT General, Technology

Hyundai's Boulder Concept SUV previews a US-made pickup truck

How-To Geek - 5 hours 35 min ago

Hyundai has used the New York International Auto Show to unveil the Boulder Concept, a rugged SUV that previews the automaker's first "fully-boxed" body-on-frame platform and a production midsize pickup that will use the architecture by 2030. The off-roader is targeted at the US and will be designed and built in the country using American steel.

Categories: IT General, Technology

The Testaments review: The Handmaids Tale sequel finds new power in its YA perspective

Mashable - 5 hours 36 min ago

Honestly, I wasn't sure we needed more of The Handmaid's Tale.

When Season 1 premiered during the early months of the first Donald Trump presidency, it struck a nerve, reflecting real-life concerns over the decline of women's rights and the rise of authoritarianism. Those concerns are more relevant than ever during Trump's second presidency, as the administration continues to systematically attack women and queer people in ways that recall the Christo-fascist nightmare of Gilead.

SEE ALSO: 'The Testaments' trailer: 'Handmaid's Tale' sequel sees June's baby all grown up

Yet between these presidencies, and between The Handmaid's Tale's start and finish, the series lost its way. After Season 1, it moved beyond Margaret Atwood's novel, and in its efforts to outdo our own growing dystopia, it turned into a grim, self-indulgent spectacle.

Much of that grimness remains on display in The Testaments, a follow-up series based on Atwood's 2019 novel of the same name. However, the show also finds something new — and perhaps even hopeful — to say, and that's all thanks to its focus on the younger generations growing up in Gilead.

The Testaments focuses on the youth of Gilead. The ensemble of "The Testaments." Credit: Disney / Russ Martin

The Testaments introduces viewers to a new tier of Gilead's rigid hierarchy: the Plums. Named after the distinct shade of purple they wear, Plums are the young daughters of high-ranking Commanders. Unlike the leads of The Handmaid's Tale, they didn't have independent lives before Gilead. They don't know what they've lost, only the world they're being raised in.

The Plums are being trained for marriage at a school run by The Handmaid's Tale's Aunt Lydia (Ann Dowd), whose role in the series has been substantially cut down compared to her role in Atwood's novel. In fact, quite a lot has changed between the novel and the show, which builds out the sickening pageantry of the marriage process between Commanders and their child brides. From high-stakes tea parties to a ball that puts a disturbing twist on prom, The Testaments ushers its young ensemble through a fraught coming-of-age story.

Our gateway into this world is Agnes MacKenzie (Chase Infiniti), the adopted daughter of a powerful Commander. Born before the coup that established Gilead but too young to remember much of it, she has been raised in a stew of religious, patriarchal propaganda that vilifies women as temptresses. Agnes recalls how, after smiling at a boy once, she was forced to stand with her mouth taped, holding a sign reading "slut." On a field trip, Aunt Lydia's underling Aunt Vidala (Mabel Li) shows her students a group of men who have been hanged for rape. The lesson? That these men did something wrong, but so did their victim, who "liked attention."

SEE ALSO: 'Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen' review: Marriage is a killer

These horrifying "lessons" are meant to grind the girls down into perfect cogs in Gilead's machine. But they're still teenage girls, and in The Testaments' most refreshing moments, we see them acting as such. In one telling scene, the Plums recite their pre-lunch prayers, emotionlessly, as one. Once the Aunts grant them permission to "socialize," the spell of their robotic routine breaks and they launch into excited discussion. Elsewhere, they play outside, fret over their outfits, and even harbor secret crushes that they know Gilead would consider sinful. Even Gilead isn't immune from mean girl behavior, as one of Agnes' friends Shunammite (Rowan Blanchard) regularly throws shade at other students. Her disdainful delivery of "weirdos" is a welcome break from the girls' go-to "proper" dialogue about the Lord's blessings and the fine weather. (Although it does make you wonder how such slang has carried down through Gilead's years of repression.)

Between the messed-up marriage market and the disquieting school environment, The Testaments proves just as chilling as The Handmaid's Tale, but far more reserved in its depiction of atrocities. There is the occasional scene of harsh punishment, but no graphic depictions of sexual violence. The restraint is a welcome departure from the original series, and it's also one of The Testaments' greatest strengths: proof that seeing a sinister ideology take root can be more effective than a violent scene played for shock value.

The Testaments' young ensemble is remarkable. The ensemble of "The Testaments." Credit: Disney / Russ Martin

Another one of The Testaments' greatest strengths is its cast, led by One Battle After Another breakout Infiniti. Her Agnes is a bundle of repression, made to mask her greatest fears and desires below a placid exterior. As the series continues, she strains against this forced pleasantness again and again, committing small acts of rebellion that bring catharsis and further trouble. It's remarkable to watch Infiniti chart that growth, especially as Agnes' jaded voiceover suggests further rebellion down the line.

Co-leading the series is Lucy Halliday as Daisy, a Pearl Girl. These are young women from outside of Gilead who have joined the country and converted to its ways. Daisy is originally from Toronto, and, as the trailer shows, she may still have connections to Canada that prove she isn't the perfect pearl Gilead wants her to be. She's a firecracker whose rebelliousness must be dimmed if she's to survive, and Halliday plays that contrast with just the right amount of anxiety, and even a touch of dark comedy.

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The Testaments' other Plums are standouts as well. Blanchard's sassy Shunammite brings a welcome dose of comic relief to the series, yet as the season goes on, her insecurities result in some painfully vulnerable moments. Elsewhere, Mattea Conforti will break hearts as Becka. She's recently gotten her period and begun the matchmaking process, but she's less elated and more terrified of being caged. Who can blame her? While The Testaments avoids a lot of the claustrophobic close-ups that defined The Handmaid's Tale, it still evokes a sense of imprisonment. The series frequently returns to Agnes' large dollhouse, a replica of her own considerable mansion. Like her dolls, she and the other Plums are considered playthings, made to act however Gilead wishes. The effect is stifling.

At times, The Testaments' mix of The Handmaid's Tale's bleakness and coming-of-age tale doesn't quite work, such as the inclusion of a love triangle that falls into melodrama territory. However, the series finds new power in its young adult perspective, centering on people who have never known anything but authoritarianism, but who are slowly gaining the resolve to do something about it. Perhaps that messaging, combined with some of The Testaments' use of YA tropes, will speak to audiences of Agnes and Daisy's age in a way that the bleakness of The Handmaid's Tale might not be able to.

The first three episodes of The Testaments premiere Apr. 8 on Hulu, with a new episode following each week.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Incognito mode doesn't do what you think it does

How-To Geek - 5 hours 50 min ago

For a long time, I treated incognito mode like a privacy shield. Open a private window, browse freely, close it, and everything just disappears. No history, no tracking, no trace. It feels clean, almost anonymous, and that's exactly why it's so easy to misunderstand what it's doing.

Categories: IT General, Technology

iPhone 18 Pro will be missing a popular color, leaker says

Mashable - 6 hours 4 min ago

Were you planning to get a black iPhone 17 Pro last year, only to be sideswiped with the revelation that there was no black iPhone 17 Pro? Well, if you were hoping that Apple would come to its senses and release a black iPhone 18 Pro later this year, then we have more bad news for you.

According to one Apple leaker, Apple has no plans to release a black iPhone 18 Pro. 

SEE ALSO: Apple to issue emergency patch to protect iPhones from DarkSword spyware

The leaker, known as Instant Digital on the Chinese social media platform Weibo, has a good track record when it comes to advance knowledge of Apple's upcoming devices. Instant Digital has previously shared accurate information in previous iPhone leaks.

This would mark the second year in a row that Apple decided to pass on a black color option for its premium iPhone models. Apple shocked its fans last year when it released the iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max without a standard black option (the phones were offered in silver, deep blue, and cosmic orange).

The iPhone 17 Pro line had an anodized aluminum body (instead of titanium), which proved to be extremely scratch-prone, and "scratchgate" could explain the lack of a black color option. Scratches were more visible with the darker deep blue colors.

SEE ALSO: What is ‘scratchgate’? Unpacking the iPhone 17 Pro scratching problem.

As 9to5Mac points out, while the cosmic orange offering caught consumers off guard, the color option was actually widely popular and may have partially led to Apple having its best fiscal quarter in its history.

It appears Apple may be trying to catch lightning in a bottle twice. As Bloomberg's Apple insider Mark Gurman previously reported, the company is currently working on a "Deep Red" color offering for the upcoming iPhone 18 Pro models. This would be the first iPhone to come in any shade of red since the iPhone 14 was offered in red as part of the (PRODUCT)RED lineup.

For iPhone users who must have a black color smartphone, the iPhone 18 base model will likely still come in black. In addition, Apple is reportedly passing on any fun colors for the much-talked-about iPhone Fold, which is rumored to launch by the end of the year. Apple appears to be opting for more traditional Apple colors for its first foldable mobile device (think space gray and, yes, black).

With all that being said, Apple could still change its mind or even unveil a completely different color lineup for the new iPhone 18 line come September.

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Categories: IT General, Technology

This 55-inch Samsung OLED 4K TV is under $900 at Amazon — save $500

Mashable - 6 hours 16 min ago

SAVE $500: The 55-inch Samsung OLED 4K S85F Series TV is on sale for $897.99 at Amazon, down from the list price of $1,397.99. That's a 36% discount.

Opens in a new window Credit: Samsung 55-inch Samsung OLED 4K S85F Series TV $897.99 at Amazon
$1,397.99 Save $500   Get Deal

The Amazon Big Spring Sale has come and gone, but Amazon forgot to turn off the discounts on TVs. We're still seeing many models sitting at their sale price two days later, but we're not mad. Baseball season is here, after all, and if you could use an upgrade to watch this year's games, check out this Samsung deal.

As of April 2, the 55-inch Samsung OLED 4K S85F Series TV is on sale at Amazon for $897.99, down from the list price of $1,397.99. That's a 36% discount that takes $500 off the price.

With 4K resolution, dynamic brightness, and excellent contrast, the 55-inch Samsung OLED TV will be a welcomed addition to your home's entertainment setup. Samsung mentions this model uses the brand's NQ4 AI Gen2 processor to ensure each scene has optimal brightness. Samsung also tapped into the color experts at Pantone to make sure skin tones were realistic and accurate.

SEE ALSO: The Google TV Streamer 4K is $20 off at Amazon — save on this streaming game-changer

When it comes to watching sports on the 55-inch Samsung OLED, the 120Hz Motion Xcelerator brings smoothness to quick movements. Plus, Samsung used object tracking sound technology which allows sound to follow objects on screen, giving a more life-like experience.

In addition to today's sale price, Amazon is tossing in free delivery and unpacking service, which usually costs $29.99. This means delivery will come to the room of your choice with unboxing and packaging removal.

Upgrade to the 55-inch Samsung OLED 4K S85F Series TV while it's still sitting at the sale price we saw earlier this week at Amazon's Big Spring Sale sale. You'll be saving $500 that can be used for your favorite streaming services in the future.

Categories: IT General, Technology
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