Blogroll

Android is open source, but your phone isn't—here's why Google locked it down

How-To Geek - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 19:05

Android has come to dominate the global smartphone marketplace, and a large part of why this has happened is thanks to its open-source nature. Any phone maker can put Android on its phones with no licensing fees, and its adoption has also spawned a massive app ecosystem, so unless you're a trillion-dollar company like Apple, going a different way isn't sensible.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Someone made a laptop that runs GrapheneOS desktop mode from a Pixel phone

How-To Geek - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 18:52

Why carry both a phone and a laptop if one device could do both? A Redditor has built a DIY "laptop" shell that is fully 3D printed, complete with a folding keyboard, a hideaway mouse, a massive battery, and a shoulder strap. It doesn’t have a processor of its own—instead, it uses a Pixel 9 running on GrapheneOS as the engine.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Aurora 1.5: Extending open foundation models for weather and Earth-system applications

Microsoft Research - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 18:46
At a glance
  • Aurora 1.5 is a major extension of Microsoft’s Aurora Earth System foundation model that adds 22 more weather variables relevant to energy, agriculture, transport, and climate risk, along with hourly temporal resolution and probabilistic ensemble forecasting.
  • Released as open source on GitHub with model checkpoints on Hugging Face, Aurora 1.5 enables researchers and developers to use, evaluate, and build on the model.
  • Aurora 1.5 connects open research to Microsoft Weather services, linking the model with data, infrastructure, managed access, and operational use for weather and Earth-system applications.

Aurora 1.5 is a major update to the open Aurora Earth-system foundation model, adding 22 new weather variables for a broader view of atmospheric conditions, hourly forecasts, and probabilistic ensemble forecasting. Developed by Microsoft Weather as an extension of the original model from Microsoft Research AI for Science, Aurora 1.5 shows how frontier research can move into broader use: open for researchers and developers to evaluate and extend, and designed to support customers where additional data, infrastructure, and operational assurance is needed. As climate and weather-related risks continue to affect communities, infrastructure, and economies worldwide, advances in Earth-system forecasting can help improve preparedness and decision-making.

What is Aurora?

Aurora is a foundation model for the Earth system developed by Microsoft Research AI for Science, first introduced in 2024 and published in Nature (opens in new tab) in 2025. It showed that a single model could be adapted to medium-range weather, ocean waves, atmospheric chemistry, and emerging climate applications, including high-resolution weather forecasting through fine-tuning. Its growing use has reinforced the value of an open, collaborative model that is easier to adapt, evaluate, and put to use. 

This next phase of Aurora (opens in new tab) builds on that foundation by making the model openly available for the global community to adapt, extend, and build on. 

What is new in Aurora 1.5?

Aurora 1.5 advances the broader effort to make open weather foundation models practical and scalable for organizations that rely on atmospheric and Earth-system intelligence. Alongside new variables and higher temporal resolution, Aurora 1.5 adds one of the most requested capabilities from users: ensemble forecasting. Because forecasts are sensitive to initial conditions and model uncertainty, ensembles run multiple simulations to show the range and likelihood of possible outcomes. Aurora 1.5 builds on Microsoft Research’s scientific foundation with new product engineering, cloud infrastructure, managed access, and decision-support capabilities. Together, these advances make Aurora 1.5 a valuable enterprise-grade weather solution for organizations. 

Figure 1: Illustration of the capabilities of Aurora 1.5 ensemble for predicting new impactful parameters such as total cloud cover and solar radiation. Ensemble mean and standard deviation are shown. 

The breadth update adds 22 new variables to Aurora’s original 4, including representative surface, pressure-level, wind, temperature, humidity, precipitation, and radiation fields. That broader coverage makes the model more relevant for sectors that depend on integrated Earth-system signals, from energy and agriculture to transport and resilience planning. 

The update to hourly temporal resolution enables fine-grained detail for precision operational guidance, such as the onset of precipitation, trade decisions, or a landfalling tropical cyclone. 

“Aurora 1.5 is a meaningful step toward making weather foundation models more open, useful, and practical. By releasing the model openly, we give researchers, developers, and organizations a clearer path to evaluate it, adapt it, and understand where it can help. Microsoft Weather’s role is to connect that open research foundation with the data, infrastructure, and applied workflows required by enterprises to use weather intelligence responsibly and with confidence.”

Sridhar Iyer, Corporate Vice President, Microsoft AI

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Watch on-demand Opens in a new tab Ensemble Forecasting in Aurora 1.5 Unlocks More Confident Decisions in the Face of Weather Uncertainty

The ensemble version of Aurora 1.5 introduces stochastic perturbations to represent model uncertainty, allowing the generation of multiple forecast members to estimate the spread of possible futures. For a multitude of applications including power systems, transport, agriculture, extreme-weather planning, and climate risk, the model distribution matters as much as the best estimate. 

This ensemble capability was developed through multi-stage fine-tuning on top of the original Aurora model. After expanding the variable set and adding hourly temporal resolution, the team introduced controlled perturbations into the model’s latent conditioning pathway and optimized the ensemble for probabilistic forecast quality. A final round of auto-regressive fine-tuning on ECMWF High Resolution (HRES) analysis data from 2018 to 2023 improved rollout behavior and stability.

Figure 2. Comparing Aurora 1.5’s probabilistic forecasts with the ECMWF ensemble forecast. The shading shows relative probabilistic forecast error, using ECMWF ENS as the baseline: blue areas indicate where Aurora 1.5 performs better, and red areas indicate where it performs worse. Across upper-air geopotential, temperature, and humidity, together with five surface variables, Aurora 1.5 outperforms ECMWF ENS on 88.9% of the evaluated variable-and-lead-time targets. 

Aurora’s ensemble approach summarizes uncertainty across multiple model runs. Its probabilistic forecasts outperform those of the state-of-the-art ECWMF dynamical ensemble on 88.9% of evaluated targets (Figure 1). In evaluations on all 2024–2025 tropical cyclones, Aurora 1.5 substantially reduced track errors, including roughly one-third lower track error when comparing the ensemble median to the original Aurora. An example for the devastating Hurricane Helene shows how Aurora 1.5’s skill translates to high-impact weather applications. 

Figure 3. Hurricane Helene ensemble forecast from Aurora 1.5, showing multiple plausible storm tracks starting at 0 UTC on September 24, 2024. The probabilistic ensemble forecast envelops the verified track, effectively capturing uncertainty in the storm’s progression. Figure 4. Aurora 1.5 reduces track error relative to the original model across lead times. Ensemble mean and median tracks are used for diagnostics, with the median showing the strongest gains, reaching roughly one-third lower error by day 5. Results reflect track position only.  Beyond weather: Aurora as an Earth-system foundation

Beyond medium-range weather applications, Terradot – part of the Microsoft Climate Innovation Fund portfolio—is working with the AI for Good Lab (opens in new tab) and the Microsoft Research Accelerator on TerraNova, using Aurora-derived weather representations (opens in new tab) to estimate and optimize carbon dioxide removal from enhanced rock weathering under real field conditions. Sasankh Munukutla, Co-Founder of Terradot, highlights, “By building on Aurora, we’re significantly advancing our R&D timelines and accelerating our path towards gigaton-scale carbon removal.” This work shows how Earth-system foundation models can support climate mitigation and public-interest science beyond forecasting, including settings where rigorous evaluation and responsible deployment matter.

Aurora is also being explored with partners such as the UK Met Office, exploring how foundation models can work alongside established physics-based systems to tackle problems from weather to climate time scales. The aim is faster, more flexible forecasts that support decision-making without replacing the science behind trusted prediction. 

“Microsoft’s Aurora model is an exciting and promising tool, enabling Met Office scientists to bring their data and expertise to help solve climate problems and provide new kinds of climate information. Met Office and Microsoft scientists and engineers are working together every day to translate lessons from AI weather prediction into the climate information space, sharing expertise in data science and climate science. Aurora is a great platform for learning how to translate these tools for use in climate projection to make the AI climate models of the future.”

— Doug McNeall, Science lead for Data-Driven Climate Modelling, Met Office Hadley Centre  Connecting open models to operational use

Microsoft connects open research, product engineering, responsible deployment, and partner ecosystems so that models can move from scientific advance to evaluated operational use. As an example, Aurora began in Microsoft Research AI for Science and is now being built on for operational use by Microsoft Weather, with AI for Good helping to evaluate public-interest applications. The platform path brings Aurora into Microsoft Foundry and Planetary Computer Pro, alongside Agent skills and Azure services that connect models with geospatial data, scalable infrastructure, and applied workflows. BKW provides an early proof point: the company is using Aurora 1.5 alongside existing operational Microsoft Weather models to support energy operations where weather-dependent generation, infrastructure planning, and environmental data need to come together. 

“This collaboration demonstrates how advanced AI capabilities and robust cloud infrastructure can be applied to one of the most strategic domains — energy, where weather plays a fundamental role. In a time of accelerated transformation, it supports our ambition to operate increasingly renewable-based systems, where generation is inherently weather-dependent, and to better anticipate and manage this variability with greater confidence and precision.” 

Farhat Quiñones Yamshid, Lead, AI and Technology, BKW  From open research to broader impact

Aurora’s open-source availability is intended to help researchers, agencies, companies, and civil society evaluate, apply, and extend the model. Microsoft Weather is building on that open foundation to deliver easier access to Aurora forecasts through managed services, integrations, and responsible deployment paths for organizations that depend on weather and Earth-system intelligence.

Foundation models should complement—not replace—physics-based models and domain expertise. The opportunity is to use them responsibly, with careful evaluation and transparency, and to invite researchers, agencies, companies, and public-interest partners to test where Aurora and related Microsoft Weather capabilities can improve forecasting, planning, and climate resilience in their own settings.

About Microsoft Weather 

Microsoft Weather is the AI-based forecasting team behind weather experiences across Windows, Bing, Copilot, Edge, and MSN, reaching more than a billion devices across 180 countries. The team has been applying AI to operational weather forecasting for more than seven years and has built a proven track record of delivering high-quality forecasts at global scale. Microsoft Weather has won multiple forecasting competitions and was ranked the world’s most accurate global forecast provider by an independent third party for three consecutive years from 2022 to 2024. Building on today’s Aurora 1.5 announcement, the team plans to extend this work in the coming months with additional fit-for-purpose AI weather models designed for enterprise scenarios where forecast quality, speed, uncertainty, and operational decision support matter most.

If you are interested in exploring Aurora and Microsoft Weather solutions for commercial or organizational applications, please contact us at AIWeatherClimate@microsoft.com 

Aurora 1.5 on Microsoft Foundry Aurora 1.5 on GitHub Aurora 1.5 paper Agent Skills for adapting Aurora to new applications

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The post Aurora 1.5: Extending open foundation models for weather and Earth-system applications appeared first on Microsoft Research.

Categories: Microsoft

I treated my home server like a spare PC, and it cost me my entire homelab

How-To Geek - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 18:30

Are you just using your home server as if it was a spare desktop? If so, you're using it wrong. Your home server is capable of so much more, so here are three things to help you change how you think about your home server.

Categories: IT General, Technology

3 best Netflix crime miniseries to binge this weekend

How-To Geek - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 18:15

As numerous miniseries have shown us, not all powerful crime stories require multiple seasons. The most impactful ones are presented as sharp and focused, with their destination apparent from the get-go. This is where crime miniseries really stand out. They dive directly into the heart of the story, the drama, and the repercussions that follow, and we can't look away.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Elon Musk says X will message you if a post you interacted with gets corrected

Mashable - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 18:14

The owner of X, the everything app, has announced a new feature that might be useful but also annoying.

In a standalone post on X, Elon Musk announced that Community Notes will get a new feature at some point soon. If a user interacts with a post that has since been corrected via Community Notes, a bot will send them a direct message about the correction.

SEE ALSO: Elon Musk to pay SEC $1.5 million settlement, judge signs off despite 'serious misgivings' This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.

Musk's posts were pretty vague and raised a few questions. For starters, we don't know when this feature will launch. More importantly, though, Musk didn't specify what kinds of interactions will prompt one of these automatic DMs. Will any interaction, such as a like, trigger one, or does the user need to repost or quote the post for the bot to send a message?

Beyond that, it's worth asking how effective this will actually be in curbing the spread of misinformation. Oftentimes, a post will gain a ton of traction before a Community Note corrects it, and sending messages to people who helped spread the post will only work if the users actually check their DMs, and then actually feel like removing whatever interactions they made with the corrected post.

Still, some accountability is better than none, I suppose.

Categories: IT General, Technology

French Fry Day 2026 deals: Score free fries from McDonalds, Five Guys, Sheetz, Chick-Fil-A, and more

Mashable - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 18:05

If you're not eating free fries this week, you're doing life wrong. Just kidding (kind of).

Friday, July 10, is National French Fry Day, which means a bunch of your favorite fast food chains are giving away free fries. While some require a minimum purchase of some kind or a (free) rewards membership, others require nothing but your will to face the crowds at a local establishment. Regardless, this is a made up holiday I, for one, can get behind.

If you're curious which fast food chains are participating in the free fry celebration, we have a running list below. Just be sure to check the details before rushing out to the restaurant of your choice.

Arby's

Arby's Rewards members can get a free fry of any size on July 10 with the purchase of a Cheesesteak online or in app.

Checkers & Rally’s

Celebrate National French Fry Day at Checkers & Rally’s from July 10 through 12 with BOGO free Famous Seasoned Fries of any size and $1 sauce trios.

Chick-Fil-A

From July 7 through 13, Chick-Fil-A is giving out free medium-size Waffle Fries as a reward in the restaurant's app. Just play the in-app "Spot the Cow" game to get the deal. It's limited to one fry reward per person.

Del Taco

July 10 through 13, you can score a free regular fry at Del Taco with with a $3 minimum purchase.

Five Guys

From July 8 through 10, customers who buy a burger, hot dog, or sandwich through the Five Guys app or Five Guys.com will get one free Little Fry. Sign in or create a Five Guys account and enter promo code FRYDAY26 at checkout to get the freebie.

Jack in the Box

Sign up to be a Jack Pack Rewards member if you're not already and you'll be able to grab a free fry of any size on July 10 with a minimum purchase of $1.

McDonald's

On July 10th, National French Fry Day proper, McDonald's is giving out free medium-sized French Fries to Rewards members. Just make a purchase of at least $1 through the McDonald's app to get the deal.

Sheetz

From July 10 through 16, Sheetz is giving away one free bag of fries with any purchase of $10 or more through the Sheetz app (under the OFFERZ tab). The freebie is limited to one per My Sheetz Rewardz member.

Wendy's

Are you a Wendy's Rewards member? Head to the app and make a purchase of at least $5 and you'll get a free fry in any size on National French Fry Day, July 10.

Whataburger

Whataburger rewards members can score a free medium fry with no purchase required on July 10. The offer is valid online or in the app.

White Castle

Head to White Castle on July 10 and pick up free Cheese Fries by using the promo code CHEESY when you place an online or in-app order.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Linux's biggest security breaches prove it's not immune to malware

How-To Geek - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 18:00

One thing Linux fans have always loved to tout over Windows was its security. While Windows has had lots of high-profile security breaches, Linux has also had its share of malware attacks, putting the belief that it's more secure than Windows in question.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Humanoid robots just removed a gallbladder in a live surgery

Mashable - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 17:58

Next time you go in for a surgery, will your doctor be a five-foot tall, 60 pound humanoid robot named Surgie? It very well could be!

A team of surgeons and engineers at University of California San Diego just successfully completed the first ever pair of surgeries during a preclinical trial using teleoperated humanoid robots.

Both of the surgeries were performed on non-primate mammals, so we're not yet at the level of operating on humans quite yet. But, it seems headed in that direction.

One surgery involved a humanoid robot and a human surgeon teaming up to perform a gallbladder removal. The human doctor acted as the assistant during the procedure. However, the second surgery, a laparoscopic gallbladder removal, was performed completely by a team of two humanoid robot surgeons.

"This study shows that humanoid robots have a viable future in the field of surgery," said UC San Diego Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering's Michael Yip, who is also one of the paper's senior authors.

SEE ALSO: Hyundai's Atlas robot debuts on the biggest stage of all: The World Cup

A robot surgeon is more than just an impressive accomplishment. The team detailed the important and practical uses for humanoid robots like Surgie at the operating table.

"Remotely operated and autonomous humanoid robots have real potential for amplifying access to critical surgeries to which patients would otherwise not have access," Yip said to UC San Diego Today. "This can help address the healthcare crisis not only in the United States, but also worldwide.”

The team provided examples such as humanoid robots "being deployed in remote communities where staffing is challenging, or in austere environments like search and rescue scenarios where a massive deployment of field medicine is needed in a short period of time."

Standing at only five-feet tall and weighing just 60 pounds also makes Surgie extremely mobile and compact in size.

Featured Video For You The humanoid so real they had to cut it open

However, there are still some kinks that need to be worked out. The team says the humanoid robot had to be recalibrated a few times during the surgery, which extended the time it took to complete the procedure. In addition, latency issues are still be worked on. Latency, or the time it takes for a human to control the robot and the robot responding, is especially important regarding deploying these robots in remote locations.

Regardless of these issues, the team behind Surgie believes there is a role the humanoid robot can play right now in the field. Being a humanoid robot means that Surgie can walk around and perform tasks similar to humans. Researchers envision scenarios where Surgie can work as an assistant in the operating room, getting tools for the human surgeons and cleaning up after procedures.

"Many communities struggle with adequate staffing on the surgical team, which means patients are not being treated," Yip said. "Our goal is an operating theatre of the future, where humanoid robots and humans work side by side as an integrated team to deliver procedures to those in need, both in traditional hospital settings as well as in non-traditional, field medicine scenarios."

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Categories: IT General, Technology

Stop wasting homelab resources—these 3 self-hosted apps simplify your life (July 10 - 12)

How-To Geek - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 17:30

Are you looking for some fun homelab projects to tackle this weekend? Today, I'm going to show you the pros of setting up a notification server, homelab inventory platform, and even a way to organize your kitchen and pantry.

Categories: IT General, Technology

How I made my phone bully me into being productive

How-To Geek - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 17:15

Reminders. Screen time limits. Grayscale mode. You’ve heard about these common techniques to use your phone less often. The problem is they’re easy to ignore. Sometimes, a bit more force is needed. So, I made my phone a bully.

Categories: IT General, Technology

The premium Sony WH-1000X The Collexion headphones get their first real discount at Target — save $50

Mashable - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 17:03

SAVE $50: As of July 9, the Sony WH-1000X The Collexion headphones are on sale for $599.99 at Target. That's $50 off their list price and, at the time of writing, $48 cheaper than Amazon.

Opens in a new window Credit: Sony Sony WH-1000X The Collexion headphones $599.99 at Target
$649.99 Save $50   Get Deal

Sony dropped a new pair of headphones in May to celebrate 10 years of its 1000X series. The name is terrible — WH-1000X The Collexion — but the execution is superb. They're extremely overpriced at $650, which is $200 more than the already excellent WH-1000XM6 headphones, but as of July 9, they've received their first-ever price drop.

You can grab the Sony WH-1000X The Collexion headphones in either black or platinum for $599.99 if you shop at Target, saving you a whole $50. It ain't much, but it's the best price to date. Plus, it beats Amazon by $48 at the time of writing.

What's so special about the anniversary headphones? Well, rather than the mostly plastic build of typical headphones, the Collexion headphones feature a stainless steel and vegan leather chassis with metal buttons and on-ear controls. Sony really prioritized quality and comfort with these babies, as well as sound. The Collexion headphones include a bespoke driver system that allows for more clarity and better high-frequency range. They also have a V3 integrated audio processor on board, which helps power an AI scale enhancement feature. Ironically, the battery life and noise cancellation are slightly less impressive compared to the XM6s.

As Mashable's Bethany Allard states, "Sony enthusiasts, folks who love a luxury look, and those who prioritize comfort above all else are the target audience for this Sony release." If that's you, and you've been waiting to grab these high-end headphones, I recommend grabbing them at Target and saving $50. Every bit counts.

Categories: IT General, Technology

16 summer hosting essentials that cost under $25 at Amazon

Mashable - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 17:02
Best summer hosting under $25 at Amazon Best yard game Franklin Sports Bocce Ball Set $19.99 (save $10) Get Deal Best cooler deal Igloo Classic Playmate Cooler (red) $20.79 (save $13.20) Get Deal Best speaker deal Soundcore Select 4 Go $21.99 (save $3) Get Deal Best kitchen deal Hario Mizudashi Cold Brew Maker $21.45 (save $4.05) Get Deal Best outdoor dining essential Fly Away Outdoor Fly Repellent Fan (2 pack) $25.91 Get Deal

With limited weekends remaining in summer 2026, it's time to schedule the backyard barbecues you've been considering. Clean off the grill, mow the lawn, and set out the games for a fun gathering with family and friends.

Maybe the only downside to this plan is that summer hosting can add up. Rather than worrying about the cost, check out these essential items at Amazon that are under $25. Shop from this list and you'll have plenty of fun without going over budget.

I've collected the best summer hosting essentials that cost $25 or less at Amazon. Happy hosting!

Best backyard game deal Opens in a new window Credit: Franklin Franklin Sports Bocce Ball Set $19.99 at Amazon
$29.99 Save $10   Get Deal Why we like it

On the list of wholesome summer fun activities, it doesn't get much better than a bocce ball match. On sale for only $19.99, the Franklin Sports Bocce Ball Set has everything you need for a great outdoor activity. Plus, there's an included carrying box for easy transportation.

Best cooler deal Opens in a new window Credit: Igloo Igloo Classic Playmate Cooler $20.79
$33.99 Save $13.20   Get Deal Why we like it

Nothing says summer more than the Igloo Classic Playmates Cooler. Go with the red colorway while it's on sale for $20.79 and your guests will have instant access to chilled drinks while lounging on the patio. The seven-quart size can hold up to nine cans, making it easy to load up and set out for guests.

Best speaker deal Opens in a new window Credit: Soundcore Soundcore Select 4 Go $21.99 at Amazon
$24.99 Save $3   Get Deal Why we like it

Compact in size and price, the Soundcore Select 4 Go Bluetooth Speaker is well worth using during summer hosting. It's dustproof and waterproof and can get up to 20 hours of playtime before needing to recharge. Crank up the playlist of summer with the Soundcore speaker while it's on sale at Amazon for $21.99.

Best kitchen deal Opens in a new window Credit: Hario Hario Mizudashi Cold Brew Maker $21.45 at Amazon
$25.50 Save $4.05   Get Deal Why we like it

The Hario Mizudashi Cold Brew Maker is one of my best secret hacks for making summer hosting easy. It takes just a few minutes to get a one liter batch brewing by loading up the basket with ground coffee. After that, I leave it in the fridge overnight and wake up to excellent cold brew that costs a fraction of buying it premade at the store. It's the perfect refresher to serve on warm afternoons.

Best outdoor dining essential Opens in a new window Credit: Fly Away Fly Way Outdoor Fly Repellent Fan $25.91 at Amazon
  Shop Now Why we like it

Admittedly, this one is a smidge over $25, but the payoff is well worth it. Instead of dealing with the struggle of swatting flies and even bees away from your table when dining outside, get the help of the Fly Away Repellent Fans. A two pack at Amazon comes in at $25.91. The fans use reflective blades made from a holographic material that keeps flying insects away. But the blades are soft and flexible enough to not cause harm should a hand get in the way. Fly Away says the two fans are ideal for tables of up to six feet, and they use AA batteries, so they're easy to replace.

More summer hosting deals under $25
Categories: IT General, Technology

I stopped shopping for a new SSD after adopting these 6 storage habits

How-To Geek - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 17:00

I wasn't a fan of wasting money on the most expensive SSDs even before the whole NAND shortage, but now? No, thank you. Now's not the time to buy a new drive.

Categories: IT General, Technology

The Lego Pac-Man Arcade set is over $50 off for Insiders — buy now to score a free Lego Sea Serpent

Mashable - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 16:54

SAVE $54: As of July 9, Lego Insiders can grab the Lego Pac-Man Arcade set for $215.99. The offer runs through July 12 or while supplies last.

Opens in a new window Credit: Lego Icons Lego Icons Pac-Man Arcade $215.99 at Lego
$269.99 Save $54   Get Deal

Lego is giving Pac-Man fans a reason to revisit the arcade era. The Lego Icons Pac-Man Arcade set is currently down to $215.99 for Lego Insiders, saving members $54 off its usual $269.99 price through July 12 or while supplies last. The good news? Joining Lego Insiders is free, and the purchase qualifies you for a complimentary Sea Serpent gift set ($24.99 value).

Designed for adult builders, this 2,651-piece set recreates the look of the original 1980s arcade cabinet, complete with a 4-way joystick, glowing coin slot, and adjustable score display. It’s not a playable arcade machine, but Lego packed in plenty of interactive touches to make it feel like the real thing.

Credit: Lego

The coolest feature is the mechanical maze hidden inside the cabinet. Turn the side crank and you can simulate Pac-Man’s classic chase through the maze as the characters move around the board. You can even remove the back panel to peek at the inner mechanics and see how the whole system works. Up top, you’ll find a display case featuring rotatable Pac-Man, Blinky, and Clyde figures, plus a tiny 1980s arcade scene with a gaming minifigure tucked inside the cabinet.

Credit: Lego

Beyond the nostalgia factor, the set has a fun bit of gaming history behind its design. The yellow used for Pac-Man was reportedly inspired by the same shade of yellow found on Lego bricks — so this collaboration feels like a full-circle moment. Once built, the 12.5-inch-tall arcade cabinet makes a pretty impressive display piece for anyone who grew up feeding quarters into the original game or just loves a good retro gaming collectible.

For a little nostalgia you can actually display, this Lego Pac-Man Arcade set is a pretty fun pickup.

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Categories: IT General, Technology

The discontinued Japanese sports sedan that's quietly becoming a bargain

How-To Geek - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 16:45

The Acura TLX Type S is officially gone. Production ended in 2025, there's no replacement coming, and one of the most overlooked sports sedans of the last few years is quietly disappearing from dealer lots.

Categories: IT General, Technology

The gorgeous Sonos Ace noise-cancelling headphones are a steal at $120 off

Mashable - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 16:40

SAVE $120: As of July 9, the Sonos Ace noise-cancelling headphones are on sale for just $279 on Amazon. That's a saving of 30% on list price.

Opens in a new window Credit: Sonos Sonos Ace $279 at Amazon
$399 Save $120   Get Deal

When Sonos released its first-ever headphones in spring 2024, our biggest complaint was the steep $449 price tag. So it's a good thing the brand knocked $50 off the list price last summer, and even better that it just shaved an extra $120 off just because.

As of July 9, the Sonos Ace headphones are on sale for only $279 at Amazon — a much more palatable price for noise-cancelling headphone seekers. That's 30% off the current list price and just $14 or so more than their all-time low from Prime Day.

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The Ace headphones are an aesthetic knockout, but beyond looks, they also offer incredible sound quality, impressive spatial audio, top-notch battery life (30 hours with noise cancellation turned on), and extreme comfort. As Mashable's tester Miller Kern noted in her review, "No exaggeration, these are the most comfortable over-ear headphones I’ve personally tried."

The noise cancellation is just fine, but other brands have it beat. If cutting outside noise is your top priority, we'd recommend going with the Bose QuietComfort Ultra 2s or even the AirPods Pro 2. If you like to stay in touch with the outside world, Kern writes that Sonos Ace's aware mode is "probably the best transparency mode I’ve experienced."

Once a bit overpriced, the Sonos Ace headphones are now a pretty sweet value at just $279. But the deal won't last forever, so add it to your cart while you can.

Categories: IT General, Technology

Bad Apples trailer: Saiorse Ronan hits her breaking point

Mashable - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 16:35

Respect your teachers, folks. They're underpaid, underappreciated, and if you push them to the edge, well, good luck. That's the core message of the Saoirse Ronan-led dark comedy thriller Bad Apples, which has a trailer out today.

Directed by Jonatan Etzler and written by Jess O'Kane as an adaptation of Rasmus Andersson's novel De Oönskade, the film sees Ronan as a Somerset-based primary school teacher named Maria. She adores teaching, but the underfunded education system wears her down on the daily. When her disruptive student Danny (newcomer Eddie Waller) spins out of control, Maria makes some choices.

As I wrote in my review out of BFI London Film Festival, "With Ronan's always-impeccable talents supported by a sublime young cast, Bad Apples leans into unethical impulses, all the while exposing home truths about the under-resourced education system and social disdain toward children with behavioural, emotional, and social difficulties. Plus, it's really funny."

Bad Apples hits cinemas Sept. 18.

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Categories: IT General, Technology

4 free (and private) Dropbox alternatives you can host yourself

How-To Geek - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 16:31

Are you tired of spending money on Dropbox every month when you have a perfectly good NAS sitting at home? Or, maybe you're just tired of Dropbox being able to see all your data whenever you upload something. Regardless of why you want to leave Dropbox, here are four self-hosted replacements that are completely free and keep your data private.

Categories: IT General, Technology

4 myths about the longevity of vinyl—and why we believe them anyway

How-To Geek - Thu, 07/09/2026 - 16:15

The oldest, best-kept record I have in my modest vinyl collection is a pressing of The Beatles’ Help! soundtrack from 1965 that was among the hundreds that my vinyl-nerd mom left me (thanks, Mom). While most of them are well-played, dinged-up, unplayable dinner plates, many of them, like the near-perfect Help!, miraculously still sound gorgeous and will for many years to come.

Categories: IT General, Technology
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