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I finally understand why Arch Linux isn't for me—and probably isn't for you either
Arch and Arch-based distros get a lot of buzz, and it’s easy to find myself wondering whether I‘m missing out—but I‘ve learned from experience that Arch isn’t for everyone. It’s a phenomenal project, but there are many reasons it isn’t the best option for most of us.
Jessica McCabe built How to ADHD by solving her own biggest problem
Jessica McCabe started posting on YouTube because she knew she couldn't lose it.
McCabe lost notebooks and phones and was even capable of losing "her own head," according to her mother. So whenever she wanted to revisit helpful articles, research, or her own notes on strategies for living with her ADHD, McCabe didn't have an organizational system that made it easier for her to find (or actually remember) the information. Then, she realized one already existed.
"Anytime I wanted to show people this one really funny video on YouTube, I could find it. So I was like, YouTube. I won't lose YouTube," she told Mashable.
Thus, How to ADHD was born. Now, about 10 years later, the mental health creator has 1.94 million subscribers on YouTube, 100,000 followers on TikTok, a book she wrote called How to ADHD, and a second book in progress. The day before we spoke at VidCon, she gave two presentations at the World Confederation of Cognitive Behavioral Therapists Congress alongside experts, including doctors and research fellows, in the fields of psychology and psychiatry.
SEE ALSO: Audity credits her success to her muse and keeping things funSo yes, McCabe is a mental health creator, but she's also a verifiable force in the global mental health community. Mashable sat down with her to learn how her channel transitioned from a place to catalog her findings for herself to a full-fledged business, how she stays organized as a neurodivergent creator and mother, how she can care for yourself while connecting with her audience, and her hopes for the online mental health content creation space.
Tell us about the research process that goes into your videos, both when you first started and how it has evolved over time.The research process has definitely evolved. It started out as me Googling things, like, "I have ADD. What does that mean?" And I was like, oh, a lot of articles say it's not called ADD anymore. It's apparently all ADHD now. And oh, it doesn't just impact focus. It impacts executive function, too. I didn't know that. Over time, as I was posting this information on the channel, people in the comments would be like, "Do you know about Google Scholar? Do you know about PubMed?" Or eventually it was, "Hey, I'm an ADHD researcher. Would you like help? I see you're trying to disseminate good scientific information about ADHD."
So I started working with researchers. And even then, it took a little bit. The first researcher that I worked with was very pedantic and wanted to use very technical language. And I was like, I'm trying to disseminate to a lay public. I need to simplify a bit. I need to do that without losing important nuance, but I do need to be able to restate it in words that anybody can understand.
The current researcher I work with is Dr. Patrick LaCount. He's now our chief science officer, and he reviews everything on our channel. So if you see that we have the little badge on our channel that says, "We're on the Health Shelf", it means it's a channel from a trusted provider. That's because Dr. Patrick LaCount reviews everything that I put out before I put it out.
That's not a given on every mental health channel. It's amazing that you guys have that.It's really important to me to ensure the information we're putting out is accurate. Especially the fast pace that you have to go to as a content creator, where you're posting every week or maybe sometimes more often than that. It's really easy for things to slip through the cracks. So it's really important to me to have that review process of, is this accurate? Because if it's not accurate, then what am I doing?
Before you had researchers working with you, how did you handle that while maintaining a consistent posting schedule?I did have a consistent posting schedule, and I am a recovering perfectionist, but I gave my perfectionism a different target. I was like, "OK, you can get as perfectionistic about this as you want. You can read as many articles to make sure that everybody's agreeing with you and that you're getting the right information as you want, as long as you can get that video out on Tuesday. And that was non-negotiable for me. For a while, I was able to do that, but then, as the amount of information I was trying to include grew, the scripts and videos got longer, and it became harder and harder to hit that mark.
So we're still trying to figure it out. What that means for me now is that I'm not researching a brand-new topic every week like I did in the beginning. I've played around with different ways of doing it. One was like, "For this month, I'm learning about this topic, and all the content will be about it." Now it's a lot of, "Oh, I already know this stuff. I've already researched this stuff. I can make another video about the same topic." But at first, I was killing myself because it was a new topic every single week, and I had to research from scratch.
That's intense.I don't recommend it, but I did learn a lot. And now I have a book as a result.
So tell me a little bit more about the workflow you developed and how it came about.So the workflow evolved quite a bit, too. When I first started, I was planning to do it by trial and error, like, OK, I struggle with organization or cleaning my house, so I'm going to try this strategy for a week. I'm going to film it and then edit it. Then I quickly realized that's not actually doable in a week. You can't figure out the strategy once a week, try it for a week, then edit it.
SEE ALSO: How this Harvard-trained psychiatrist used Twitch and YouTube to bring mental health education to the massesInstead, what I did was, OK, let me learn about this thing. I had a format that I used every single time: introduce the problem, explain the problem, introduce the solution, and explain the solution. I just did it on a blue wall and added graphics afterward. That worked really well. What didn't work well was me trying to do it off the cuff because I learned really quickly I'm very hard to edit. I've gotten better. Hopefully, this is not terrible.
So, quickly, my process went from "let me try and speak off the cuff about what I've learned" to "that's not going to work, that's going to be impossible to edit" to "what if I outline?" But then I would look at the outline, and my mind would go blank because there would be all this pressure to like say whatever it was that I meant when I had that bullet point written down. So then I was like, I need to script. I just need to script.
The problem is that as an actor, I didn't do very well, partly because I had such a hard time memorizing lines. So very early in the process, I had a giant whiteboard, and I printed out every single word in giant, like 36-point font, and I just taped it to this whiteboard. I used what was my strength, which was I got really good at cold reading, but really bad at memorizing lines. Anytime I went into an audition as an actor, I was like, "Let me cold-read." So I'd glance down, glance up, and say the line, glance down, glance up, and say the line. So some of it was happy accidents. Like our punch-in, punch-out style was to cover the fact that I had to look down between the lines.
For the part of your workflow that involves other people, at what point did you decide you needed to build out your team, and how did you approach that process?That evolved over many, many years. At first, it was my boyfriend at the time, like, "Hey, you're an editor. Can you throw a couple of graphics on this?" Once I edited it, I was like, here you go, make it pretty, and he would take like a few hours to punch it up.
Over time, it became clear that what I was doing was really meaningful to people and could turn into something, right? More than just a personal project. So he did more and more until I was like, OK, I've got to pay this guy. I actually ended up hiring him full-time before I was full-time.
I was still waiting tables, but I was like, I need an editor. I will work for free 24/7. He will not, understandably. Eventually, I was able to go full-time as well. Then, when that marriage fell apart, I had to hire a team. There were a couple of people that I actually met at VidCon who were like, "Oh yeah, we can do some editing for you, and we can do some animations."
Digital organization was such a big struggle for me as someone with ADHD that I ended up hiring somebody literally to organize my shit. Our community manager had been volunteering on our Discord for a long time, and finally, after a couple of years, I was like, "We should hire you, though." Basically, my whole strategy was that whenever I wanted to hire a new person, I brought one on. Now I have a pretty robust team.
What's having a team like? Because content creation and running a team are very different skill sets.It is a very different skill set. Also, moving from "I'm going to have people I know help me with this thing" to "oh, I am hiring for a position, and I need to vet that person" was interesting.
An ADHD creator friend of mine, Dani Donovan, recommended a recruiter that she had worked with because she was also in the same boat of hiring friends. So for the first time, we used a recruiter who found us our current producer, and I was like, this person is amazing.
If I could go back in time, I'd work with a recruiter. It's really important as a creator to work with people. I made the mistake early on of prioritizing the hard skills. How good are you at animating? How good are you at editing? How good are you at these skills? And I didn't prioritize the soft skills — how are you collaborating with the rest of the team? Are you an easy person to work with? Can you take feedback? Now I really prioritize soft skills.
I would love to talk about your relationship with your audience. I imagine it has grown, but I feel like, especially being a mental health creator, there's an extra weight to that, and people come a lot with their personal experiences. So how do you navigate that?It's tough because I started out as a peer in my community. I was somebody who was learning about my ADHD for the first time; they were learning about theirs. We kind of came up together, and that was a really cool experience.
It also meant that if someone was struggling, it was almost like I was struggling too. We were in the same boat. And my boat was starting to float, and I didn't want to let their's to sink. I wanted to respond to every comment. I wanted to help everybody. As the channel grew, I couldn't anymore. I would get to the point where I would be overwhelmed with taking on a lot of people's pain and needs. I would need to step away for a little bit, but then I would come back, and there would be so many messages.
Facebook was really the first place where this was overwhelming for me, all of the direct messages that you would get. One day, I went to respond to a message, and by the time I got through like five messages, that person had already responded, so I was in a conversation with them. And I went — it's not just that I'm procrastinating or avoiding or like not doing the right thing by not responding. I can no longer respond to people.
So that's when I had to evolve it to let me read the comments and hear what people are saying. Then I need to make content that speaks to that struggle, content that will be for more than just that one person. That was a tough evolution for me in moving away from that one-to-one relationship.
I imagine there could have been some guilt there. Like, you're letting a version of a relationship go.It was painful moving into this parasocial space where I don't know everybody in my community anymore. We don't have regular conversations, but I still very much care and want to be there for people. I just can't in the same way. So one of the things we're doing now that I'm really excited about is that I'm going to start coaching people one-on-one.
I can get the one-on-one I really value, but then we put that content online so other people can benefit, too.
Since becoming a mom, do you feel that the way you approach the content itself, or the way you approach the work of creating the content, has changed?It has changed. The first change is obviously having to take a break. As a content creator, you're producing content week after week after week, maybe day after day after day. But maternity leave is a thing that is apparently important! So I had to figure out how to keep putting out content while I'm away and set my team up for success to do that.
Even then, it was really rough that first year to create content, because it felt like my brain had been hijacked by this new passion, this new child. My brain had literally been rewired. It also coincided with finishing my book and putting that out into the world. I finished my project of learning everything I could about my ADHD brain, putting it somewhere I could find it again, and making it available to other people, and I was embarking on a new one: motherhood.
And suddenly, my entire hyperfocus was on being a mom, and I did not have a channel for it. I don't want a channel about being a mom. So most of what I was learning no longer made sense to share with my community. That was a big, big shift for me because I had to figure out how to keep making content for this community when that's not where my head is at. So we changed up how we were doing content. I was no longer just a talking head on a blue wall. We also hired the wonderful new producer I was telling you about, and he's local, so we were able to start filming skits in my house and doing wild projects like having Cas from Clutterbug come down and help me reorganize my entire house. We were able to do different kinds of content.
But it was very much an exploration of what kinds of content my brain can focus on. What kind of content do I want to make?
What are your hopes for the mental health content creation space going forward? And as a second part, who are the creators in that space now that you think more people should be watching?Therapy in a Nutshell is great. Dr. Tracey Marks is great. Also, Daniel from The Aspie World. He's great for anybody who's dealing with autism. A lot of people who watch my channel are like, can you do this, but for autism? And I'm like, I don't have autism. But my friend does!
There are a lot of great mental health creators. But what I'm hoping for in this space is that we get more people with lived experience connecting with people who have research-backed, evidence-based information, and then we disseminate that. There are many academic researchers speaking to it, and many speaking from personal experience. But I would love to see more people doing what I'm doing, which is speaking about their personal experience as a vehicle to share evidence-based information, so it's not just, "This one thing worked for me." It's, "This is what works for a lot of people, and it worked for me. Maybe it would work for you, too."
Europeans to lose access to Studio Canal content bought through PlayStation
Sony will revoke access to digital downloads from Studio Canal in certain European countries, the company announced this past weekend.
"From September 1, 2026, due to our content licensing agreements, you will no longer be able to access your previously purchased content from Studio Canal, and it will be removed from your video library," the blog post reads.
Following that unfortunate news is a list of hundreds of movies and television shows that will soon be disappeared not only from the PlayStation Store but your own video library, including both small-budget sensations like Attack The Block and Hot Fuzz, beloved rom-coms like Bridget Jones' Diary and iconic action movies like Rambo and Terminator 2: Judgment Day.
SEE ALSO: The PlayStation 6 could ditch the built-in disc driveSony's announcement also did not include any word about refunds or compensation for the millions of people who thought they were purchasing a product when it turned out they were only leasing it.
This isn't the first time a major media company has abruptly discontinued access to digital downloads. Hell, it's not even the first time Sony has done it; in fact, irate gamers have been pushing back against this trend for years, crying foul not only about the sneaky practice of retroactively removing purchased products from digital stores but also about the downstream effect of killing the second-hand market. Obviously, if all downloads are digitized, there will be no rifling through bargain bins of DVDs, Blu-rays, or game disks.
And while most games are still sold in both physical and digital formats, the most anticipated game of the year, Rockstar's Grand Theft Auto 6, recently announced it will be sold digitally only. Customers who purchase the game in-store will instead receive a physical box containing a download code.
Unsurprisingly, fans across the internet are reacting negatively to the news, especially because they understand a simple concept: when the biggest, best-selling, and most popular game does something, every other game is likely to follow suit.
Your 3D printer isn't finished printing when the nozzle stops moving
Modern 3D printers are so much more refined than the early machines I tried just over a decade ago. They are almost plug-and-play, the quality of the results is often almost perfect. Also, you don't need a lot of technical knowledge to run a printer anymore.
I thought my repairable Android phone would last 10 years—it lasted 3 months
I loved my foldable Galaxy Z Fold, but I was so enamored by the idea of a repairable and open-source phone that I was willing to go back to a traditional slab in order to give this experiment a shot. So I bought the Murena Fairphone 6 with the idea that this would be a device I could preserve for many years to come. Then, out of the blue, this dream came to an end.
After a year on AMD, one NVIDIA feature finally broke me—and it has nothing to do with DLSS
After almost a decade of rocking NVIDIA GPUs, I got an AMD RX 9070 XT in early 2025 and have been using it for almost a year and a half. In general, I haven't had any major complaints. The performance has been great at my resolution of choice (1440p ultrawide), FSR 4 looks almost as good to my eyes as DLSS 4, the drivers have been very stable, and ray tracing performance is more than usable in most games.
Everything coming to HBO Max in July
As summer hits its stride, HBO Max is keeping the momentum going with a July lineup that features buzzy originals, franchise expansions, and fresh cinematic arrivals.
I gave my old Chromebook a second life as a dedicated Home Assistant terminal
I have an old Chromebook with a slightly broken casing that used to belong to my wife. It's still perfectly usable, and I hate throwing tech away unnecessarily. I decided to set it up as a dedicated Home Assistant terminal, and it's way more useful than I expected.
Is COZEWARE’s Visio ductless mini split the smarter home upgrade?
If you've ever found yourself sweating through a heatwave waiting for a contractor to quote you for central air installation, you already know the problem. Traditional HVAC systems work well enough in theory, but the reality of getting one installed, running it efficiently, and maintaining it over time is a different story. Mini-split systems have been quietly solving that issue for years, and with newer models like the COZEWARE Visio, the case for going ductless has never been stronger.
4 warning signs your car’s AC is about to die during a summer road trip
Summer is here. The days are long, the temperatures are rising, and millions of Americans are hitting the road for their epic summer adventures. However, nothing spoils a summer road trip faster than a busted air conditioning system.
I'm 3D printing something useful every day for a month—here are the 4 projects I'm starting with
3D printing is an intoxicating hobby, but it's so easy to get caught up in printing useless things. The prints look cool, but they don't actually serve a purpose. So, I've challenged myself to 3D print something useful every day for a month. Here are the first four projects I'm starting with.
Your CD and DVD collection is slowly destroying itself
I love physical media, you love physical media. Physical media is awesome, and generally just better than digital streaming or downloads, if a little bit less convenient.
Google's Gemma AI runs locally on my $300 mini PC, and it replaced ChatGPT for more than I expected
AI tools can be useful, but the costs add up quickly once you start looking beyond the free versions. ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and other platforms all have their strengths, but paying for multiple subscriptions just to get the best parts of each one isn't something most people are going to do casually.
The most useful Google Pixel feature I found isn't new, but almost nobody uses it
One of the oldest hardware features in smartphones is vibration motors. While the technology has improved, the functionality hasn't really changed much over the years. However, I recently discovered a feature on my Google Pixel phone that makes vibration a lot smarter.
Excel Power Query isn't just for experts or big data—it's an everyday tool you should be using
Cleaning up data by hand in Excel is a recipe for mistakes, and even well-built formulas can become difficult to maintain as spreadsheets grow. Power Query is often dismissed as a tool for data experts working with massive datasets—but it's actually one of the most practical tools for everyday Excel tasks. It offers a safer way to automate spreadsheet chores without the complexity most people expect.
3D-printed threads are amazing—here are some of my favorite ways to use them
3D printing has democratized fabrication at home, but there are a lot of items that many of us assume cannot be 3D printed. For a while, I put threads in this category.
Ubuntu tries to improve GNOME. Fedora convinced me it didn't need fixing
Ubuntu has done a lot for the Linux desktop, including making installation less frightening, pushing Linux into normal laptop conversations, and giving many people their first working desktop. The problem is that Ubuntu's GNOME no longer feels like GNOME with a distro underneath it. It is a negotiated settlement between GNOME's design, Canonical's old Unity instincts, Snap integration and an entire set of defaults designed to make the transition from other desktops less awkward.
FIFA World Cup schedule today: Games, kickoff times, livestream info for June 28
The 2026 World Cup knockout rounds are finally here, following two weeks of exciting — and sometimes unpredictable – soccer action. That excitement now continues as qualifying teams now face each other in single elimination games.
Today, June 28, features just one game: South Africa play co-hosts Canada for a spot in the last 16. Here's everything you need to know to watch live today.
FIFA World Cup schedule today: June 28Round of 32: South Africa vs. Canada (Los Angeles Stadium) — kickoff at 3 p.m. ET
South Africa made it through to the knockouts with a last ditch win against South Korea, finishing second in Group A. Now they face Group B runners-up Canada. The Canadians will see this as a winnable fixture and will back themselves to reach the next round. South Africa would almost certainly say the same thing.
Live coverage will be on Fox and Fox One. Peacock will carry the live Spanish-language coverage.
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YouTube TV — 10-day trial, then $67.99/month for 3 months
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It's possible to watch the World Cup for free on international services like ITVX, BBC iPlayer, NOS, or RTÉ. Our global World Cup watch guide can walk you through the process.
You will need a VPN to live stream the World Cup on these free streaming services. We recommend ExpressVPN — a Mashable-tested service and an Official Tournament Supporter of the FIFA World Cup in the U.S., Canada, and Europe — as our VPN of choice for sport. It offers servers in 105 countries, a user-friendly app available on all major devices, a speedy connection, and up to 10 simultaneous connections.
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