144 posts tagged ‘technology internet’
Ikea Just Announced Smart Home Sensors for Under $10
Ikea just announced a set of smart home sensors all for under $10. The set includes a door and window sensor named Parasoll, a motion sensor called Vallhorn, and a water leakage sensor called Badring. These are set to be globally released in the first half of next year. Read more...
This ‘Little Mac’ Is a Pint-Sized Windows Version of Apple’s Famed PC
How best can you display the advances in technology over the years? Let’s take a PC like the landmark original 1984 Apple Macintosh—later rebranded the Macintosh 128K—and shrink it by more than half. Then, boost its processing capability and memory by a factor of thousands or even tens of thousands—AKA modern mobile… Read more...
Could This—Finally—Be Humanity's First Permanent Lunar Base?
Thales Alenia Space and the Italian Space Agency (ASI) are embarking on a pioneering venture to construct the first permanent human outpost on the Moon, a critical component of NASA’s Artemis program. Read more...
YouTube Rolls Out New Games for Premium Users
YouTube ventured into gaming this week by rolling out a test of YouTube Playables to all Premium users. Playables are small, free games for mobile and desktop devices with no downloads, such as Angry Birds Showdown, from YouTube. Read more...
Sports Illustrated Allegedly Dupes Readers With Fake AI-Created Writers
Update 5:46 PM: Sports Illustrated sent us the following statement. Read more...
Teenage Engineering’s TP-7 Is the Ferrari of Tape Recorders
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Teenage Engineering’s New Mic and Recorder Are the Most Delightful Gadgets I’ve Used In Years
This year, Swedish electronics manufacturer Teenage Engineering launched two new devices: a microphone, the CM-15, and a digital tape recorder, the TP-7. If purchased together, they’ll run you almost $3,000. For many, it seems absurd to pay that much for products with features that come built into your iPhone — but… Read more...
Evernote May Limit Free Users to Just 50 Notes
Evernote is testing out a new plan that would severely limit users of its free version to only 50 notes and one notebook, TechCrunch first reported on Monday. One of the world’s largest note-taking apps, with over 250 million users, is quietly pushing for free users to upgrade to premium services. Read more...