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Today β€” 9 January 2025Tech News

Apple makes Severance season one available to stream for free on the Roku Channel for a limited time

9 January 2025 at 10:37

In a promotional push to boost interest for the upcoming second season, Apple has added all of Severance season one to the Roku Channel, for users to watch for free. The Roku Channel boasts more than 90 million users, making it one of the largest destinations of free streaming video content.

This marks the first time TV+ content has been made available on a free third-party streaming platform. The move shows just how committed Apple is to trying to expand engagement and viewership of its original content.

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Wish you could rearrange CarPlay apps like on iPhone? There’s a way, but it’s weird

By: Zac Hall
9 January 2025 at 10:28

Ever wish you could rearrange or delete apps from CarPlay? It turns out you can, although it works differently than rearranging your iPhone Home screen.

The trick is in the Settings app on iPhone. Just don’t try to do this while driving. You don’t even need to be connected to CarPlay for it to work.

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β€˜Path of Exile 2’ Players Call Bullshit on Elon Musk’s Video Game Stream

9 January 2025 at 10:35


The world’s richest man claims he’s playing the game at the highest level. But that’s only true if you have no idea what’s going on.

Anker's newest charger from CES 2025 is already discounted

9 January 2025 at 10:38

Just a couple of days after Anker announced its 140W four-port wall charger at CES 2025, it’s already on sale. The charging brick has a display (which lets you keep tabs on various metrics), multiple fast-charging options and an β€œodometer” to track its lifetime usage. You can slash $10 off its retail price on Amazon and Anker’s website.

When not on sale, the Anker Charger (140W, 4-Port, PD 3.1) costs the same as Apple’s 140W wall charger for MacBooks but has loads of extra perks. Among those is its β€œhigh-definition” (although we don’t know the exact resolution) color display. There, you can monitor its total output power, a per-port wattage breakdown, temperature and its total hours of operating time (the aforementioned β€œodometer”). The screen even rotates 90 degrees with a long press of its button to fit different outlet orientations.

Its three USB-C ports, two of which are high-speed and can charge a 15-inch MacBook Air to 50 percent in 30 minutes. Also onboard is a single USB-A port. The Anker Charger supports multiple fast-charging options, including PD3.1 and UFCS. It’s bundled with a five-ft 240W USB-C to USB-C cable.

The four-port charger has an MSRP of $90, but you can get it for $80 by clipping a digital coupon on Amazon and Anker’s website.

Also on sale is Anker’s new 25,000mAh charger with two built-in cables. One cable is retractable, while the other loops into a lanyard when not in use. Anker says the retractable one has been tested for over 20,000 retractions, and the lanyard cable can support up to 44 pounds.

The soda-can-sized charger also has three USB-C ports, which can deliver up to 100W to your devices. It, too, has a display showing battery temperature, output and input wattage and battery health (this one is shown in a classic percentage rather than hours).

The Anker Power Bank (25K, 165W, Built-In and Retractable Cables) retails for $100 but can be yours for $90 with a coupon on Amazon and Anker’s website.

Follow @EngadgetDeals on Twitter and subscribe to the Engadget Deals newsletter for the latest tech deals and buying advice.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/deals/ankers-newest-charger-from-ces-2025-is-already-discounted-183858056.html?src=rss

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Β© Anker

Product image of the new four-port Anker Charger. It sits plugged in on a flat surface with four cables charging various Apple devices.

This mean bean machine is bound to upset coffee fans

9 January 2025 at 10:30

If you know anything about coffee, and coffee snobs, you’ll know they’re always going on about where their beans are sourced from. The preference for single origin beans is better for traceability, transparency, and when you discover a variety you adore, you can keep going back. Japanese company Mihatama, however, turned up to CES 2025 in Las Vegas with Flavor Craft AI, an app-controlled system to meter out beans to suit your specific taste. You can just imagine the coffee snobs clutching their heads at the thought of blending beans in such a fashion.

Essentially, you fire up the app and select preferences based on your preferred flavor, selecting for strength, acidity, bitterness, astringency and richness. Once you’ve done so, the AI will direct the machine to churn out a blend of different beans sufficient quantities to match the flavor you’ve requested. Said beans will be collected in the bottom tray, where you can then dump them into your grinder of choice and brew up your drink.

The company has set up a pre-launch page on Indiegogo which will open to pre-sales at some point in the near future. Its representatives have said that it’ll cost around $400 when it goes on sale, plus or minus the cost of never being able to invite your coffee snob friends over to your house ever again.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/home/kitchen-tech/this-mean-bean-machine-is-bound-to-upset-coffee-fans-183045969.html?src=rss

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Β© Daniel Cooper for Engadget

Image of Mihatama's Flavor Craft AI coffee bean blending machine.

DotLumen’s haptic headset could help blind people navigate

9 January 2025 at 10:15

DotLumen founder Cornel Amariei describes his product as a β€œself driving” system to enable blind and low-vision people a way to get around. It’s essentially the electronic equivalent to a guide dog, helping users avoid obstacles when walking around. The Romanian company turned up to CES 2025 in Las Vegas armed with prototypes of its headset that it hopes will make blind people’s lives a lot easier.

The headset looks like a chunky piece of VR gear, with a front unit sitting on your forehead just above your eyes. There’s a chunky power and processing pack on the rear that keeps the bulky device's weight balanced while walking around. In the front, there are six computer vision cameras β€” three near field and three pointed further away β€” which Amariei says was inspired by Tesla’s setup.

Collision avoidance is the main priority here, preventing you from bumping into other pedestrians or street obstacles. In front of the headset are a series of little arms that make contact with your forehead, each one tied to a vibrating motor. When the vibrations are in the center of your forehead, it’s safe for you to move forward, but when the vibrations move either side, you should turn to refocus.

There is also a voice guide, and this will chime in to let you know when the view in front of you is getting crowded. Amariei told me that the headset has a battery life of around 2.5 hours, which is more than enough for an average walk. But that if you do need some extra juice, you can hook up a USB-C battery pack and carry that around with you as well.

Image of a handsome man wearing a blindfold, facemask and DotLumen's accessibility headset.
Daniel Cooper for Engadget

Testing the headset in the less-than-ideal environment of CES was a great way way to see how serious the company is. After all, the ceilings are low, the walkways narrow and there are always hundreds of people who just walk at you, expecting you to throw yourself out of their way. Which is why I wore a blindfold and strapped the prototype to my head in order to roam the floor at Eureka Park.

It’s obviously quite hard to describe the sensation navigating a space using only gentle taps on your forehead. I certainly was quite hesitant, taking small steps and slowly moving forward, letting the headset guide me on my journey through. When crowds thronged past me in tight formation, the hardware’s audio guide said β€œnarrow,” telling me the space around me was in short supply.

What impressed me is that I was able to navigate the scrum without bumping into anyone, and managed to get a fair way through the hall. Naturally, I can’t speak to the headset’s long-term effectiveness, especially as someone who can see, but the technology certainly feels like it could be very useful.

Amariei said DotLumen will begin selling its headset in Europe in the near future, with the price expected to come in under €10,000. As steep as that sounds, he added the price to train a guide dog is significantly higher. In the US, the Guide Dog foundation says it costs $50,000 to breed, raise, train and place an assistance dog.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/wearables/dotlumens-haptic-headset-could-help-blind-people-navigate-181532099.html?src=rss

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Β© DotLumen

Image of a person wearing DotLumen's blindness headset.

Of course Atari’s new handheld includes a trackball, spinner, and numpad

In the wake of the successful Nintendo Switch and Valve Steam Deck, we have seen a wave of PC-based,Β Android-based, and even FPGA-based handheld gaming systems that can sometimes be hard to tell apart. The upcoming Atari GameStation Go sets itself apart with what we're relatively sure is a first for portable gaming: built-in trackball, spinner, and number pad controls.

Gamers who cut their teeth after 1990 or so might not remember an era when arcade and home console games often relied on controls that went beyond the usual D-pad/joystick and action buttons. But there are plenty of classics from the early days of electronic gaming that just don't feel right unless you have a trackball (Centipede, Missile Command, Crystal Castles), spinner (Arkanoid, Tempest), or number pad (Star Raiders, Intellivision sports games). Many modern retro re-releases try to re-create these kinds of games with more standardized joystick and button controls, but the results can be limited at best and unplayable at worst.

The Atari GameStation Go, on the other hand, seems to be aiming for maximum retro authenticity by packing a whole host of control options into its $150, 7-inch display portable. While a prototype shell for the GameStation Go was briefly shown at the 2024 Consumer Electronics Show a year ago, this year's CES is the official announcement party for a playable version of the GameStation Go.

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Β© My Arcade / Atari

DoorBox debuts its new and improved smart delivery box at CES 2025

9 January 2025 at 10:26

Millions of packages stolen each year. DoorBox aims to change how packages are delivered with its smart package box that features a theft-proof design with live camera feeds and an alarm that activates automatically if the box is tampered with.Β  After selling 2,000 units of its initial version, which offered manual functionality, the startup unveiled […]

Β© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

Spy pics appear to show Tesla’s refreshed Model Y in testing

9 January 2025 at 10:26
silver new model y front driving in snow
Oh hey, another full-frontal light bar design. | Image: Cochespias1

Pictures posted on social media give us a look at a facelifted Tesla Model Y β€œJuniper” refresh that lets go of the original Model 3 headlight style in favor of a new front lightbar setup that reminds me of the Chevy Equinox EV. As reported by InsideEVs, Instagram car spy account Cochespias1 and X user DominicBRNKMN posted spy shots of the updated Model Y as it drove around on snowy grounds.

Although the images are a bit blurry, they also show a new rear end with a Cybertruck-ish lightbar similar to the one seen in a July leak.

After this exciting journey it’s time to unveil the secrets… Here is the 2025 Tesla Model Y Juniper pic.twitter.com/prRhQlSP7M

β€” Dominic BRNKMN (@DominicBRNKMN) January 9, 2025

Reuters first reported Tesla was working on a Model Y redesign in early 2023 before a purported mule was seen in the wild last year with the front and rear camouflaged. The Model Y is one of the top-selling vehicles in the world, and it’s also the last vehicle Tesla makes that still has stalks for changing gears and activating turn signals.

As it’s essentially unchanged since launching in 2020, barring a center console refresh, it’s about due for a makeover. Tesla’s most recent redesign was for the Model 3 β€œHighland” that made its US debut last year, which also mainly changed the front and rear, along with other tweaks to make it quieter and improve the ride quality.

It’s unknown when Tesla might plan to launch the new Model Y, but previous reports suggested the automaker is getting set to build a redesigned six-seater Model Y in China for late 2025.

Best of CES 2025: All of the wildest and most intriguing gear, new releases, and hands-on features [Updated]

By: 9to5Toys
9 January 2025 at 10:06

All of the best and most interesting to new gear from CES 2025 is being collected for you right here. The latest in smart home advancements and display tech to the suite of AI features seemingly getting injected into just about all of it, and everything in between, we will be rounding up the most intriguing new reveals and prototypes as well as products you’ll actually be able to get your hands-on this year down below.

more…

Best of CES 2025: All of the wildest and most intriguing gear, new releases, and hands-on features [Updated]

By: 9to5Toys
9 January 2025 at 10:06

All of the best and most interesting to new gear from CES 2025 is being collected for you right here. The latest in smart home advancements and display tech to the suite of AI features seemingly getting injected into just about all of it, and everything in between, we will be rounding up the most intriguing new reveals and prototypes as well as products you’ll actually be able to get your hands-on this year down below.

more…

This Tim Cook habit can almost fix Vision Pro’s biggest problem

9 January 2025 at 09:54

Tim Cook says that he uses his Vision Pro every day. And in multiple interviews this past year, he’s mentioned a specific habit with the product that’s a big part of his use: lying down. After following his lead, I can now report that this method can (almost) fix the Vision Pro’s biggest problem.

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Mark Zuckerberg gave Meta’s Llama team the OK to train on copyrighted works, filing claims

9 January 2025 at 10:10

Counsel for plaintiffs in a copyright lawsuit filed against Meta allege that Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg gave the green light to the team behind the company’s Llama AI models to use a data set of pirated ebooks and articles for training. The case, Kadrey v. Meta, is one of many against tech giants developing AI […]

Β© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

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