Telegram founder Pavel Durov said Monday that the company is now profitable. Durov said the chat appβs total revenue surpassed $1 billion in 2024. The company, which launched its premium subscription service in 2022, now has 12 million paid users. Durov also said that the app is finishing the year with more than $500 million [β¦]
I've heard of apps like Too Good To Go, which sell surplus food at a discount, but never gone much further than signing up.
To test it out, I spent a week in early December only buying food from the app. I wanted to see if it was a viable way of saving money, sticking to a budget, and learning to be a bit more flexible with my cooking.
I also want to be more mindful about the groceries I buy and, unfortunately, sometimes waste.
Too Good To Go's CEO, Mette Lykke, told me in a recent interview that the app now operates in 19 countries across North America, Europe, and Australia, and covers 170,000 stores.
Lykke said the company hopes to inspire people "to make that the first step in a journey toward having a more responsible relationship with food."
"If we look at the state of the planet and the climate crisis, then it's pretty clear that something needs to change," Lykke said.
It was fun trying out new places in my city, London. While the pastries I received were hit-and-miss, the fresh produce from local stores was a real highlight.
After the sugar rush I was still hungry, so I chose a bag of sandwiches and pastries from my local Costa Coffee for Β£3.50 ($4.44).
I got a slightly stale pan au raisin and two sandwiches β one seasonal turkey feast, and a BLT which my boyfriend took for lunch the next day.
In total, I spent Β£7.40 ($9.39) on items worth at least Β£22.90 ($29.08), so the week was off to a good start.
Tuesday
On Tuesday, I switched things up by trying out fresh produce from a couple of local stores. They offered "surprise bags" of groceries for Β£4 ($5.08) each.
While I was slightly overwhelmed with what to do with it all, it was an absolute hit with my boyfriend, who is always thrilled to be met with a culinary challenge.
One of the bags had Padron peppers, garlic, tomatoes, mushrooms, radishes, and beets. I also received three packets of pita bread, a sourdough baguette, a fruit bar, some buttermilk, and fresh herbs.
The multivitamin patches were a curveball, which I have to admit I didn't try.
In the other bag, I got a melon, some Greek yogurt, lettuce, butter, rainbow chard, and sausages.
The sausages went in the freezer, but almost everything else was used to make a pasta sauce, roasted peppers, sauteed mushrooms, buttermilk pancakes, and basil oil. The beets got pickled.
The only thing we ended up having to waste was the watercress, which was already looking past its best.
In total, I spent Β£8 ($10.16) on items worth at least Β£24 ($30.48).
Wednesday
Tuesday's groceries went further than expected, so I bought another pastry bag to satisfy my snackiness during the day.
I'm not convinced the sourdough loaf and pastel de nata (which I squashed) I got for Β£4.09 ($5.19) truly had a full sale value of Β£12 ($15.24), but they were both pretty good.
The server recommended putting the loaf in the freezer and toasting the slices, which was a great tip that lasted me the rest of the week.
Thursday
I knew I was out for dinner with friends on Thursday so I picked up some Starbucks pastries on the way. This was the biggest letdown of the experiment.
But for Β£2.50 ($3.18), a muffin, cookie, cinnamon bun, and cheese stick is certainly better than nothing.
In total, I spent Β£2.50 ($3.18) on items worth at least Β£7.50 ($9.52).
Friday
I'd been eyeing up a nearby Bangladeshi restaurant all week, so knowing I had a night in alone on Friday, I went for the Β£4.09 ($5.19) curry bag they were offering.
I got a few bhajis, some chicken and rice, two veggie curries, more rice, some okra, and what I thought was probably cabbage.
It was all good and spicy, though the bhajis were slightly stale.
In total, I spent Β£4.09 ($5.19) on items worth at least Β£12 ($15.24).
The results
For the whole week, I spent Β£26.08 ($33.11) on Β£78.40 ($99.54) worth of food.
Not every bag felt like amazing value. But some, especially the grocery bags, were genuinely impressive.
The experience taught me a lot about how to be flexible. I'm now committed to focusing less on "use by" dates on food and sticking to the safety assessment Lykke taught me β "look, smell, taste, don't waste" β before throwing things out.
My advice for anyone downloading Too Good To Go is to use it with foresight. The app is great for saving money for those on a strict budget who are OK with some compromises.
Too Good To Go is available in huge stores in the UK (such as Asda) and the US (including Whole Foods), so there are plenty of places to try.
Lykke told me the nice thing about Too Good To Go is you don't have to give anything up, and she's right. From a quick scan of my area, there is bubble tea, ice cream, Turkish food, burgers, doughnuts, and more. You don't get to choose exactly what you want, but as long as you don't mind a bit of a surprise, it's worth a try,
"You actually get good food, it's a good deal, and you do something good," Lykke said. "It's win-win for businesses, for consumers, and for the planet."
A new report published by the child safety groups Heat Initiative and ParentsTogether Action details the alarming presence of inappropriate apps that are rated as suitable for children as young as four years old on Appleβs App Store. The groups worked with a researcher to review as many apps as possible in the span of 24 hours, and say they ultimately identified over 200 apps that contained βconcerning content or featuresβ given the ages they were rated for β including stranger chat and AI girlfriend apps, gaming apps with sexual or violent prompts and imagery, and AI-powered appearance rating apps. Engadget has reached out to Apple for comment and will update this story upon hearing back.
The research focused on apps with assigned age ratings of 4+, 9+ and 12+ in categories considered to be βriskyβ: chat (including AI and stranger chat apps), beauty, diet and weight loss, unfiltered internet access (apps for accessing schoolsβ banned sites) and gaming. Among the findings, the report says at least 24 sexual games and 9 stranger chat apps were marked as appropriate for kids in these age groups. The research also identified 40 apps for unfiltered internet access and 75 apps relating to beauty, body image and weight loss carrying these age ratings, along with 28 shooter and crime games. Collectively, the roughly 200 offending apps spotted during the 24-hour investigation have been downloaded over 550 million times, according to Heat Initiative.Β
About 800 apps were reviewed in all, and the research found that some categories were more likely than others to carry apps with inappropriately low age ratings. For stranger chat apps and games, βfewer were rated as appropriate for children,β the report says. In most cases, they were 17+. But in the categories of weight loss and unfiltered internet access, βnearly all apps reviewed were approved for kids 4+.β The report calls on Apple to do better when it comes to child safety measures on the App Store, urging the company to use third-party reviewers to verify appsβ age ratings before they become available to download, and to make its age rating process transparent to consumers. You can read the full report, Rotten Ratings: 24 Hours in Appleβs App Store, here.Β
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/inappropriate-apps-rated-as-safe-for-young-children-are-prevalent-in-the-app-store-report-warns-213727965.html?src=rss
With a US TikTok ban scheduled to take effect in less than a month, President-elect Donald Trump said Sunday that heβd like to keep the app around, according to Reuters. βWeβre going to have to start thinking because, you know, we did go on TikTok, and we had a great response with billions of views, [β¦]
Social network Bluesky has released a new update to its app that includes a separate mentions tab in notifications, protections against username squatting, and new controls for replies sorting. The company announced that it is adding a new mentions tab with the v1.96 rollout to let you see those posts separately. Until now, all notifications [β¦]
Almost a year ago, I was prompted to look for another budgeting app. Intuit, parent company of Mint, the budgeting app I had been using for a long time, shut down the service in March 2024. The company encouraged Mint users to migrate to its other financial app, Credit Karma, but I found it to be a poor Mint replacement after trying it out. That sent me searching elsewhere to find an app to track all of my financial accounts, monitor my credit score, track spending and set goals like building a rainy-day fund and paying down my mortgage faster.
If youβre looking for a new budgeting app to get your finances straight, allow Engadget to help. I tried out Mint's top competitors in the hopes that I'd be able to find a new budgeting app that could handle all of my financial needs, and to see which are actually worth the money.
How we tested budgeting apps
Before I dove in and started testing out budgeting apps, I had to do some research. To find a list of apps to try out, I consulted trusty olβ Google (and even trustier Reddit); read reviews of popular apps on the App Store; and also asked friends and colleagues what budget tracking apps (or other budgeting methods) they might be using for money management. Some of the apps I found were free and these, of course, show loads of ads (excuse me, βoffersβ) to stay in business. But most of the available apps require paid subscriptions, with prices typically topping out around $100 a year, or $15 a month. (Spoiler: My top pick is cheaper than that.)
All of the services I chose to test needed to do several things: import all of your account data into one place; offer budgeting tools; and track your spending, net worth and credit score. Except where noted, all of these apps are available for iOS, Android and on the web.
Once I had my shortlist of six apps, I got to work setting them up. For the sake of thoroughly testing these apps, I made a point of adding every account to every budgeting app, no matter how small or immaterial the balance. What ensued was a veritable Groundhog Day of two-factor authentication. Just hours of entering passwords and one-time passcodes, for the same banks half a dozen times over. Hopefully, you only have to do this once.
Best budgeting apps of 2025
Budgeting app FAQs
What is Plaid and how does it work?
Each of the apps I tested uses the same underlying network, called Plaid, to pull in financial data, so itβs worth explaining what it is and how it works. Plaid was founded as a fintech startup in 2013 and is today the industry standard in connecting banks with third-party apps. Plaid works with over 12,000 financial institutions across the US, Canada and Europe. Additionally, more than 8,000 third-party apps and services rely on Plaid, the company claims.
To be clear, you donβt need a dedicated Plaid app to use it; the technology is baked into a wide array of apps, including all of the budgeting apps listed in this guide. Once you find the βadd an accountβ option in whichever one youβre using, youβll see a menu of commonly used banks. Thereβs also a search field you can use to look yours up directly. Once you find yours, youβll be prompted to enter your login credentials. If you have two-factor authentication set up, youβll need to enter a one-time passcode as well.
As the middleman, Plaid is a passthrough for information that may include your account balances, transaction history, account type and routing or account number. Plaid uses encryption, and says it has a policy of not selling or renting customer data to other companies. However, I would not be doing my job if I didnβt note that in 2022 Plaid was forced to pay $58 million to consumers in a class action suit for collecting βmore financial data than was needed.β As part of the settlement, Plaid was compelled to change some of its business practices.
In a statement provided to Engadget, a Plaid spokesperson said the company continues to deny the allegations underpinning the lawsuit and that βthe crux of the non-financial terms in the settlement are focused on us accelerating workstreams already underway related to giving people more transparency into Plaidβs role in connecting their accounts, and ensuring that our workstreams around data minimization remain on track.β
Why did Mint shut down?
When parent company Intuit announced in December 2023 that it would shut down Mint, it did not provide a reason why it made the decision to do so. It did say that Mint's millions of users would be funneled over to its other finance app, Credit Karma. "Credit Karma is thrilled to invite all Minters to continue their financial journey on Credit Karma, where they will have access to Credit Karmaβs suite of features, products, tools and services, including some of Mintβs most popular features," Mint wrote on its product blog. In our testing, we found that Credit Karma isn't an exact replacement for Mint β so if you're still looking for a Mint alternative, you have some decent options.
What about Rocket Money?
Rocket Money is another free financial app that tracks spending and supports things like balance alerts and account linking. If you pay for the premium tier, the service can also help you cancel unwanted subscriptions. We did not test it for this guide, but we'll consider it in future updates.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/best-budgeting-apps-120036303.html?src=rss
A new app called Tapestry promising to unify social media, news, and RSS in one place, is nearing completion. Designed by Iconfactory, the same team that created the third-party Twitter client Twitterific back in the day, Tapestry was unveiled at the beginning of the year as a tool that could better organize todayβs fragmented online [β¦]
Instagram head Adam Mosseri is teasing upcoming generative AI features for the social app that will allow creators to βchange nearly any aspectβ of their videos using text prompts. The editing tools will be powered by Metaβs Movie Gen AI model, and are expected to launch on the social network sometime next year, Mosseri said [β¦]
Threads is introducing a new way to reshare photos and videos on its social network. Instead of quote-posting the original post and then adding commentary, Threads users will instead be able to click a new option, βUse media,β allowing them to just reshare the photo or video directly to a new post where they can [β¦]
The company behind the news app Flipboard just launched something called Surf, which is sort of like an RSS feed for the open social web. The app allows users to create feeds that pull from the open social web, including services like Mastodon and Bluesky. It also sources content from blogs, podcasts and YouTube videos.
Flipboard CEO Mike McCue calls it a βbrowser for the social webβ and that description makes a whole lot of sense. Surf supports a whole bunch of open protocols, including RSS, Blueskyβs AT Protocol and ActivityPub. That last one is used to power decentralized platforms like Mastodon, Threads, Pixelfed, PeerTube and Friendica, among others. This follows Flipboard itself moving to the fediverse, which allowed for full interoperability with Mastodon and other decentralized networks.
The app has been in development for nearly two years and lets users build custom feeds using a combination of sources. If you wanted to follow a niche topic like, say, 3D printing, you could add notable people to a feed, along with hashtags, specific RSS feeds, preferred podcasts and more. As of the initial beta launch, Surf comes with 30,000 predefined topics to explore. Custom feeds can also explore multiple topics at once, to personalize things.
The appβs home page includes a wide swath of curated feeds to follow that are organized into sections like Featured, Trending, Communities and Expert Voices. Feeds are configurable in a number of ways, which lets users include or exclude stuff like replies, reposts or mature content. Thankfully, the order of the feed is also fully adjustable, with an option for a Twitter-like timeline.
This sounds pretty cool right? One of the main problems in this new era of the social web, in which the old guard has lost so much steam, is the lack of a centralized hub. This looks to solve that problem to some extent.
Now a spot of bad news. Surf is technically available right now, but only as an invite-only, closed beta. If you can get a hold of one of those invites, the app is available for both iOS and Android, with a desktop client coming soon.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/apps/flipboard-just-launched-surf-which-is-sort-of-like-an-rss-feed-for-the-open-social-web-184015833.html?src=rss
The global app economy continued to recover in 2024, after an earlier slowdown in 2022 β at least in terms of consumer spending. In 2024, global consumer spending in mobile apps and games reached $127 billion across the App Store and Google Play, up 15.7% from the prior year. However, those increases were driven by [β¦]
Alphabetβs Wing announced on Wednesday that itβs expanding its partnership with DoorDash to bring drone delivery to customers in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. Customers in the area will now be able to order food from 50 merchants located in Stonebriar Centre in Frisco and Hulen Mall in Fort Worth. Wing says its drones can βdeliver [β¦]
ChatGPT is coming to phones. No, not smartphones β landlines. Call 1-800-242-8478 (1-800-CHATGPT), and OpenAIβs AI-powered assistant will respond as of Wednesday afternoon. β[Our mission at] OpenAI is to make artificial general intelligence beneficial to all of humanity, and part of that is making it as accessible as possible to as many people as we [β¦]
The Supreme Court said on Wednesday that it will hear ByteDance and TikTokβs challenge to a law that would ban the social network in the U.S. unless the social network divests from Chinese ownership by January 19.Β On January 10, the Supreme Court justices will hear arguments about whether the sell-or-ban law violates the First Amendment. [β¦]
Social magazine app maker Flipboard is reinventing itself for the new era of the open social web. While the companyβs original app allowed users to collect content from blogs, news websites, and traditional social media services like Facebook and Twitter in order to create curated magazines, its new app called Surf, launching into invite-only beta [β¦]
Once, not long ago, booking a table at a hot new restaurant didnβt entail a midnight dash to Resy. Truly, we didnβt know how good we had it then. Hours-long lines out the door are now the norm, not the exception, in major cities from New York to Los Angeles. One reason is that restaurants [β¦]
YouTube is partnering with the Creative Artists Agency (CAA) to help celebrities, athletes, and creators identify content that uses their AI-generated likeness on the platform. The tool, which YouTube will begin testing early next year, will let these professionals submit requests for the removalΒ of their AI-generated likeness. YouTube will first make the tool available for [β¦]
File transfer service WeTransfer is now limiting users to 10 transfers per month with its free plan. The company is already applying the new limit to users, as per a support page. At the same time, WeTransfer is adding some perks to the free plan, including increasing the overall file transfer limit from 2GB to [β¦]
Metaβs social network Threads is experimenting with a feature that will let you schedule posts, Instagram head Adam Mosseri said. Users who will get to test this feature wonβt be able to schedule replies. βWe want to balance giving people more control to plan their Threads posts while still encouraging real-time conversations,β he said. People [β¦]