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FCC chair says we’re too dependent on GPS and wants to explore ‘alternatives’

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) plans to vote on an inquiry to explore alternatives to GPS, FCC chair Brendan Carr says in a blog post.

Carr says that while GPS has been “indispensable,” the technology “isn’t infallible” and that “disruptions to GPS have the potential to undermine the nation’s economic and national security.” Carr says that “we need to develop redundant technologies,” which is why the FCC will “vote on an inquiry to explore other Positioning, Navigation, and Timing (PNT) systems” that can serve as “complements or alternatives” to GPS.

In addition to GPS, Carr also says the commission will vote on two proposals regarding 911 technology. One is “a proposal to update our existing rules to ensure the resiliency, reliability, interoperability, and accessibility” of “Next Generation 911,” or NG911, which is internet-connected emergency tech that will eventually replace legacy 911 systems.

Another is a proposal to “strengthen our 911 location accuracy rules” to potentially improve the information first responders receive about a person’s location, including the ability to more accurately find callers on specific floors in buildings.

The issues are tentatively on the agenda for the FCC’s open meeting on March 27th.

AMD says the $549 RX 9070 is real but doesn’t deny reports of possible bait and switch

Yesterday, reviewers agreed: AMD is finally beating Nvidia with its RX 9070 and RX 9070 XT graphics cards, assuming they actually launch with sufficient stock at their $549 and $599 prices.

But this morning’s launch, while better than recent Nvidia launches in terms of supply, may not have met that bar — and AMD would not deny reports that even the best-priced models of these GPUs are capped to specific quantities, after which they may be sold at higher than $549 or $599.

When The Verge checked this morning, major US retailers Best Buy and Newegg listed as few as a single model of each GPU at their MSRP, which sold out quickly, of course. Most cards are listed for a $100 premium over that MSRP, if not more.

Micro Center appears to be doing far better, with as many as five 9070s and five 9070 XTs at MSRP and a website that claims they’re even still available for purchase if you visit one of its 28 US locations in person.

What happens next? It’s not unusual for each graphics card partner to sell a variety of fancier grades of the same GPU at higher prices with fancier cooling and overclocking — but retailers are now suggesting that even the prices of entry-level cards won’t hold.

“We have now learned how the recommended prices, also known as MSRP prices, work for the launch of the AMD Radeon RX 9070 and RX 9070 XT […] they will apply to a limited number of cards,” wrote Swedish retailer Inet.se, as documented by VideoCardz.

“MSRP is capped quantity of a few hundred, so prices will jump once those are sold through,” UK retailer Overclockers UK also reportedly wrote.

Even Best Buy seemed to suggest that $549 / $599 prices were only temporary. When we visited this morning, the Best Buy website described them like they were on sale,  though the company has since removed the “save $80” and “save $130” you see below. AMD says the Best Buy listings were an error.

We asked AMD:

  • Can you confirm or deny that the best prices on the best-priced cards are capped in this way?
  • Can you confirm or deny that only a fraction of the best-priced models of 9070 and 9070 XT will be sold at their announced MSRP?
  • Can you confirm or deny that AMD has okayed any board partners or retailers whatsoever to raise their prices beyond MSRP after selling through a certain quantity or certain number of shipments?

AMD would not confirm or deny. It did address the larger question of MSRP availability with this statement from chief gaming solutions architect (and gaming marketing boss) Frank Azor, though:

It is inaccurate that $549 / $599 MSRP is launch-only pricing. We expect cards to be available from multiple vendors at $549 / $599 (excluding region specific tariffs and / or taxes) based on the work we have done with our AIB partners, and more are coming. At the same time, the AIBs have different premium configurations at higher price points and those will also continue.

On X, Azor tweeted that AMD is working to replenish stock “in the coming days and weeks,” adding, “MSRP pricing (excluding region specific tariffs and/or taxes) will continue to be encouraged beyond today so don’t despair.”

Update, 4:30PM ET: Added that AMD says the Best Buy listings were in error.

Now Google Maps is starting to use Android 16’s live update notifications

Google Maps is the first app we’re seeing adopt Android 16’s new Live Updates feature, according to Android Authority. Users on Android 16 beta 2.1 can now see the time until their next turn and estimated time to arrival on the status bar of their device.

Google introduced the Live Updates feature in its first beta of Android 16 beta release, describing it as a “new class of notifications that help users monitor and quickly access important ongoing activities.” The feature is similar to Live Activities on iOS, which shows real-time notifications on the lock screen and the Dynamic Island, but until now we haven’t seen much of what it looks like with real Android apps.

As shown by Android Authority, there’s also a new option in the Google Maps app that allows you to turn off “live info,” which will appear on the status bar and lockscreen. Live Updates are still only partially supported in Android 16 beta 2.1, as Android Authority says notifications from Google Maps are still “collapsed” on the always-on display.

Even though Google Maps’ adoption is still limited, there’s plenty of time for Google and other developers to add full support for Live Updates, as Android 16 isn’t expected to launch until June.

Anker’s 8-in-1 charging station has dropped to a new low price

Anker’s black MagGo Magnetic Charging Station 8-in-1 (Qi2) is a small device that can power up eight devices for just $50.

If you’re planning on giving your desk or workspace a good spring cleaning, Anker’s MagGo Magnetic Charging Station (8-in-1) is a relatively affordable way to rid your life of excess cable clutter. That’s especially true right now, as Anker’s versatile charging gadget is down to an all-time low of $49.99 ($20 off) at Amazon in select colors.

Anker’s orb-shaped gadget can supply power to up to eight devices, so you don’t need to keep multiple chargers lying around. The speedy Q2-compatible charger is capable of delivering 15W wireless speeds to MagSafe-equipped iPhones and functions as a relatively sturdy stand, keeping your phone securely in place via magnets. It’s also a great way to make use of Apple’s StandBy mode, which lets you use your phone as an ad hoc smart display to showcase the time, calendar events, and other information when your phone is placed horizontally.

As alluded to previously, Anker’s latest MagGo station also functions as an 8-in-1 power strip, one that can support up to 67W total power output across a pair of USB-C and USB-A ports. It’s also equipped with three AC outlets, allowing you to power everything from lamps to fans to beefy external monitors. That’s pretty good for a gadget that’s roughly the size of Apple’s HomePod Mini.

Read our hands-on impressions.

Nvidia denies reports that its RTX 50 laptop GPUs are missing ROPs, too

Remember when Nvidia categorically told us that “no other Nvidia GPUs” had shipped, or would be shipping, with missing render units? Well, you can imagine our surprise to read that the company’s RTX 50-series laptop GPUs might be affected as well, with Heise Online and Hardwareluxx reporting that Nvidia has asked manufacturers to check their laptops for fewer ROPs than promised.

But Nvidia tells The Verge there isn’t actually a problem with those notebook GPUs. “All partners continue to run checks as part of our standard testing procedure,” Nvidia GeForce global PR director Ben Berraondo tells us, adding that Nvidia will reach out to both German publications to discuss.

We asked very specifically:

Did we just go from “no other GPUs are affected” to ‘“some laptop GPUs” are also affected?

The answer was “Nope.”

Just to triple-check, the “nope” means that no laptop GPUs are affected by the missing ROP issue, yes? 

“Correct, no further issues,” says Berraondo.

That’s a fairly categorical denial, and it sounds like laptop buyers can expect to find the full complement of ROPs in their Nvidia 50-series laptops either way — either because there never was an issue to begin with or because there’s no longer an issue now that partners will catch it during these tests.

Both Heise and Hardwareluxx have suggested that these tests are unusual in one way: some laptops may be delivered in April or May instead of planned March release dates. However, Heise also reports one other possible reason for delays: that “Nvidia only recently distributed the final vBIOS for the notebook GPUs,” according to Google Translate.

Jackbox games are coming to smart TVs

Tee K.O. 2 from Jackbox Party Pack 10.

Jackbox Games are going to be available on smart TVs as part of a new cloud streaming service, according to a blog post. Jackbox aims to launch a beta of the service on “one or two smart TV platforms in the Spring of 2025.”

Generally, Jackbox titles are offered in bundles called “Party Packs” that you can play on platforms like game consoles and PCs. This new native smart TV app could make it easier to jump into a Jackbox game, since you won’t need to launch the titles from a device like a game console.

To start, this Jackbox service will only offer a “small collection” of “ad-supported” games for free. But down the line, Jackbox plans to “also offer our entire catalog of games for a subscription fee.” (You can already subscribe to a Jackbox Games channel on Amazon’s Luna cloud gaming service for $4.99 per month to access the Jackbox catalog.)

Jackbox’s service relies on Amazon’s new AWS GameLift Streams technology that lets companies build their own cloud gaming apps and experiences. GameLift Streams is also being used by companies like Bandai Namco, which relies on it to “stream an immersive metaverse platform to fans of its Gundam franchise,” according to a press release.

What went wrong with Skype?

Skype was Microsoft’s biggest-ever acquisition in 2011, a deal brokered by former CEO Steve Ballmer when the company was trying to compete with the rise of the iPhone. But after spending $8.5 billion on Skype, Microsoft dropped the ball again and again over the past 14 years, to the point where Skype was so irrelevant during a global pandemic that everyone used Zoom instead.

Skype has been relegated to a forgotten relic of an era before Google and Apple’s mobile dominance, and Microsoft is now laying it to rest alongside other failed mobile efforts like Windows Phone. It wasn’t always this way, though.

In early 2012, a few months after Microsoft’s acquisition, I visited the Skype offices in Stockholm that engineers had just moved into. Skype had just passed 41 million concurrent users, more than even Steam’s recent record. Skype was so popular at the time that people kept stealing the Skype signs outside its offices, so the company simply stopped replacing them.

Inside the Skype Stockholm office, I met engineers who were excited and nervous about Microsoft’s acquisition, but who had been reassured by a visit from Ballmer, who shook their hands and promised that Micr …

Read the full story at The Verge.

Reddit will tell you if your post breaks the rules before you publish it

Reddit is introducing some new features for posts that should make it easier to know if your post meets a subreddit’s rules and if it’s for the appropriate community, according to a blog post.

The new Rules Check will flag a potential issue as you’re writing the post. As shown in a GIF of the mobile app, you’ll see a red notification badge above your keyboard on a little magic wand icon, and if you tap that, the app will display a pop-up showing rules that your post might be breaking.

This feature will be tested first on iOS and Android. If your post is removed for breaking the rules, Reddit will show a prompt suggesting that you try instead to post it to a different subreddit.

The new Community Suggestions feature will offer recommendations on which subreddit a post might be a fit for. And the Clear Community Info tool you might see before posting will let you know a subreddit’s specific posting requirements.

Reddit is also offering insights on your posts, including “views, upvotes, shares, and more,” per the blog post.

Telo’s electric MT1 mini-truck gets a new preproduction prototype

red mini truck in front of house

Telo Trucks, the company building a compact, modular electric pickup truck, revealed its new preproduction prototype in Los Angeles. The San Carlos, California-based startup recently closed a $5.4 million funding round and is working with bespoke manufacturing partner Aria Group (which has built EV restomods including for companies like Everrati) to enter the next development phase towards the final mini-truck.

The company said they have over 5,000 preorders for the mini-truck, which is now known as the Telo MT1, that “represents over $250M+ in customer commitments.” The EV was first revealed in 2023 and showed off a clever modular design where the truck cab can open for more bed space, or enclosed like a van. There’s also a “Monster Tunnel” storage compartment across the truck’s width where you can carry long items, similar to Rivian’s gear tunnel.

The overall design of the latest MT1 looks nearly identical to the original reveal, save for a relocation of the side body indentations. The interior has LCD screens housed in separate cut-out plates, making the instrument cluster look more analog. And it uses materials like biodegradable cork throughout the cabin.

The front of the vehicle is still entirely flat, which helps give the truck its spectacularly short design that makes it perfect for urban environments. Although a flat front seems like it lacks crucial crumple zone space, Telo says it’s continuing “rigorous safety and durability testing.” Telo expects to achieve homologation “sometime next winter.”

animation showing the truck bed stretch into the cabin with surf boards and plywood and a cap to turn it into a van.

Meanwhile, the company’s co-founder and CEO Jason Marks is calling for more investors, partners, and customers to help make MT1 happen. Telo also has industrial designer Yves Behar on board, who has worked on products for Jawbone and Herman Miller. And co-founder and CTO Forrest North, who previously founded motorcycle company Mission Motors, is helping build the MT1’s battery technology.

Telo MT1 reservations are still open for $152, the same number of inches as the vehicle’s length. The US could use some small pickup trucks, where the best we’ve got is the 200-inch Ford Maverick Hybrid. The market is still dominated by extra-large gas-powered trucks like the Ford F-150 (and it’s EV versions aren’t doing too well).

Cybercriminals arrested for stealing hundreds of concert tickets through StubHub exploit

A woman in a dress holding a blue guitar and singing into a microphone on stage.

Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour ended last year, but authorities have finally apprehended a pair of thieves who managed to steal hundreds of tickets by exploiting a loophole in StubHub’s back end.

Per The Hollywood Reporter, two cybercriminals who stole and re-sold hundreds of digital tickets to different concerts and sporting events like the U.S. Open have been arrested by police. Tyrone Rose and Shamara Simmons have been charged with grand larceny, computer tampering, and conspiracy. If found guilty, the pair could face anywhere from 3-15 years in prison. Rose and Simmons are set to appear in court and submit their pleas this Friday, but the police’s investigation will continue as they are said to have worked with a number of accomplices — at least one of whom is now dead, while another has yet to be caught.

According to the Queens District Attorney’s Office, Rose, Simmons, and other members of the crime ring obtained the tickets by intercepting legitimate StubHub URLs generated after legal ticket purchases. Those ill-gotten URLs would then be passed along to other participants in the scheme, who would use them to resell the tickets on StubHub itself. 

Between June 2022 and July 2023, the crew managed to re-sell about 900 tickets for shows including Swift, Adele, and Ed Sheeran for about $600,000. It’s not entirely clear how the group’s plan first came together, but it seems as if they were able to discover the exploit because some of them worked for Sutherland Global Services, a Kingston-based IT contractor. In the wake of the news, StubHub terminated its working relationship with Sutherland.

In a statement about the case, Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz said that the crime ring wanted to “use the popularity of Taylor Swift’s concert tour and other high-profile events to profit at the expensive of others.”

Katz added that “This takedown highlights the vigilance of my office’s Cybercrime and Cryptocurrency Unit as well as the importance of working with our industry partners to combat fraudulent activities and ensure the protection of consumers.”

The MagicX Zero 40 has a vertical display to properly handle DS games

A dual-screen game being played on the MagicX Zero 40 handheld.
The MagicX 40 could arrive as early as April 2025 with a vertically-oriented touchscreen and physical controls. | Screenshot: YouTube

With Nintendo exhausting its supply of DS repair parts, fans of the dual-screen handheld may have another way to play when their original hardware finally dies. The MagicX Zero 40 is yet another handheld emulator but with a peculiar design incorporating a four-inch vertically-oriented 800×480 touchscreen display allowing emulated DS titles to be played like they are on Nintendo’s devices.

The Zero 40 is expected to be released sometime in April 2025 for around $75, according to Time Extension. MagicX isn’t as well known as companies like Anbernic that have been making handhelds for years, but the company debuted its first Android-powered gaming device, the Mini Zero 28, earlier this year, to favorable reviews.

The company is taking a similar approach with the Zero 40 as Nintendo did with its 2DS, and not just when it comes to skipping 3D. Although all of the folding devices in the DS lineup featured two separate displays, the 2DS used just a single panel that was made to look like two separate screens by the handheld’s plastic casing. That’s likely part of the reason the Zero 40 could launch as comparatively cheap as the 2DS.

A render of the MagicX Zero 40 handheld against a gray background.

The Zero 40 will be powered by an Allwinner A133P processor paired with 2GB of RAM and a 4,300mAh battery that MagicX says will be good for between five and seven hours of gameplay. Like the Mini Zero 28, the Zero 40 will run Android, although don’t expect the latest version of Google’s mobile OS as the company’s last device shipped with Android 10 a month ago. It will rely on the Drastic emulator for DS titles, which was made free last March for Android devices.

Aside from MagicX recently sharing a video demonstrating gameplay on the Zero 40, there haven’t been any hands-ons or reviews of the device, so its capabilities aren’t yet known. But the company says it should be able to emulate N64, PSP, and Dreamcast titles, in addition to DS games. It’s nowhere near as powerful as the clamshell Ayaneo Flip, but that DS alternative was priced close to $1,000. If it launches close to $75, the MagicX Zero 40 could fill a void with handheld emulators at a reasonable price.

Flying is still safe for now — but the FAA isn’t

I was on a flight back to New York the other day, and something really odd happened when we landed: the passengers burst into applause. I’ve only ever seen that happen after a flight with really bad turbulence or a big delay. But this was a totally boring flight that took off and landed on time with no drama whatsoever. So why the clapping?

Well, you know why: there have been a lot of plane crashes, or near crashes lately — and it’s all against the backdrop of the Trump administration and Elon Musk firing Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) employees and talking about upgrading everything with Starlink, or whatever they’re posting about on social media today.

Just this week, news reports have detailed exactly how Musk has wedged his way into the agency to force SpaceX into the conversation — including a move to take over an existing Verizon contract and even threatening FAA employees with termination if they don’t get fully onboard.

So the reason it feels less safe to fly — the reason people are clapping when the plane lands — isn’t just the tragic accidents. It’s that the system we took for granted to keep us safe and solve problems when they occur is being destabilized right in front of our eyes, and actually improving that system takes more than posts and bravado or conflicts of interest so intense it causes a constitutional crisis. It’s actually a complicated dance of people, technology, and policy — you know, Decoder stuff.

So today I’m talking to Andy Hawkins, The Verge’s transportation editor, about what’s going on in the skies. He just edited a big piece for us by writer Darryl Campbell that helps put a lot of what’s happening in air travel right now into perspective. There’s some very reassuring data about how safe it is to actually fly, but there are also some big questions about what we need to do next to regain our confidence in air travel. 

He and I talked about how safe it really is to fly right now — extremely safe — and how the current air traffic systems might change for the better and the worse. And, of course, we talked about Musk. 

If you’d like to read more on what we talked about in this episode, check out the links below:

  • What’s the deal with all these airplane crashes? | The Verge
  • How Elon Musk muscled his way into the FAA | Bloomberg
  • Elon Musk says upgrade of FAA’s air traffic control system is failing | CNN
  • FAA targeting Verizon contract in favor of Musk’s Starlink, sources say | Washington Post
  • FAA officials ordered staff to find funding for Elon Musk’s Starlink | Rolling Stone
  • FAA announces ‘hiring supercharge’ for air traffic controllers | Forbes
  • Air traffic control trainees to get raise, in nod to cost of living | NYT
  • Some of the 400 jobs that were cut at the FAA helped support air safety | AP
  • DC plane crash marks first major commercial crash in US since 2009 | ABC
  • What the ATC controller sees | Flight Training Central

Netflix follows Paul vs. Tyson fight with another boxing stream in July

Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano boxing on Netflix.

Netflix is airing another live boxing match. The service will exclusively stream a rematch between Amanda Serrano and Katie Taylor on Friday, July 11th, according to an announcement on Thursday.

The two boxers previously went head-to-head on Netflix in the leadup to the boxing match between Mike Tyson and Jake Paul last November, which ended with Taylor’s controversial win. For their third fight, the pair will headline an all-women’s card at Madison Square Garden.

Though Netflix’s livestream ran into some technical hiccups during the Paul vs. Tyson match, the company seems to have stepped up its game since then. Its live Christmas Day NFL games aired without issue, and most of its WWE Monday Night Raw streams have been free of major glitches.

Netflix hasn’t stopped expanding its lineup of live content, either. The company snapped up the US streaming rights to the Women’s World Cup in 2027 and 2031, and will soon start airing a late-night talk show with comedian John Mulaney every week starting March 12th.

NFL, celebrity boxing, and hot dogs: Netflix’s push into live TV

After moving from DVD rentals to all-digital streaming more than a decade ago, Netflix is making its next big transformation: it’s also becoming a hub for live content. The streamer’s foray into livestreams started with a Chris Rock comedy special and a rocky Love is Blind reunion, then quickly jumped into live sports streaming with a golf tournament that paired professional golfers with Formula 1 drivers.

Netflix’s livestreams have only gotten bigger since then, with a hot dog eating contest between storied rivals Joey Chestnut and Takeru Kobayashi. On November 15th, 2024, a live boxing match between Mike Tyson and Jake Paul raked in 108 million average viewers, making it “the most-streamed sporting event ever,” according to Netflix.

However, widespread streaming issues persisted throughout the event, leaving fans wondering whether Netflix is equipped to handle future livestreams, including two NFL Christmas Day games and WWE’s Monday Night Raw.

Read on for all the latest on Netflix’s dive into livestreaming.

The Take It Down Act isn’t a law, it’s a weapon

Photo illustration to show a person’s face being stolen for deepfake porn.

It’s internet safety law season again. After a narrow failure to pass the Kids Online Safety Act in 2024, Congress is now advancing the Take It Down Act, which criminalizes nonconsensual intimate imagery (NCII, once dubbed “revenge porn,” including AI-generated content) and sets requirements for web platforms to remove it. The bill has gained support from First Lady Melania Trump, and President Donald Trump touted it during his joint address to Congress on March 4th, promising he would sign it. In a normal world, this could be a positive step towards solving the real problem of NCII, a problem that AI is making worse.

But we are not in a normal world. Parts of the Take It Down Act are more likely to become a sword for a corrupt presidential administration than a shield to protect NCII victims — and supporters of both civil liberties and Big Tech accountability should recognize it.

The typical discourse around a bill like the Take It Down Act works this way: lawmakers propose a rule that’s supposed to do a good and popular thing, like help victims of nonconsensual sexual images get those images taken down. Civil liberties advocates go “wait a minute, this has a lot of bad side …

Read the full story at The Verge.

The Corvette ZR1’s 233-mph run had to start in a virtual world

Photo of Corvette ZR1.
At 233 mph, the 2025 Chevrolet Corvette ZR1 is now the fastest car ever built by a U.S. auto manufacturer.  | Image: GM

Last October, the Chevrolet Corvette ZR1 set a top speed of 233 mph on consecutive runs around a closed track. That’s not the fastest street-legal production car in the world: the Bugatti Chiron Super Sport 300+ will, as the name implies, top 300 mph. What’s special about the ZR1, then? Its $174,995 starting price may sound expensive, but it’s a steal compared to the Bugatti, which costs somewhere north of $4 million. The ZR1 is officially the world’s fastest production car available for less than $1 million. 

The ZR1 achieved that speed on a massive test track in Papenburg, Germany, a place where the banking is so steep that the drivers suffered through 1.7 vertical Gs on the turns. That’s just one number out of an endless series of figures that the team behind that record-setting run calculated well in advance, tapping into simulations usually reserved for more utilitarian jobs, like figuring out how steep a grade a Silverado can tow up before blowing a gasket.

Here, the only number that really mattered was top speed — a figure that, in simulation, differed from reality by less than half of one percent. This is how they did it.

Everyday Hero

The Corvette has always been a …

Read the full story at The Verge.

1Password is making it easier to find passwords based on your location

A screenshot of the 1Password mobile app showing its new ability to load items based on your location.
A new home tab option in 1Password provides faster access to saved passwords based on your location. | Image: 1Password

1Password introduced a new feature today that will make it easier to find the login, password, or access code you’re looking for, based on where you’re using the app. It will now let you add a specific physical location to items, and they’ll automatically appear in the new Nearby section of the app’s home tab, depending on how close you are to that spot.

The password manager already makes it easy to quickly access frequently used or favorited passwords on the mobile app’s home tab without searching. But both of those sections can get cluttered if you have a long list of passwords you regularly access. The addition of location data will help ensure only the most relevant passwords are presented when opening the mobile app — like your health card at the doctor or travel documents at the airport — minimizing the need to scroll through a long list or remembering exactly how you named an item in order to find it through a search.

Locations can be added to new or existing items saved in 1Password either while at the specific location or by dropping a pin using a new map view that lets you search for a place while you’re elsewhere.

A screenshot showing the range options for stored passwords with location data in the 1Password mobile app.

You can also limit the number of items that show up in the app’s home tab by range. You can only be presented with passwords associated to locations within 50 feet or up to 10 miles away — although that could negate the usefulness of the feature if you’re once again presented with an overly long list of items.

A screenshot showing a map view in the 1Password mobile app.

The app’s new map view also allows you to browse all the locations associated with passwords and other saved items in your account.

AgileBits, 1Password’s developer, says that “your location data is never stored, shared, or tracked,” and the 1Password app does its checks for nearby items locally so your current location never leaves your device. The company also added an additional layer of security around the loading of map data by giving users the option to turn off this feature entirely at any time.

Being able to specify locations for passwords is a feature originally introduced through 1Password labs, a section of the app where the company lets users try out and provide feedback on new and experimental features before they’re rolled out to all users. Experimental features are made available in the 1Password mobile and desktop apps in the labs tab under Settings, and users can turn unreleased features on or off at any time.

NASA is making sacrifices to keep the Voyager mission alive

It’s been 47 years since the twin Voyager spacecraft started their historic mission. Having travelled through interstellar space, farther from Earth than any other human-made objects, their nuclear batteries are depleting — but NASA is taking measures to squeeze as much life out of the aging probes as possible.

The Voyagers’ radioisotope power system loses around 4 watts each year, so to preserve power, NASA engineers have been shutting down some of the science instruments carried by each probe. Voyager 1’s cosmic ray subsystem experiment was turned off on February 25th. When the low-energy charged particle instrument aboard Voyager 2 is shut down on March 24th, both spacecraft will have three out of the ten identical science instruments they launched with remaining operational.

“Electrical power is running low,” said Voyager project manager, Suzanne Dodd. “If we don’t turn off an instrument on each Voyager now, they would probably have only a few more months of power before we would need to declare end of mission. The Voyagers have been deep space rock stars since launch, and we want to keep it that way as long as possible.”

Instruments aboard the probes have been turned off for this purpose before. The only equipment that remained powered after both spacecraft had completed their final flyby of the solar system’s gas giants was prioritized to collect data about the heliosphere and interstellar space. With the latest shutdowns, NASA says the Voyager probes should have enough power to keep operating for another year.

The Voyagers have greatly surpassed the lifespan expected from their two-planet exploration mission. Both were only built to last five years, but the scientific data they’ve collected since is unique, motivating NASA to extend their chances of survival. The agency managed to fix Voyager 1 when it stopped transmitting viable data in 2023, 15 billion miles away from Earth, bringing it back online again in June last year.

Future energy saving plans include turning off the low-energy charged particle instrument aboard Voyager 1 next year, and Voyager 2’s cosmic ray subsystem in 2026. With these efforts, NASA engineers believe the two probes could continue operating with at least one science instrument into the 2030s — providing unforeseen challenges don’t arise.

“Every minute of every day, the Voyagers explore a region where no spacecraft has gone before,” said Voyager project scientist Linda Spilker. “That also means every day could be our last. But that day could also bring another interstellar revelation. So, we’re pulling out all the stops, doing what we can to make sure Voyagers 1 and 2 continue their trailblazing for the maximum time possible.”

DuckDuckGo is amping up its AI search tool — but will still let you leave it behind

An image showing the DuckDuckGo logo on a blue and green background.

DuckDuckGo has big plans for embedding AI into its search engine. The privacy-focused company just announced that its AI-generated answers, which appear for certain queries on its search engine, have exited beta and now source information from across the web — not just Wikipedia. It will soon integrate web search within its AI chatbot, which has also exited beta.

DuckDuckGo first launched AI-assisted answers — originally called DuckAssist — in 2023. The feature is billed as a less obnoxious version of tools like Google’s AI Overviews, designed to offer more concise responses and let you adjust how often you see them, including turning the responses off entirely. If you have DuckDuckGo’s AI-generated answers set to “often,” you’ll still only see them around 20 percent of the time, though the company plans on increasing the frequency eventually.

“We’d like to raise that over time,” Gabriel Weinberg, the CEO and founder of DuckDuckGo, told The Verge. “That’s another major area that we’re working on … We want to kind of stay conservative with it. We don’t want to put it in front of people if we don’t think it’s right.”

A screenshot of an AI search summary.

Some of DuckDuckGo’s AI-assisted answers bring up a box for follow-up questions, redirecting you to a conversation with its Duck.ai chatbot. As is the case with its AI-assisted answers, you don’t need an account to use Duck.ai, and it comes with the same emphasis on privacy. It lets you toggle between GPT-4o mini, o3-mini, Llama 3.3, Mistral Small 3, and Claude 3 Haiku, with the advantage being that you can interact with each model anonymously by hiding your IP address. DuckDuckGo also has agreements with the AI company behind each model to ensure your data isn’t used for training.

Duck.ai also rolled out a feature called Recent Chats, which stores your previous conversations locally on your device rather than on DuckDuckGo’s servers. Though Duck.ai is also leaving beta, that doesn’t mean the flow of new features will stop.

In the next few weeks, Duck.ai will add support for web search, which should enhance its ability to respond to questions. The company is also working on adding voice interaction on iPhone and Android, along with the ability to upload images and ask questions about them. Weinberg said that while Duck.ai will always remain free, the company is considering including access to more advanced AI models with its $9.99 per month subscription.

A screenshot from Duck.ai.

DuckDuckGo isn’t going to join OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, and maybe even Meta in creating a separate app for its AI chatbot, however. “We think the end state is that really the ultimate app mixes all these things,” Weinberg said. “We think some queries are better to start with chat, some are better to start with search. A lot of them, you could start with either. Then sometimes you want to flow between. And if you’re flowing between, kind of fluidly like that, it’s a better experience to have it in one app.”

You can try out DuckDuckGo’s chatbot on the Duck.ai website or the DuckDuckGo browser, as well as find AI-assisted answers in the DuckDuckGo search engine.

Our first look at Apple’s sky blue MacBook Air

The MacBook Air M4 in sky blue on a table.

Aside from a new color, the M4 MacBook Air looks a whole lot like last year’s model. And we’ve got the hands-on experience and pictures to prove it.

Apple’s got five main updates for its refresh of the 13- and 15-inch MacBook Airs for 2025. First, it’s got a similar M4 chip to the base 14-inch MacBook Pro, though here it starts with a 10-core CPU and 8-core GPU. Also inherited from the MacBook Pros, the Airs now use the 12-megapixel Center Stage webcam that’s wider and can track you within the frame. And you can now (finally) use two external monitors and keep the lid open, essentially giving you a fancy triple-monitor setup with the lowly MacBook Air.

As for that new color option, sky blue, it replaces space gray. Starlight, silver, and midnight are still around from last year (and midnight is unchanged, so expect some fingerprint smudginess). The new blue is a very pale metallic finish. You could mistake it for a silver if you didn’t see them side-by-side. I think the best way I could describe it is 2003 Toyota Matrix blue. In other words, it’s nice but not blue enough. Apple should call it non-committal blue.

But the fifth thing that’s new for the MacBook Air, and likely the one many of us will care most about, is that it starts at a lower price. The 13-inch model starts at $999 while the 15-inch starts at $1,199. This is actually a return to form for the 13-inch, which used to start at that price before an increase during the M2 generation. The M4 Air may be an otherwise subtle chip-bump of an upgrade with a new bland-ish metallic finish, but $100 off makes all the difference.

In addition to our hands-on with the MacBook Air we also got our first look at the new Mac Studio duo, one with the M4 Max chip and one with a new, all-out M3 Ultra. The Studios don’t look any different, but the changes inside are pretty major for hardcore pros doing some heavy-duty creative work or local AI stuff.

And the new iPad Air with M3 chip? Well, it’s an iPad. Cool. I guess?

Apple’s new Macs and iPads are due out next week and already up for order. Check out our smattering of photos.

MacBook Air M4

Mac Studio M4 Max / M3 Ultra

iPad Air

Photography by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

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