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Technology News

8 Best Lighted Makeup Mirrors (2025), Tested and Reviewed

Wired Top Stories - Wed, 2025-03-19 04:34
Ensure a flawless finish every time with these WIRED-tested picks, no matter where you’re putting on your face.
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The Creator of the Smash Indie Game ‘Animal Well’ Is Already Working on His Next Project

Wired Top Stories - Wed, 2025-03-19 04:00
Billy Basso talks about the seven years he spent developing his hit game, and what he’s up to next.
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Best MacBooks (2025): Which Apple Laptop Should You Buy?

Wired Top Stories - Wed, 2025-03-19 03:30
Having a hard time choosing from Apple’s complex MacBook lineup? Let us help you find the right laptop.
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NordVPN Coupon and Discount Codes: 77% Off

Wired Top Stories - Tue, 2025-03-18 22:30
Save up to 77% on 2-year plans and get 3 free months with our NordVPN discount codes.
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Can NASA remain nonpartisan when basic spaceflight truths are shredded?

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-18 16:56

It looked like the final scene of a movie, the denouement of a long adventure in which the good guys finally prevail. Azure skies and brilliant blue seas provided a perfect backdrop on Tuesday evening as a spacecraft carrying four people neared the planet's surface.

"Just breathtaking views of a calm, glass-like ocean off the coast of Tallahassee, Florida," commented Sandra Jones, a NASA spokesperson, during the webcast co-hosted by the space agency and SpaceX, whose Dragon vehicle returned the four astronauts from orbit.

A drone near the landing site captured incredible images of Crew Dragon Freedom as it slowly descended beneath four parachutes. Most of NASA's astronauts today, outside of the small community of spaceflight devotees, are relatively anonymous. But not two of the passengers inside Freedom, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams. After nine months of travails, 286 days to be precise, they were finally coming home.

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Roku Tests Showing Ads Before the Home Screen Loads

Wired Top Stories - Tue, 2025-03-18 15:02
Users in the test group are unimpressed by the video ads, which play automatically. Customers say they will be eager to toss their Roku devices if the ads become permanent.
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Tesla Got a Permit to Operate a Taxi Service in California—but There’s a Catch

Wired Top Stories - Tue, 2025-03-18 14:53
The taxi service will initially operate with Tesla employee drivers only, use current-model vehicles, and won’t allow for driverless rides.
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Developer’s GDC billboard pokes at despised former Google Stadia exec

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-18 14:40

It has been nearly two years now since game industry veteran Phil Harrison left Google following the implosion of the company's Stadia cloud gaming service. But the passage of time hasn't stopped one company from taking advantage of this week's Game Developers Conference to poke fun at the erstwhile gaming executive for his alleged mistreatment of developers.

VGC spotted a conspicuous billboard in San Francisco's Union Square Monday featuring the overinflated, completely bald head of Gunther Harrison, the fictional Alta Interglobal CEO who was recently revealed as the blatantly satirical antagonist in the upcoming game Revenge of the Savage Planet. A large message atop the billboard asks passersby—including the tens of thousands in town for GDC—"Has a Harrison fired you lately? You might be eligible for emotional support."

Google's Phil Harrison talks about the Google Stadia controller at GDC 2019. Credit: Google

While Gunther Harrison probably hasn't fired any GDC attendees, the famously bald Phil Harrison was responsible for the firing of plenty of developers when he shut down Google's short-lived Stadia Games & Entertainment (SG&E) publishing imprint in early 2021. That shutdown surprised a lot of newly jobless game developers, perhaps none more so than those at Montreal-based Typhoon Games, which Google had acquired in late 2019 to make what Google's Jade Raymond said at the time would be "platform-defining exclusive content" for Stadia.

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Nvidia announces DGX desktop “personal AI supercomputers”

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-18 14:19

During Tuesday's Nvidia GTX keynote, CEO Jensen Huang unveiled two so-called "personal AI supercomputers" called DGX Spark and DGX Station, both powered by the Grace Blackwell platform. In a way, they are a new type of AI PC architecture specifically built for running neural networks, and five major PC manufacturers will build them.

These desktop systems, first previewed as "Project DIGITS" in January, aim to bring AI capabilities to developers, researchers, and data scientists who need to prototype, fine-tune, and run large AI models locally. DGX systems can serve as standalone desktop AI labs or "bridge systems" that allow AI developers to move their models from desktops to DGX Cloud or any AI cloud infrastructure with few code changes.

Huang explained the rationale behind these new products in a news release, saying, "AI has transformed every layer of the computing stack. It stands to reason a new class of computers would emerge—designed for AI-native developers and to run AI-native applications."

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Nvidia announces “Rubin Ultra” and “Feynman” AI chips for 2027 and 2028

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-18 14:10

On Tuesday at Nvidia's GTC 2025 conference in San Jose, California, CEO Jensen Huang revealed several new AI-accelerating GPUs the company plans to release over the coming months and years. He also revealed more specifications about previously announced chips.

The centerpiece announcement was Vera Rubin, first teased at Computex 2024 and now scheduled for release in the second half of 2026. This GPU, named after a famous astronomer, will feature 288 gigabytes of memory and comes with a custom Nvidia-designed CPU called Vera.

According to Nvidia, Vera Rubin will deliver significant performance improvements over its predecessor, Grace Blackwell, particularly for AI training and inference.

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Furious at the FCC, Arkansas jail cancels inmate phone calls rather than lower rates

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-18 13:08

Sheriff John Montgomery of Baxter County, Arkansas, isn't going to take it anymore—if by "it" you mean "having to offer lower phone call rates to incarcerated inmates." Noting that such phone calls are "not required to be provided by law," Montgomery is ending all inmate phone calls on March 30, 2025.

The cause of Montgomery's wrath, and of his March 30 date, is the Federal Communications Commission, which set an April 1, 2025, deadline for smaller jails to lower the obscene rates of inmate phone calls. (Larger jails had to comply in January.) According to the FCC, 15-minute phone calls to inmates could run as much as $12.10 in these smaller jails. The Commission now demands that such calls cost no more than $1.35. (You can read the new rate schedule here.)

The rates are high in part because extra security is required for inmate communications services, but the system had also become a way for local agencies to make money by charging vendors a "site commission payment." In this model, vendors might be selected based less on what was good for security and for inmate families and more on how much cash the vendor could funnel to the jail. FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks even referred to these payments as "kickbacks."

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‘It’s a Heist’: Real Federal Auditors Are Horrified by DOGE

Wired Top Stories - Tue, 2025-03-18 13:04
WIRED talked to actual federal auditors about how government auditing works—and how DOGE is doing the opposite.
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How Google and NVIDIA are teaming up to solve real-world problems with AIHow Google and NVIDIA are teaming up to solve real-world problems with AI

Google official blog - Tue, 2025-03-18 13:00
An overview of the collaboration between Google and NVIDIA and a preview of the announcements at GTC this week.An overview of the collaboration between Google and NVIDIA and a preview of the announcements at GTC this week.
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Gemini gets new coding and writing tools, plus AI-generated “podcasts”

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-18 12:40

On the heels of its release of new Gemini models last week, Google has announced a pair of new features for its flagship AI product. Starting today, Gemini has a new Canvas feature that lets you draft, edit, and refine documents or code. Gemini is also getting Audio Overviews, a neat capability that first appeared in the company's NotebookLM product, but it's getting even more useful as part of Gemini.

Canvas is similar (confusingly) to the OpenAI product of the same name. Canvas is available in the Gemini prompt bar on the web and mobile app. Simply upload a document and tell Gemini what you need to do with it. In Google's example, the user asks for a speech based on a PDF containing class notes. And just like that, Gemini spits out a document.

Canvas lets you refine the AI-generated documents right inside Gemini. The writing tools available across the Google ecosystem, with options like suggested edits and different tones, are available inside the Gemini-based editor. If you want to do more edits or collaborate with others, you can export the document to Google Docs with a single click.

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FCC to get Republican majority and plans to “delete” as many rules as possible

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-18 12:30

Commissioner Geoffrey Starks will resign from the Federal Communications Commission this spring, he announced today. Starks' exit will give Chairman Brendan Carr a Republican majority, as the FCC has had two Democrats and two Republicans since the January resignation of former Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel.

"Today I sent a letter to the President and Leader Schumer indicating that I intend to resign my seat as a Commissioner this spring," said Starks, a Democrat who has been an FCC commissioner for over six years. "Serving the American people as a Commissioner on the Federal Communications Commission has been the honor of my life... Over the next few weeks, I look forward to working with the chairman and my fellow Commissioners, and all FCC staff, to further the mission of the agency."

Even with a 2-2 deadlock, Carr has gotten to work on some of his priorities, such as investigating news stations accused of bias against President Donald Trump and dropping a Biden-era proposal to increase regulation of broadband providers.

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New Portal pinball table may be the closest we’re gonna get to Portal 3

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-18 12:20

Fans of Portal 2 have been waiting nearly 14 years now for another official entry in the beloved action-puzzle series. In the meantime, those fans have had to settle for DLC, fan mods, and odd, Aperture-Science-themed spinoffs that capture the look and feel of the Portal universe in a number of decidedly non-Portal games.

Now, it seems we can add a full-fledged physical pinball table to that list of spinoffs with the announcement of a full-size, fully licensed Portal-themed pinball table built on Multimorphic's P3 pinball platform. Pinball News' write-up has more details than the press release, noting that the table was developed in conjunction with the team at Valve "to ensure all the features are accurately represented and they had access to all the assets from the Portal and Portal 2 games."

That means new stylized Aperture Science art on the side of the table and new "Test Chamber" animations on the large display that runs underneath the playfield. It also means Ellen McLain reprising her iconic roles as GLaDOS to record new spoken reactions to in-game events, alongside a new Wheatley-esque personality core named Reggie, voiced by Marc Silk [Update: This post originally misstated the status of Reggie and his voice actor. Ars regrets the error]. Watching the promotional trailer and hearing a fully animated toy sculpt of Reggie intone "I'm making a note here: huge success!" in his trademark British accent is sure to make even the most jaded Portal fan grin at least a little bit.

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The 45 Best Shows on Max (aka HBO Max) Right Now (March 2025)

Wired Top Stories - Tue, 2025-03-18 12:00
When No One Sees Us, The White Lotus, and Celtics City are just a few of the shows you need to be watching on Max this month.
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FTC Removes Posts Critical of Amazon, Microsoft, and AI Companies

Wired Top Stories - Tue, 2025-03-18 11:02
Business-guidance content published during the Biden administration has been removed from the Federal Trade Commission website.
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Google inks $32 billion deal to buy security firm Wiz even as DOJ seeks breakup

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-18 09:53

Google today announced a $32 billion deal to buy Wiz, an Israeli cloud security company that would become part of Google's cloud division if the merger is completed.

The all-cash deal requires regulatory approval at a time when the Department of Justice is trying to break up Google by forcing it to sell the Chrome browser after a judge ruled that Google illegally maintained a monopoly. Google is also awaiting a verdict in a separate ad-tech monopoly case brought by the US government.

Google's announcement this morning said that "Wiz's products will continue to work and be available across all major clouds, including Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Oracle Cloud platforms."

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SpiderBot experiments hint at “echolocation” to locate prey

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-18 09:46

It's well understood that spiders have poor eyesight and thus sense the vibrations in their webs whenever prey (like a fly) gets caught; the web serves as an extension of their sensory system. But spiders also exhibit less-understood behaviors to locate struggling prey. Most notably, they take on a crouching position, sometimes moving up and down to shake the web or plucking at the web by pulling in with one leg. The crouching seems to be triggered when prey is stationary and stops when the prey starts moving.

But it can be difficult to study the underlying mechanisms of this behavior because there are so many variables at play when observing live spiders. To simplify matters, researchers at Johns Hopkins University's Terradynamics Laboratory are building crouching spider robots and testing them on synthetic webs. The results provide evidence for the hypothesis that spiders crouch to sense differences in web frequencies to locate prey that isn't moving—something analogous to echolocation. The researchers presented their initial findings today at the American Physical Society's Global Physics Summit in Anaheim, California.

"Our lab investigates biological problems using robot physical models," team member Eugene Lin told Ars. "Animal experiments are really hard to reproduce because it's hard to get the animal to do what you want to do." Experiments with robot physical models, by contrast, "are completely repeatable. And while you're building them, you get a better idea of the actual [biological] system and how certain behaviors happen." The lab has also built robots inspired by cockroaches and fish.

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