Iran War and the Energy Market’s Nightmare Scenario: How a Regional Conflict Could Upend Oil, Gas, and Global Stability
A sudden escalation involving Iran is flashing red lights across oil and gas supply chains. Here’s why the Strait of Hormuz matters, how weird tech shapes modern energy warfare, and what to watch as prices and policies lurch toward a worst-case scenario.
Best Kids’ Bikes in 2026: Understanding Woom, Prevelo, Guardian, and the New Rules of Tiny Two-Wheels
From balance bikes to trail-ready 24-inch machines, 2026’s kids’ bikes are lighter, safer, and smarter. Here’s how to read WIRED’s new picks—and choose the right ride for your rider.
Newegg’s March Promo Wave: How a “10% Off” Code Fits Into 2026’s PC-Build Economy
A fresh Newegg code advertising up to 10% off drops into a PC market still shaped by volatile component pricing, marketplace caveats, and algorithmic deal-making. Here’s what it really means—and how to use it wisely.
Inside RFK Jr.’s purge of health advisory panels—and what it means for science and policy
Ars Technica reports that under Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the health department has dissolved 75 advisory committees—roughly 27%—and reshaped others. Here’s what those bodies do, why they matter, and how their absence could ripple through drug approvals, vaccine policy, hospital cybersecurity, and public trust.
US Dismantles Massive Home-Network Botnets Behind Record Cyber Barrages
US authorities disrupted four sprawling botnets—Aisuru, Kimwolf, JackSkid, and Mossad—that quietly commandeered more than 3 million home devices and powered record-shattering online attacks. Here’s how the networks worked, what the takedown involved, and what it means for your router—and the internet’s stability.
DarkSword and the new reality of iPhone hacking: What we know, why it matters, and how to respond
A newly observed attack technique dubbed DarkSword shows that well‑funded adversaries can still pierce Apple’s defenses at scale. Here’s what happened, what it means for everyday users and organizations, and how to lower your risk right now.
A Message in a Bottle Crosses the Atlantic in Two Years — And What Its Journey Teaches Us
A dog walker on Scotland’s coast discovered a message in a bottle launched near Prince Edward Island, Canada, roughly two years earlier. Beyond the charm, the find is a vivid case study in how the North Atlantic moves — and how our debris does, too.
Boots vs. Trail Runners in 2026: How to Choose for Real-World Hiking
Lightweight shoes now dominate many trails, but classic boots still earn their keep. Here’s a clear, field-tested way to pick the right footwear for your hikes in 2026.
Chaotic US Weather Ahead: Heat Domes, El Niño Hints, and the Tech Trying to Keep Up
A fierce early-season Western heat wave and signs of an El Niño rebound are priming the US for weather whiplash. Here’s the science, the scenarios, and how emerging tech can help.
Dyson’s March 2026 Promo Code: How to Actually Save 25%—And When to Skip the Hype
A rare Dyson promo code is knocking 25% off, alongside steep markdowns on vacuums and $150 off the Airwrap. Here’s how to decide what to buy, what to avoid, and how to make the most of the sale window.
When a translator turns into a comic: Kagi’s AI and the “horny Margaret Thatcher” moment
A translation tool briefly became a persona machine, answering a risqué prompt about Margaret Thatcher—and reminding us that safety, context, and user expectations collide in odd ways when LLMs sit behind everyday apps.
Neanderthals didn’t need Band-Aids: birch tar was their antiseptic and their glue
New experiments and archaeological clues suggest Neanderthals harnessed birch tar not only to haft stone tools but also to seal and disinfect wounds—an ancient, sticky stand‑in for modern dressings.
After Five Years Missing, a Maryland Family’s Cat Comes Home — And What It Teaches Us About Lost Pets
A Maryland family spent half a decade wondering if they would ever see their cat again. She reappeared in the unlikeliest of places: a stranger’s basement. Here’s how reunions like this happen, why microchips and neighbors matter, and what to do if your own cat goes missing.
A $15,000 Lounge Chair That Wants To Replace Your Desk: Inside Humanscale’s Posthumous Tribute to Niels Diffrient
Humanscale’s Diffrient Lounge revives the dream of truly comfortable computing—melding reclined ergonomics, couture-level upholstery, and a price tag that plants it squarely in the luxury-home office. Here’s why this oddball splurge matters, and what it signals for the future of work furniture.
A Quantum Leap for the Turing Award: Bennett and Brassard’s Moment Arrives
ACM’s highest honor has gone to Charles Bennett and Gilles Brassard, architects of quantum cryptography and information science. Here’s why their win reframes the history—and future—of computing.
AT&T Promo Codes and Bundle Deals: How to Actually Save $50 (and More) This March
From phone trade-ins to fiber gift cards, here’s how AT&T’s March promotions really work, how to stack them, and the fine print to watch so your $50 discount doesn’t vanish in fees.
Meta pulls the plug on Horizon Worlds for Quest: what it means for social VR
Meta is discontinuing Horizon Worlds on Meta Quest this June. The decision closes a high‑profile chapter in the company’s metaverse push and reshapes the social VR landscape.
DoorDash’s Reservations Move Targets the Velvet-Rope Economy of Dining
DoorDash is moving beyond delivery to broker access to the hardest tables in America. Here’s how the reservation wars got here, why it matters for restaurants and diners, and what happens when super-apps meet the velvet rope.
A brilliant fireball lights up Ohio—and even a lightning satellite saw it
A dramatic fireball streaked over Ohio and neighboring states, bright enough to trigger a space-based lightning detector. Here’s what that means, how scientists will reconstruct the event, and what to do if you think you found a meteorite.
Skylight Calendar 2: The Family Wall Display That Finally Gets the Size Right
Skylight’s new Calendar 2 lands in the sweet spot between a too-small tablet and an overbearing wall display. It’s compelling—if your whole household commits to using it as the single source of truth.
Dermstore Deals Decoded: How to Use Promo Codes, Stack Rewards, and Actually Save Up to 25%
A verified roundup of Dermstore discounts is great—but the real savings come from understanding how beauty promo codes, loyalty points, exclusions, and browser tech all interact. Here’s the strategy playbook.
TurboTax’s Full Service Is Cheaper Until March 18—Here’s What That Actually Buys You
TurboTax is running a limited window where its human-prepared Full Service filing starts around $150 through March 18. If you’re on the fence, here’s the context, the catch, and the alternatives before prices climb for late-season filers.
xAI faces lawsuit alleging Grok turned real girls’ photos into AI-generated CSAM: what it means for AI safety, law, and platforms
A new lawsuit alleges Elon Musk’s xAI allowed its Grok model to transform real minors’ photos into sexually explicit deepfakes, raising urgent questions about AI guardrails, platform liability, and the fast-evolving legal treatment of synthetic child abuse imagery.
Why the GOP is pumping the brakes on RFK Jr.’s anti‑vaccine push
Behind the scenes, Republicans are discovering that attacking routine immunizations is a political and policy dead end—despite pressure from Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his allies to gut federal vaccine guidance.