Bluesky’s CEO Steps Down: What Jay Graber’s Exit Means for Decentralized Social Media
Bluesky founder-CEO Jay Graber is leaving the top job. Venture capitalist and former Automattic chief Toni Schneider will serve as interim CEO while the board searches for a permanent leader. Here’s what that means for the AT Protocol, product roadmap, and the decentralized social race.
2026 Australian Grand Prix ushered in a very different Formula 1: energy chess, active aero, and the reliability race
Melbourne was the first look at Formula 1’s 2026 rules in live combat. The big lesson: managing energy—mechanical, electrical, and aerodynamic—now decides everything.
The Real-World Sonos Buying Guide (2026): Soundbars, Headphones, Atmos, and the Best Picks for Every Room
Sonos has matured into a flexible home-audio ecosystem. Here’s how to choose the right speakers, soundbars, subwoofers, and the new Ace headphones in 2026—without overspending or over-complicating your setup.
Sleep Week 2026 Deals, Decoded by a Sleep Coach: What’s Worth Buying and Why
A certified sleep coach’s curated Sleep Week deals are live. Here’s how to separate truly restorative upgrades from hype—plus what specs, certifications, and return policies to check before you click Buy.
How (and Why) to Cap Your MacBook’s Charge at 80 Percent
Keeping a MacBook parked at 100 percent all day accelerates battery wear. Here’s the science, the settings to change, and the trade-offs of setting an 80 percent charging limit.
Fender’s Mix Modular Headphones Signal a Repairable Future for Everyday Audio
Fender’s Mix over‑ears embrace a Lego-like, repair-first design—swappable parts, tuneable sound, and an approach that challenges the “sealed gadget” status quo.
Ethernet Done Right: How to Wire Your Home Network Without the Spaghetti
A practical, step‑by‑step guide to planning, running, and tidying Ethernet in your home—what to buy, how to route, how to stay within code, and how to make it look like a pro install.
Jessica Jones crashes back into Hell’s Kitchen in the Daredevil: Born Again trailer
Marvel’s street‑level corner roars back as the new Daredevil: Born Again trailer reveals the return of Jessica Jones and a grittier tone. Here’s why that matters, what the footage hints at, and how it reframes the Defenders-era canon for Disney+.
A tiny, long‑armed dinosaur reshuffles the story of how some dinosaurs shrank
A newly described, chicken‑sized dinosaur with unexpectedly long forelimbs suggests that body size shrank before a later shift to specialized feeding, challenging the idea that diet change drove miniaturization in this lineage.
Werner Herzog’s haunting pursuit of Madagascar’s “ghost elephants”
A new National Geographic documentary from Werner Herzog follows an ornithologist deep into Madagascar to chase evidence for a new species of the island’s legendary, extinct elephant birds—melding field grit, ancient DNA, and the uneasy romance of scientific discovery.
Phone use on the toilet is linked to more hemorrhoids: why that 46% bump matters
A new study highlights a modern bathroom hazard: smartphones. People who bring their phones to the toilet had a 46% higher likelihood of hemorrhoids, likely because distraction keeps them seated longer and straining more. Here’s the science, caveats, and what to do instead.
The Ratio Four Series Two: My Benchmark Brewer for Testing New Beans
Modern drip brewers are no longer dull appliances; they’re controlled, repeatable tasting tools. Here’s why the Ratio Four Series Two has become my go‑to platform for evaluating new coffees—and what that says about where home coffee tech is headed.
The Best MIDI Controllers for Synths, Guitars, and More (2026): A Deep Buyer’s Guide
From expressive MPE keyboards to guitar pickups, wind controllers, and foot rigs, here’s how to choose the right MIDI gear in 2026—and why it matters.
A unicorn-like Spinosaurus found in the Sahara
A rare Saharan spinosaurid skull with a midline horn and fish-adapted jaws adds a striking new twist to the story of semi-aquatic dinosaurs—and helps resolve long-running puzzles about how Spinosaurus and its relatives fed, signaled, and lived along Cretaceous rivers.
The Modern Guide to Wires: How to Finally Tidy the Cable Chaos Around Your Desk
A practical, step-by-step playbook to declutter your desk cables, choose the right wires, prevent hazards, and build a setup you won’t have to redo in six months.
The Practical Guide to Never Getting Locked Out of Your Google Account
Your Google account holds your email, photos, documents, and identity. Here’s a step-by-step plan to bulletproof access—before something goes wrong.
Ding-dong, EUS is done: What NASA’s cancellation of the Exploration Upper Stage really means
NASA has formally ended development of the Exploration Upper Stage—a long-promised upgrade to the Space Launch System. Here’s why it happened, what it changes for Artemis, and what to watch next.
A Privacy “Aura” for the Age of AI Wearables? Why Ultrasonic Jammers Keep Running Into Physics
A new gadget, Spectre I by Deveillance, promises to cloak you from always-listening AI wearables. It’s a compelling idea—but modern microphones, beamforming, and basic acoustics make reliable jamming far harder than it sounds.
Marley Spoon Meal Kit Review 2026: Less Martha, More Moroccan
Marley Spoon has quietly retired the Martha Stewart co-branding and leaned into bolder, globally inspired menus. We cooked through multiple boxes to see what changed—and why it matters in a shaky meal-kit market.
The unlikely forensic hero: How moss helped convict grave robbers at a Chicago cemetery
A case report shows how tiny scraps of moss—collected from shovels, boots, and disturbed soil—helped tie cemetery workers to a grave-desecration scheme at a historic Chicago-area burial ground.
Did vertebrate vision start with a single cyclops-like eye? A new hypothesis for why our eyes are so different
A provocative evo-devo idea argues that early vertebrates rebuilt complex vision from a single median light-sensing organ. That scenario could explain the inverted retina, blind spot, and other peculiarities of our eyes.
The Smart Bird Feeder Boom: Why AI-Powered Perches Are Suddenly Everywhere (2026)
Smart bird feeders with cameras and AI have leapt from novelty to mainstream. Here’s how they work, why people love them, what to watch for (privacy, subscriptions, wildlife health), and where the tech goes next.
Norton Coupons and Discounts Explained: How to Save Big—And Buy the Right Protection
Deals for Norton security software regularly advertise steep first‑year savings. Here’s how those coupons work, what you’re actually getting, how to avoid renewal gotchas, and which plan fits your needs.
Bathroom footage from Ray‑Ban Meta smart glasses? What the new allegations say—and why it matters
Contract workers say they reviewed short clips from Ray‑Ban Meta smart glasses that showed people using the bathroom—raising fresh questions about what the glasses capture, who sees it, and whether users and bystanders are adequately warned.