The Best Roku TV Is $210 Off — Should You Grab It Now or Wait?
Roku’s flagship Mini‑LED QLED TV is marked down by about $210 at major retailers. Here’s what that really means, how it stacks up against TCL/Hisense/Samsung, and a checklist to make sure you get the right panel and features for your room and habits.
Best Gravel Running Shoes (2026): The Door‑to‑Trail Guide to Salomon, Adidas, and Nike
Gravel running is now its own thing—neither pure road nor pure trail. Here’s how Salomon, Adidas, and Nike are shaping the hybrid shoe you can wear from sidewalk to singletrack, plus how to choose the right pair for your routes.
Best Sheets Under $200 and $100 (2026): Cotton, Bamboo, Organic
A practical, lab-informed guide to buying comfortable, durable, and responsibly made sheets under $100 and $200—covering cotton, bamboo/viscose, organic options, and what “cooling” really means in 2026.
Grammarly’s New “Expert” AI Reviews Claim Feedback From Famous Authors—Even the Dead
Grammarly has rolled out an AI feature that emulates feedback from marquee authors—living and deceased—via a tool from a company now called Superhuman. It’s a clever product hook with thorny implications: consent, right of publicity, false endorsement, and the cultural cost of bottling literary voices into chatty bots.
Budget Windows Laptops Versus the MacBook Neo: Why $500 Machines Suddenly Matter
A wave of $500 Windows laptops—like current deals on the Asus Vivobook 14—are reshaping expectations for everyday computing and putting price pressure on Apple’s new MacBook Neo. Here’s what changed, what to buy, and how to think about value in 2026.
Space Command’s sober answer on “UAPs in space” — and what it really tells us
Pressed on whether the US military sees unexplained craft in orbit, the head of US Space Command said he’s seen no evidence of anything alien—just satellites, debris, and natural objects. Here’s why that answer matters, what the military actually tracks, and how to tell a real anomaly from sensor mirages.
Sony’s 5.1 Bravia Theater System Deal: Why $100 Off Might Be the Sweet Spot
A rare discount on Sony’s 5.1 soundbar bundle makes full-surround audio more attainable. Here’s what the deal means, what to check before you buy, and how to get the most from a compact, living‑room‑friendly home theater.
Apple’s $599 MacBook Neo: A Colorful Shock to the System
Apple just upended its own playbook with the MacBook Neo—a colorful, $599 entry-level laptop that undercuts every Mac notebook that came before it. Here’s what it means for students, switchers, and the broader PC market.
Best Theraguns and Therabody Tools for Smarter Recovery (2026)
Percussive massage guns, compression boots, and LED face tech now occupy the same gym bag—and the same app. Here’s how Therabody’s lineup fits together, what the evidence says, and how to choose the right tool for your recovery goals.
BarkBox Promo Codes and Discounts: What “Up to 50% Off” Really Buys You
BarkBox’s big headline deals look tempting. Here’s how to decode the offers, maximize savings, avoid fine‑print gotchas, and pick the right box for your dog.
NASA circles April 1 for Artemis II—first crewed trip to the Moon in five decades
NASA is eyeing April 1 for Artemis II, the first crewed lunar voyage since Apollo. A small but telling issue—a dislodged seal—shows how millimeter-scale parts can shape billion-dollar timelines.
Why Trump Revived an Old Iran–Election Conspiracy Right After New US Strikes
Within hours of fresh US military action against Iran-linked targets, Donald Trump resurfaced a long-running claim that Iran "stole" the 2020 election. Here’s how that narrative formed, why it keeps coming back, and what to watch as geopolitics and misinformation collide online.
Apple’s new MacBook Air with M5 doubles base storage and nudges prices up—here’s why that matters
Apple refreshed the MacBook Air with the M5 chip, a bigger default SSD, and higher entry prices—reshaping the lineup and hinting at a cheaper MacBook below it.
Shark UV Reveal Review (2026): When Your Robot Vacuum Turns Into a Blacklight Detective
Shark’s latest robot vacuum adds a UV “reveal” mode that makes hidden stains and residues fluoresce. It’s part cleaning tool, part household truth serum—and it changes how you think about dirty floors.
Why Missile Alerts and War Updates Trigger Doomscrolling
Emergency alerts and algorithmic feeds weren’t designed to coexist. Together, they can pull civilians into an always-on vigilance loop that’s hard to escape. Here’s how the loop forms, what it does to our brains, and what can be done about it.
L.L.Bean Promo Codes and Deals in 2026: How to Actually Save Big on Outdoor Gear
A practical, data-savvy guide to saving at L.L.Bean in 2026—covering welcome offers, seasonal clearance timing, free shipping thresholds, group discounts, cashback stacking, and the fine print most shoppers miss.
What Is That Mysterious Metallic Device US Chief Design Officer Joe Gebbia Is Using?
A candid café sighting of U.S. Chief Design Officer Joe Gebbia wearing unusual earbuds tethered to a metallic disc ignited speculation about a new wave of ambient AI hardware—and the risks of hype, hoaxes, and hardware leaks.
Delivering Under Fire: How Gulf Gig Workers Keep Rolling Through Missile Alerts
In Gulf cities where missile and drone alerts now punctuate daily life, app-driven couriers are still on the move. Their persistence exposes a strange collision of high-speed logistics, algorithmic incentives, and wartime risk—raising urgent questions about safety, ethics, and the future of on-demand convenience.
War in Iran Spiked Oil Prices. Trump Will Decide How High They Go
A fresh conflict in Iran has jolted crude markets. The size and duration of the price surge now hinge on policy choices from the White House—ranging from sanctions and naval protection to SPR releases and talks with OPEC+.
Pico’s Project Swan Aims to Make XR Your Daily Workspace—Not a Weekend Toy
ByteDance’s Pico is pitching a work‑first “digital office” headset at a moment when Apple’s Vision Pro struggled to make productivity stick. Here’s what that means for XR’s next chapter—and what questions still loom.
The Data Centers Have Arrived at the Edge of the Arctic Circle
Hyperscale AI and high‑performance computing are racing north for cheap, cold, and clean power. The move reshapes Nordic grids, local economies, and the environmental equation for the world’s most energy‑hungry buildings.
The strange animals that bend the rules of body heat
From hummingbirds that “shut down” at night to sharks that warm their muscles, evolution keeps finding new ways to cheat the physics of hot and cold—and to ride out storms, floods, and predators.
Lenovo’s MWC 2026 Concept Parade: A Laptop That Packs Its Own Monitor, a 3D Dual‑Screen Yoga Book, and a Foldable Legion Handheld
At MWC 2026, Lenovo showed off prototypes that blur lines between laptop, tablet, and console—including a notebook that stores a portable monitor, a 3D‑capable dual‑screen Yoga Book, and a foldable Legion handheld that turns into a mini laptop.
If Iran Tries to Close the Strait of Hormuz: Energy Shock, Drone Swarms, and a Global Stress Test
A realistic look at how a shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz would unfold: from oil and LNG shortages to mine warfare, drone swarms, maritime insurance chaos, and the tech that could keep ships moving—or stop them cold.