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From massage guns to compression boots and LED face masks, these are the top performers in Therabody's wellness lineup.
Google Chrome will begin shipping new releases every two weeks in September, instead of monthly.
The future is here, and it is jacked up on B vitamins, red dye, and taurine. These are the best energy drinks to get from tired to wired.
New Airs leave more room underneath for the rumored low-cost MacBook.
The company says the new model will reduce the "cringe" that's been annoying its users for months.
Ethan Agarwal, a 40-year-old tech entrepreneur with no political background, told TechCrunch on Monday evening that he is running for California's 17th congressional district.
On Tuesday, during Apple's weeklong product launch event, a listing for the "MacBook Neo (Model A3404)" appeared on a regulatory compliance page on Apple's website under its lineup of 2026 MacBooks. First spotted by MacRumors, the listing appears to be an accident and has since been removed, but may have been a leaked reference to a rumored entry-level MacBook. Unfortunately, it didn't include any additional details beyond the device's name and model number. Cool name https://t.co/OR4xRV6WGi - Mark Gurman (@markgurman) March 3, 2026 Apple has reportedly been working on a budget-friendly MacBook priced under $1,000 and powered by an iPhone … Read the full story at The Verge.
Save on Barkbox subscriptions, including monthly themed collections of plush toys, tough chews, and healthy snacks designed to keep your pup’s tail wagging.
Kalshi lets you place bets on everything from football games to foreign invasions. The prediction market’s CEO, Tarek Mansour, says this doesn’t count as gambling—and is actually good for society.
The Kobo Remote is small and lightweight, but large enough to be comfortable to hold. Does anyone really need a remote for a device you’re already either holding or using at arm’s length? E-readers have saved us from the risk of paper cuts and the burden of physically turning pages, but Kobo is making it even easier by releasing a wireless page-turning remote. The Kobo Remote might be indulgent and basic, but it’s all about maximizing convenience, and at the end of the night when I’m looking to unwind with a good book, that’s exactly what I want. Wireless remotes for e-readers aren’t a new idea, but none of them just directly connect to Kindles and Kobos, despite recent versions of those e-readers now supporting Bluetooth. You either need to jump through hoops to modify the software on your e-reader to make it connect to specific third-party remotes, or settle for a remotely operated accessory that attaches to an e-reader and physically taps the screen to turn the page. Clip-on page turners have always felt too cumbersome and complicated to me. I’m probably not alone, because shortly after it launched last November, the $30 Kobo Remote quickly sold out and remained out of stock for several months. It wasn’t until late January that I was finally able to buy one, and while I think Kobo could have squeezed in a little more functionality, both my wife and I have readily embraced the remote. At just shy of 4 inches long and about the size of a pack of Juicy Fruit, the Kobo Remote is a lot smaller than I was expecting. It feels even smaller in my large hands, but at the same time big enough to comfortably hold and operate, and to not get lost in the bedsheets if dropped. The remote includes an optional wrist lanyard, which on more than one occasion has prevented it from going missing when I’ve fallen asleep reading. There’s no rechargeable battery, but Kobo says the included AAA should last for months. The remote will only connect to Kobo devices that support Bluetooth for audiobooks, but the pairing process is as painless as connecting headphones. Once paired, the remote automatically reconnects when your Kobo wakes, requiring just a second or two before it’s ready to go. If you want to connect it to a different e-reader, a button on the front edge of the remote manually activates pairing mode. The remote has two clicky buttons. The larger one goes to the next page, and the smaller one flips back. They’re easy to differentiate by touch — in addition to the size difference, one button is concave, while the other is convex — but you can’t customize their functionality. It would be nice to be able to press and hold either button to increase or decrease screen brightness, or make font size adjustments. And my wife, a voracious consumer of audiobooks, was disappointed to find she couldn’t use the remote’s buttons to adjust the volume or pause playback — they only skip forward or back 30 seconds at a time. Is the Kobo Remote a must-have accessory for eve
I am excited about the SpaceX IPO for all the reasons investors shouldn't be. Maybe it'll be a real marquee moment for Silicon Valley, but I see the potential for a shitshow. After all, more than a decade ago, Musk said that SpaceX going public before going to Mars would be bad for the company. Are private markets tapped out on cash to fund SpaceX ambitions? Elon Musk has been very clear about his feelings on publicly traded companies. Specifically: He doesn't like them! "I am hesitant to foist being public on SpaceX, especially given the long term nature of our mission." In 2013, Musk sent an email to SpaceX, which his biographer Ashlee … Read the full story at The Verge.
Under the new Standard plan, subscribers will lose access to the audiobooks they've consumed when they unsubscribe. The Premium plan lets users keep the audiobooks they’ve listened to even if they unsubscribe.
Some AI founders are using a novel valuation mechanism to manufacture unicorn status.
The UV light built into Shark’s newest robot vacuum is on a quest to embarrass me with how many stains it's spotted.
It's been a busy few years for Scott Pilgrim. Following a live-action film and the conclusion of the comics in 2010, the series has slowly been coming back to life. First, in 2021 Scott Pilgrim vs. The World: The Game was rereleased on modern consoles after years of being inaccessible. Two years later came an even bigger surprise: Scott Pilgrim Takes Off, a Netflix anime that remixed the story with an alternate take on Scott's battle with seven evil exes. This was followed by a giant box set to celebrate the comic's 20th anniversary, and now the series is back again with a game called Scott Pilgrim EX. According to Scott Pilgrim creator Bry … Read the full story at The Verge.
A combination of war alerts, breaking news updates, and algorithmic feeds are trapping users in a threat-monitoring loop.
Protect your home against dust, pets, allergies, and more with air purifiers tested firsthand by WIRED.
No one has had a Synchron brain-computer interface longer than Rodney Gorham. He's still finding new ways to use it.
These updated M5 chips were specifically designed to make the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro laptops better at handling intensive AI tasks.
The new app promises a way to send and receive messages without being distracted by your timeline.
Year after year, we mostly know what to expect from our smartphone upgrades. Galaxy, iPhone, Pixel, or whatever else, everything seems to get slightly better (and occasionally more expensive) without many surprises in store. That's not to say there are no new ideas left in smartphones, though. You just have to know where to look. Verge subscribers, don't forget you get exclusive access to ad-free Vergecast wherever you get your podcasts. Head here. Not a subscriber? You can sign up here. On this episode of The Vergecast, The Verge's Allison Johnson reports back from Mobile World Congress, which is positively overflowing with ideas abou … Read the full story at The Verge.
Everybody’s trying to get in on Cosmic Orange. | Photo: Allison Johnson / The Verge Unihertz, known for its slab phone alternatives, has unveiled an evolution of its device with a physical keyboard: The Titan 2 Elite. It's smaller and sleeker than the (aptly named) Titan that precedes it, comes in the orange color that's all the rage right now, and looks a heck of a lot like a Blackberry. Unihertz teased the Elite in January; from the teaser it looked to be a smaller Titan 2 with rounded edges. Having seen it in person at MWC, I can confirm that's exactly what it is. The keys are slightly smaller than the Titan 2's, and there's no secondary screen on the back of the new device. Like its predecesso … Read the full story at The Verge.
There have never been so many ways to check for hypertension. Here’s what's available and how to use them.
Endor Labs, the application security startup backed by more than $208 million in venture funding, today launched AURI, a platform that embeds real-time security intelligence directly into the AI coding tools that are reshaping how software gets built. The product is available free to individual developers and integrates natively with popular AI coding assistants including Cursor, Claude, and Augment through the Model Context Protocol (MCP). The announcement arrives against a sobering backdrop. While 90% of development teams now use AI coding assistants, research published in December by Carnegie Mellon University, Columbia University, and Johns Hopkins University found that leading models produce functionally correct code only about 61% of the time — and just 10% of that output is both functional and secure. "Even though AI can now produce functionally correct code 61% of the time, only 10% of that output is both functional and secure," Endor Labs CEO Varun Badhwar told VentureBeat in an exclusive interview. "These coding agents were trained on open source code from across the internet, so they've learned best practices — but they've also learned to replicate a lot of the same security problems of the past." That gap between code that works and code that is safe defines the market AURI is designed to capture — and the urgency behind its launch. The security crisis hiding inside the AI coding revolution To understand why Endor Labs built AURI, it helps to understand the structural problem at the heart of AI-assisted software development. AI coding models are trained on vast repositories of open-source code scraped from across the internet — code that includes not only best practices but also well-documented vulnerabilities, insecure patterns, and flaws that may not be discovered for years after the code was originally written. Badhwar, a repeat cybersecurity entrepreneur who previously built RedLock (acquired by Palo Alto Networks), founded Endor Labs four years ago with Dimitri Stiliadis. The original thesis was straightforward: developers were becoming "software assemblers," writing less original code and importing most components from open source repositories. Then came the explosion of AI-powered coding tools, which Badhwar described as "the once in a generation opportunity of how to rewrite software development life cycle powered by AI." The productivity gains are real — more efficiency, faster time to market, and the democratization of software creation beyond trained engineers. But the security consequences are potentially devastating. New vulnerabilities are discovered every day in code that may have been written a decade ago, and that constantly evolving threat intelligence is not easily available to the AI models generating new code. "Every day, every hour, new vulnerabilities are found in software that might have been written 5, 10, 12 years ago — and that information isn't easily available to the models," Badhwar explained. "If you sta