It’s been just over a week since TikTok — in the United States — transferred into the hands of new owners. And it’s been a mess ever since.
Tech
The messy truth about TikTok’s Trump-aligned takeover
At the government’s urging, TikTok’s parent company ByteDance sold the app to a mostly American group of investors, including the software business giant Oracle (founded by Trump ally Larry Ellison), MGX (an Abu Dhabi-based company also involved in Trump crypto ventures) and the private equity firm Silver Lake.
But since the new owners took control, the app has seen major outages and malfunctions, claims of censorship and uproar over its updated terms of service.
Today, Explained guest host Jonquilyn Hill sat down with David Pierce, editor-at-large at The Verge, to break down people’s concerns about TikTok’s new owners and what this may mean for people’s experiences on the social media app in the future. Below is an excerpt of their conversation, edited for length and clarity. There’s much more in the full podcast, so listen to Today, Explained wherever you get podcasts, including Apple Podcasts, Pandora, and Spotify.
American TikTok has new owners now, and almost immediately after they took over, people started reporting issues with the app. I wanna start with the big one. People said that they were being censored. What’s going on there, and what are the complaints?
That is the big one. It’s also the most complicated one to sort through because fundamentally, it’s about feelings. So a thing to understand is that everybody has always believed they’re being censored on social media. Since time immemorial, this is the story of social media. What’s happening on TikTok is at this particular moment I believe less about censorship and more about normal internet problems.
There were a lot of people reporting that they would upload videos around what was happening in Minneapolis and those videos would get no views or those videos would actually not upload properly. There were people who were saying that if you DM’d the word “Epstein” to somebody else that that wouldn’t go through. All of this is more easily and just as successfully explained by normal corporate ineptitude.
TikTok’s new data center provider, Oracle, had a huge outage. What we think we know is that it was a big data center in Virginia that had what they called a weather-related issue. They’ve had big issues at the data center and that seems to be the actual culprit here.
There are lots of good reasons to be worried about censorship. There are lots of potential censorship problems coming to TikTok, but rationally speaking, the likelihood that this new group would have taken over TikTok and immediately smash a big red “censorship” button is pretty unlikely.
Is there a way for us to actually know? I mean, people are pretty skeptical of TikTok right now.
I think one useful analog here is when Elon Musk bought and took over Twitter. And when Elon Musk took over Twitter, he just said out loud all of the changes he was intending to make, right? And this was after years of conservatives, in particular, saying that they were being censored by Twitter’s existing leadership.
So, Elon Musk comes in and essentially says, I’m going to reverse that. And then does a bunch of very obvious things. So, I think there is a version of this that feels very obvious. It’s just that for right now, there are better, simpler sort of Occam’s Razor-y explanations for what’s going on.
What about the new terms of service that folks had to agree to?
This is a tricky one because one of the very funny things about terms of service on apps like these is that they’re always terrifying, and they’re often terrifying for totally non-terrifying reasons.
What happened in this case is there are some new things in the terms of service. The new TikTok US is going to collect more precise location data if you allow it. It also gives TikTok permission to collect a bunch of data around kind of nebulous AI things that make it clear they’re gonna do a lot of sort of gen AI stuff inside of TikTok, and that’s data they can collect.
But, actually, that has been in TikTok’s terms of service for some time. Still, I think it is reasonable to be alarmed that this data is going to be collected by a new group of people.
All of this is the business side; but will my experience on the app change now?
The one thing that actually no other platform has done a good job of replicating [is TikTok’s algorithm]. But now, one of the stipulations of this deal is that there has to be some meaningful separation of that algorithm from Chinese control. The new owners are going to “retrain, test, and update” the algorithm. That is a very vague phrase, but it means in some way the algorithm is going to change. But that we’re going to not see [how] for a while.
Tech
PlayStation Prices Increasing Next Week: Prepare for $900 for a PS5 Pro
Increasing prices across the board are becoming a plague now, fueled by everything from tariffs to wars to the AI industry’s devouring of hardware components. Sony’s PlayStation hardware is the latest to get an increase, according to a blog post from the company on Friday. It’s the second such hike, in fact, after 2025’s price bumps.
The price increases take effect on Thursday, April 2, so now’s the time to get one of Sony’s consoles before they go up. The increases are pretty significant:
This happened to Microsoft’s Xboxes last fall, and Nintendo’s original Switch hardware last August. And with the current economic climate and political chaos, who knows where things could go next?
My big question is, who would ever pay $900 for a game console? And who will even pay $600 for a console that’s now almost six years old? While the PlayStation 5 has had a lot of wonderful games, sales declined last holiday compared to the year before. Gaming hardware increasingly feels like a luxury now, and I wonder how many people will continue to indulge in it versus just using whatever hardware they already have instead.
Read more: RAM Shortage and Higher Laptop Prices Not Expected to End This Year (or Next)
Tech
How NYU’s Quantum Institute Bridges Science and Application
This sponsored article is brought to you by NYU Tandon School of Engineering.
Within a 6 mile radius of New York University’s (NYU) campus, there are more than 500 tech industry giants, banks, and hospitals. This isn’t just a fact about real estate, it’s the foundation for advancing quantum discovery and application.
While the world races to harness quantum technology, NYU is betting that the ultimate advantage lies not solely in a lab, but in the dense, demanding, and hyper-connected urban ecosystem that surrounds it. With the launch of its NYU Quantum Institute (NYUQI), NYU is positioning itself as the central node in this network; a “full stack” powerhouse built on the conviction that it has found the right place, and the right time, to turn quantum science into tangible reality.
Proximity advantage is essential because quantum science demands it. Globally, the quest for practical quantum solutions — whether for computing, sensing, or secure communications — has been stalled, in part, by fragmentation. Physicists and chemical engineers invent new materials, computer scientists develop new algorithms, and electrical engineers build new devices, but all three often work in isolated academic silos.
Gregory Gabadadze, NYU’s dean for science, NYU physicist and Quantum Institute Director Javad Shabani, and Juan de Pablo, Anne and Joel Ehrenkranz Executive Vice President for Global Science and Technology and executive dean of the Tandon School of Engineering.Veselin Cuparić/NYU
NYUQI’s premise is that breakthroughs happen “at the interfaces between different domains,” according to Juan de Pablo, Executive Vice President for Global Science and Technology at NYU and Executive Dean of the NYU Tandon School of Engineering. The Institute is built to actively force those necessary collisions — to integrate the physicists, engineers, materials scientists, computer scientists, biologists, and chemists vital to quantum research into one holistic operation. This institutional design ensures that the hardware built by one team can be immediately tested by software developed by another, accelerating progress in a way that isolated departments never could.
NYUQI’s premise is that breakthroughs happen at the interfaces between different domains. —Juan de Pablo, NYU Tandon School of Engineering
NYUQI’s integrated vision is backed by a massive physical commitment to the city. The NYUQI is not just a theoretical concept; its collaborators will be housed in a renovated, million-square-foot facility in the heart of Manhattan’s West Village, backed by a state-of-the-art Nanofabrication Cleanroom in Brooklyn serving as a high-tech foundry. This is where the theoretical meets physical devices, allowing the Institute to test and refine the process from materials science to deployment.
NYUQI will be housed in a renovated, million-square-foot facility in the heart of Manhattan’s West Village.Tracey Friedman/NYU
Leading this effort is NYUQI Director Javad Shabani, who, along with the other members, is turning the Institute into a hub for collaboration with private and public sector partners with quantum challenges that need solving. As de Pablo explains, “Anybody who wants to work on quantum with NYU, you come in through that door, and we’ll send you to the right place.” For New York’s vast ecosystem of tech giants and financial institutions, the NYUQI offers a resource they can’t build on their own: a cohesive team of experts in quantum phenomena, quantum information theory, communication, computing, materials, and optics, and a structured path to applying theoretical discoveries to advanced quantum technologies.
Solving the Challenge of Quantum Research
The NYUQI’s integrated structure is less about organizational management, and more about scientific requirement. The challenge of quantum is that the hardware, the software, and the programming are inherently interconnected — each must be designed to work with the other. To solve this, the Institute focuses on three applications of quantum science: Quantum Computing, Quantum Sensing, and Quantum Communications.
For Shabani, this means creating an integrated environment that bridges discovery with experimentation, starting with the physical components all the way to quantum algorithm centers. That will include a fabrication facility in the new building in Manhattan, as well as the NYU Nanofab in Brooklyn directed by Davood Shahjerdi. New York Senators Charles Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand recently secured $1 million in congressionally-directed spending to bring Thermal Laser Epitaxy (TLE) technology — which allows for atomic-level purity, minimal defects, and streamlined application of a diverse range of quantum materials — to NYU, marking the first time the equipment will be used in the U.S.
NYU Nanofab manager Smiti Bhattacharya and Nanofab Director Davood Shahjerdi at the nanofab ribbon-cutting in 2023. The nanofab is the first academic cleanroom in Brooklyn, and serves as a prototyping facility for the NORDTECH Microelectronics Commons consortium.NYU WIRELESS
Tight control over fabrication, and can allow researchers to pivot quickly when a breakthrough in one area — say, finding a cheaper, more reliable material like silicon carbide — can be explored for use across all three applications, and offers unique access to academics and the private sector alike to sophisticated pieces of specialty equipment whose maintenance knowledge and costs make them all-but-impossible to maintain outside of the right staffing and environment.
The NYU Nanofab is Brooklyn’s first academic cleanroom, with a strategic focus on superconducting quantum technologies, advanced semiconductor electronics, and devices built from quantum heterostructures and other next-generation materials.NYU Nanofab
That speed and adaptability is the NYUQI’s competitive edge. It turns fragmented challenges into holistic solutions, positioning the Institute to solve real-world problems for its New York neighbors—from highly secure data transmission to next-generation drug discovery.
The integrated approach also makes the NYUQI a testbed for the most critical near-term applications. Take Quantum Communications, which is essential for creating an “unhackable” quantum internet. In an industry first, NYU worked with the quantum start-up Qunnect to send quantum information through standard telecom fiber in New York City between Manhattan and Brooklyn through a 10-mile quantum networking link. Instead of simulating communication challenges in a lab, the NYUQI team is already leveraging NYU’s city-wide campus by utilizing existing infrastructure to test secure quantum transmission between Manhattan and Brooklyn.
The NYUQI team is already leveraging NYU’s city-wide campus by utilizing existing infrastructure to test secure quantum transmission between Manhattan and Brooklyn.
This isn’t just theory; it is building a functioning prototype in the most demanding, dense urban environment in the world. Real-time, real-world deployment is a critical component missing in other isolated institutions. When the NYUQI achieves results, the technology will be that much more readily available to the massive financial, tech, and communications organizations operating right outside their door.
NYUQI includes a state-of-the-art Nanofabrication Cleanroom in Brooklyn serving as a high-tech foundry.NYU Tandon
While the Institute has built the physical infrastructure and designed the necessary scientific architecture, its enduring contribution will be the specialized workforce it creates for the new quantum economy. This addresses the market’s greatest deficit: a lack of individuals trained not just in physics, but in the integrated, full-stack approach that quantum demands.
By creating a pipeline of 100 to 200 graduate and doctoral students who are encouraged to collaborate across Computing, Sensing, and Communications, the NYUQI is narrowing the skills gap. These will be future leaders who can speak the language of the physicist, the materials scientist, and the engineer simultaneously. This commitment to interdisciplinary talent is also fueled by the launch of the new Master of Science in Quantum Science & Technology program at NYU Tandon, positioning the university among a select group worldwide offering such a specialized degree.
Interdisciplinary education creates the shared language and understanding poised to make graduates coming from collaborations in the NYUQI extremely valuable in the current landscape. Quantum challenges are not just technical; they are managerial and philosophical as well. An engineer working with the NYUQI will understand the requirements of the nanofabrication cleanroom and the foundations of superconducting qubits for quantum computing, just as a physicist will understand the application needs of an industry partner like a large financial institution. In a field where the entire team must be able to communicate seamlessly, these are professionals truly equipped to rapidly translate discovery into deployable technology. Creating a talent pipeline at scale will provide a missing link that converts New York’s vast commercial energy into genuine quantum advantage.
NYUQI: Building Talent, Technology, and Structure
The vision for the NYUQI is an act of strategic geography that plays directly into the sheer volume of opportunity and demand right outside their new facility. By building the talent, the technology, and the structure necessary to capitalize on this dense environment, NYU is not just participating in the quantum race, it is actively steering it.
Attendees of NYU’s 2025 Quantum Summit.Tracey Friedman/NYU
The initial hypothesis for the NYUQI was simple: the ultimate advantage lies in pursuing the science in the right place at the right time. Now, the institute will ensure that the next wave of scientific discovery, capable of solving previously intractable problems in finance, medicine, and security, will be conceived, built, and tested in the heart of New York City.
Tech
Understand Your Printer Better With The Interactive Inkjet Simulator
Love them or hate them, inkjets are still a very popular technology for putting text and images on paper, and with good reason. They work and are inexpensive, or would be, if not for the cartridge racket. There’s a bit of mystery about exactly what’s going on inside the humble inkjet that can be difficult to describe in words, though, which is why [Dennis Kuppens] recently released his Interactive Printing Simulator.
[Dennis] would likely object to that introduction, however, as the simulator targets functional inkjet printing, not graphical. Think traces of conductive ink, or light masks where even a single droplet out-of-place can lead to a non-functional result. If you’re just playing with this simulator to get an idea of what the different parameters are, and the effects of changing them, you might not care. There are some things you can get away with in graphics printing you really cannot with functional printing, however, so this simulator may seem a bit limited in its options to those coming from the artistic side of things.
You can edit parameters of the nozzle head manually, or select a number of industrial printers that come pre-configured. Likewise there are pre-prepared patterns, or you can try and draw the Jolly Wrencher as the author clearly failed to do. Then hit ‘start printing’ and watch the dots get laid down.
[Dennis] has released it under an AGPL-3.0 license, but notes that he doesn’t plan on developing the project further. If anyone else wants to run with this, they are apparently more than welcome to, and the license enables that.
Did you know that there’s an inkjet in space? Hopefully NASA got a deal on cartridges. If not, maybe they could try hacking the printer for continuous ink flow. Of course that’s all graphics stuff; functional printing is more like this inkjet 3D printer.
Tech
Mastodon is making its decentralized social network easier to use with its latest revamp
Mastodon is making changes in the hopes of making its social networking service more appealing and easier to use, especially for more mainstream users looking for an alternative to X or Threads.
On Thursday, the decentralized social networking software maker said it’s redesigning a key part of its platform by giving people’s user profiles a new look, which it hopes will appeal to organizations, as well as individuals.
Built on the ActivityPub protocol, Mastodon became better known after Elon Musk acquired Twitter, now called X, which led some to seek alternatives. The platform’s appeal is its decentralized nature, meaning a single company doesn’t have control of the algorithm, and users can move their accounts if they don’t like how a particular server operates or moderates its community.
However, this system is also more complicated compared with signing up for a traditional social network like X. On Mastodon, users have to pick a server to join and have different timelines (local and federated), which can be confusing to newcomers. The process for following others on the service can be cumbersome, too.
That’s left Mastodon struggling to pick up more users, numbers that now hover at around 800,000 monthly actives, down from a million at the height of the Twitter drama.
Mastodon has been working in more recent months to address various pain points that could alienate users. In February, it simplified the onboarding process and added other features users expect, like Quote Posts or “starter packs” called Collections.
Now it’s tackling user profiles. The revamped version makes several changes, many of which are visual in nature.
What’s changing
Instead of offering two views of a person’s posts (“posts” or “posts and replies”), similar to X, profiles feature just one “Activity” tab with a dropdown menu. This lets users configure other combinations of posts, by toggling on or off replies and boosts — the latter being Mastodon’s version of the repost.
Hashtags also now appear at the top of this Activity tab, allowing users to filter the posts on that account by the tag they click on.

Mastodon also ditched the pinned posts carousel, which many users didn’t like. The feature was meant to balance the needs of those who wanted to pin several posts, with the needs of those visiting a profile to quickly get to the user’s recent posts. Now Mastodon users with multiple pinned posts will have one featured, while the rest can be revealed by clicking on a new “View all pinned posts” button.
Another change is designed to explain Mastodon handles to newcomers. Unlike on X or Threads, where users are just @username, Mastodon handles have two @’s in them — one referencing their account name and the other their server’s name. A new informational pop-up explains this.

Users have more control over how their profile appears, too, with options to hide the “Media” or “Featured” tabs, if desired, or hide replies from their “Media” tab if they want to showcase their work.
Custom fields on the profile, where users add things like links, pronouns, and other information, are displayed side by side, which means there’s more vertical space available on the screen. These fields can now be modified on iOS and Android, too, not just the web.

Other tweaks to the design make profiles seem less cluttered — like the removal of a “following you” badge and moving the optional “personal note” users add to their profiles to an overflow menu.
Profile edits can now all be done from one place in the account settings, allowing users to manage tasks like their featured hashtags (which Mastodon helpfully now suggests), links, and other profile information.

Link verification — which is Mastodon’s tool to establish someone’s credibility without becoming a centralized authority (or requiring payment, as on X) — is no longer buried in settings. Users can crop and add alt text to their profile images and cover photos.
The changes will initially be available to the mastodon.social server and other servers that opt to run the nightly build. More servers will get the update when the Mastodon 4.6 software update arrives in a few weeks.
Tech
Windows PCs crash three times as often as Macs, report says
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Omnissa’s 2026 State of Digital Workspace report outlines the IT challenges that various organizations face from the growing use of AI and the heterogeneous deployment of enterprise devices. The relative instability of Windows and Android is a recurring theme throughout the report.
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European Commission investigating breach after Amazon cloud hack
The European Commission, the European Union’s main executive body, is investigating a security breach after a threat actor gained access to its Amazon cloud infrastructure.
Although the EU’s executive cabinet has yet to disclose the incident publicly, BleepingComputer has learned that the breach affected at least one account used to manage the compromised cloud infrastructure.
Sources familiar with the incident have told BleepingComputer that the attack was quickly detected and that the Commission’s cybersecurity incident response team is now investigating.
While the Commission has yet to share any details about this breach, the threat actor who claimed responsibility for the attack reached out to BleepingComputer earlier this week, stating that they had stolen over 350 GB of data (including multiple databases).
They didn’t disclose how they breached the affected accounts, but they provided BleepingComputer with several screenshots as proof that they had access to information belonging to European Commission employees and to an email server used by Commission employees.
The threat actor also told BleepingComputer that they will not attempt to extort the Commission using the allegedly stolen data as leverage, but intend to leak the data online at a later date.
The Commission disclosed another data breach in February after discovering on January 30 that the mobile device management platform used to manage its staff’s devices had been hacked.
The January incident appears to be linked to similar attacks targeting other European institutions (including the Dutch Data Protection Authority and Valtori, a government agency of Finland’s Ministry of Finance) that exploit code-injection vulnerabilities in Ivanti Endpoint Manager Mobile (EPMM) software.
These recent security breaches come on the heels of the Commission’s January 20 proposal for new cybersecurity legislation to strengthen defenses against state-backed actors and cybercrime groups targeting Europe’s critical infrastructure.
Last week, the Council of the European Union also sanctioned three Chinese and Iranian companies for orchestrating cyberattacks targeting the critical infrastructure of member states.
Tech
You can now transfer your chats and personal information from other chatbots directly into Gemini
When it comes to AI chatbots, there’s currently a war on for consumer attention. All the big chatbot providers are looking to increase their user count and, in a minor coup for itself, Google just made it significantly easier for users of those other chatbots to defect to Gemini.
On Thursday, the company announced what it calls “switching tools,” new widgets that are designed to allow users to transfer “memories” (basically chunks of personal information) and even entire chat histories from other chatbots directly into Gemini. Users can easily share “key preferences, relationships, and personal context” in this way, the company says.
The idea is to make it significantly easier to adopt Google’s AI assistant, as users won’t have to spend large amounts of time re-training Gemini on who they are and what they want.
The memory feature works like this: Gemini will suggest a prompt that the user can enter into their current chatbot, which will then generate a response that can be copied and pasted back into Gemini. In this fashion, Gemini coaches the user on what kinds of information it would be helpful to know about them, while also helping facilitate the transmission of that information back into its own archive.

“Once you import these memories, Gemini will understand the same key facts you’ve shared with other apps, like your interests, your sibling’s name, or where you grew up,” the company says. “Instead of starting over from scratch, you can quickly get Gemini up to speed on what matters most to you.”
When it comes to importing chat histories, Google says that all you need is to upload them in a zip file. It’s relatively easy to export chat logs via zips from most chatbots — including from ChatGPT and Claude. This allows users to “seamlessly pick up right where you left off,” the company says. Google says users also have the ability to search through those old chats.
ChatGPT remains the big kahuna in the consumer chatbot market, with OpenAI announcing last month that it has reached 900 million weekly active users. Gemini — despite Google’s vast distribution advantages, including its default placement across Android devices and the Chrome browser — has lagged in consumer mindshare. Last month, it shared its own numbers during Alphabet’s fourth-quarter earnings call, saying Gemini had surpassed 750 million monthly active users. This move is clearly aimed at helping Google catch up.
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MLB The Show 26 is turning me into more of a baseball fan
There were two questions I was looking to answer as I fired up MLB The Show 26. First, how much does the game cater to a baseball newbie like me? Second, will it keep me hooked enough to keep playing after my first few games?
I think it’s important to share some personal context. I have very limited experience with baseball. I have been to one MLB game, which was on my first visit to Canada as a teen. The lead-off Toronto Blue Jays hitter scored a home run on his first at-bat. Fireworks went off and everyone was going wild. Fun!
But that was the only score of the whole game. My dad and I (both lifelong soccer fans, for what it’s worth) were bored lifeless for the rest of the three hours.
An incredible run of a dog playing a baseball game at Games Done Quick aside, I had no real interest in the sport for the next couple of decades until the Blue Jays made a deep run into the 2025 playoffs. This time, now as a Canadian citizen, I bought into the excitement and watched all of the World Series last year. I was enthralled.
I slowly started to appreciate the nuances of pitching, the skill of trying to make every pitch look identical at the time the ball is thrown to hopefully hoodwink the batter. Friends who are in-the-know tolerated my most basic of questions about how everything works as the postseason wore on. Now, I’m planning to watch a lot more games this year and MLB The Show 26 arrived at just the right time to get me ready for the new season.
Sony’s San Diego Studio seemed to be speaking to me, personally, when the first thing the game asked me to do was select my preferred playstyle. The Competitive track was definitely out for now. The Simulation option offers an “authentic MLB experience that plays true to player and team ratings.” I wasn’t quite feeling that either. As a newcomer to all of this, I had to select the Casual style. That’s billed as “an easier, fun, pick up and play experience with an emphasis on learning the game.” Exactly what I needed.
I was immediately impressed with how deeply you can customize the gameplay, even if the vast array of batting and pitching options in particular felt a little overwhelming. Using both a thumbstick to aim and button to swing at the ball seemed too much for someone who has no idea as yet how to read pitches.
Dipping my toes in slowly was surely going to help me avoid getting too frustrated too quickly and uninstalling the game, so I chose to keep everything as simple as possible. I’m not switching off options like automated bullpen warm ups for a long time, if ever.
Finally, after about 20 minutes of fine-tuning some settings in the tutorial, it was game time.
The Dodgers didn’t know what hit ’em as I won my first game 38-0. I thought this Shohei guy was supposed to be good? Pffft, he didn’t even register a hit. His team only got a measly two players on base, while I had 46 hits. That blowout was a fun intro to MLB The Show 26, but I had to bump up the difficulty and make it a little more challenging if there was any chance of me sticking with it.
Instead of jumping into the Road to the Show career mode, an online match or another exhibition game to get my feet a tad wetter, I next tried the Storylines feature. This is what really drew me into MLB The Show 26.
San Diego Studio has been sharing the stories of several notable players from the Negro Leagues in the last few editions of the series. I know very little about baseball history outside of household names. So I was fascinated to learn about the likes of Roy Campanella, who debuted in the league as a 15-year-old catcher, and Mamie “Peanut” Johnson, the league’s first female pitcher.
The developers did a fantastic job of connecting these athletes’ stories to playable moments from their playing careers. Cutscene insights from Bob Kendrick, the president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, tied everything together quite beautifully. Great stories are such an effective way to pull you into a sport and to start learning about it. Stories connect us more than just about anything else.
The default difficulty in the Storylines mode was much higher than I dealt with in my first washout game. Still, that gave me a chance to practice the Competitive playstyle without having to play a full game or the stop-start nature of the tutorial.
My pitching was less accurate, so figuring out how to compensate for that made for an interesting challenge. Batting was a lot tougher too, with balls travelling faster and pitchers trying to trick me. At first, I was swinging at every ball, but that clearly was the wrong idea. I tried to be more judicious and wait to see if a ball was breaking, but that meant I was swinging too late and fouling or giving the fielders an easy catch. That’s a tricky conundrum to solve, and I’ll need a lot more practice before I dream of playing online. I’m not even going to get started on how woeful I am at catching.
And yet all of this deepened my appreciation for baseball. There’s so much more nuance and complexity to the sport than I realized until a few months ago. And even as someone who doesn’t typically enjoy turn-based games, I found myself getting into the swing of it… so to speak.
I’m never going to care about Diamond Dynasty, MLB The Show’s take on Ultimate Team modes in EA Sports games. I can’t see myself diving into the team management-focused Franchise mode, in large part because I don’t yet have a strong enough understanding of stats to have a decent handle on what makes a specific player great in their role. And as much as I like the idea of the Road to the Show career mode — in which you can stick with a player from their high school days all the way to a Hall of Fame induction — I don’t think I can invest enough time into that to make it worth the effort.
I did find the answers to the two main questions I had about MLB The Show 26. It does a bang-up job of easing a baseball newbie like me into the fray. I’m eager to keep playing as well. I don’t think MLB The Show has quite enough pull to keep me away from my actual forever game, Overwatch, for too long. But I can absolutely see myself playing it on a second screen while streaming some MLB games this season. After all, I’m always on the lookout for a great story.
MLB The Show 26 is out now on PS5, Xbox Series X/S and Nintendo Switch.
Tech
Apple’s Watch Ultra 2 is now at its lowest price yet in the Amazon Big Spring Sale
If you’re a fitness fanatic or someone who craves adventure, then this awesome Apple Watch Ultra 2 deal is for you.
You can bag the feature-packed Apple Watch Ultra 2 49mm (GPS + Cellular) with the rugged titanium case and the indigo Alpine Loop for only $499.
This is a massive $300 saving on the device, making it far more affordable for most people.
Apple’s Watch Ultra 2 is now at its lowest price yet in the Amazon Big Spring Sale
Amazon’s Big Spring Sale has pushed the Apple Watch Ultra 2 to its lowest price so far, marking one of the standout wearable deals of the season.


At its core, the 4.5-star-reviewed Apple Watch Ultra 2 is the perfect companion for avid adventurers and fitness buffs, which is why its robust 49mm case is, despite being made of corrosion-resistant titanium, surprisingly lightweight and instantly comfortable on the wrist.
With the included GPS and cellular capabilities, the device can keep track of your location in more remote areas where a smartphone may not be able to work.
When you do have internet access, either through cellular or a nearby smartphone, the Ultra 2 can keep up with all of your important notifications and message replies, but it also uses that connectivity to interact with a ton of supported apps, such as navigating with Apple Maps.
Out in the wild, you can make use of the included dual-frequency GPS to get a more accurate fix on your location, in turn helping you navigate back to your starting point and also figure out precisely how far you’ve gone.
The action button on the side of the Ultra 2 can be customised for different tasks, giving you more immediate access to the tools that you may need.
While the Indigo Alpine Loop is made with high-strength yarns taken from a single continuous strand of material, looped until it gives you a secure hold that doesn’t come undone when put under duress.
Much has been made of the Ultra 2’s longevity, with some users managing to ring up to 80-hours of use from the device, but what’s more important is that, under normal use, the device can be charged every other day, which still frees you up from having to worry about topping up every night.
There are tons more that we could say about the Apple Watch Ultra 2, but if you want all of those features in a super sturdy wearable device, nothing quite comes close as of yet, making this an easy win for anyone who can afford it.
It’s even taken pride of place in our best smartwatch buying guide, as the best rugged smartwatch.
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Tech
Custom-Built Kilowatt Laser Robot Slices Trees and Melts Rocks Into Lava

Stabi extends its arm from the shadows with a large barrel mounted to its wrist, and what is inside that barrel is not subtle. A kilowatt class laser capable of cutting through wood at a distance or turning stone into a glowing, molten mess sits at the heart of the setup, mounted in the back of a truck and pointed at a series of test targets. The whole rig was built by Prop Department to explore how high energy laser systems might be put to work in future productions.
They started by using an ancient six-axis industrial robot arm that had been working in factories for years. They next installed some special steel mounts and protective windows, which they had laser-cut from a batch of precision parts ordered online. The actual problem was getting the programming just right so the arm could travel smoothly over a target without any abrupt jerks that could scatter the beam.
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Four tiny targeting lasers sit at the corners of the main barrel, creating a visual outline of where the invisible main beam will hit once the system is turned on. There’s a regular camera on top and an infrared camera down below, which detects heat signatures that the human eye cannot see. To be extra safe, the team installed three safety interlocks to prevent accidental firing, and the operator is required to remove the power plug from the barrel at any stage of setup to ensure that nothing fires until everything is in the proper position.

Power comes from a source hidden in the truck bed. The beam itself delivers a continuous punch equivalent to a thousand watts focused down to a small area. Dark materials absorb energy quickly and heat up, whereas reflective surfaces bounce it back, explaining why certain objects endure longer than others. Every test takes place at night, when no one is around, and the operator is wearing two layers of eye protection.

Early tests started with everyday objects to get a feel for how the laser behaved. An old iPhone held up for a few seconds before the beam carved deep grooves into it, leaving the device looking like it had been through something much worse than a bad drop. A metal can was gone in a second, a clean hole punched straight through. Glass proved more interesting, with a tomato inside a jar heating and steaming before the beam eventually broke through, though the jar itself refused to shatter cleanly.

Coconuts caught fire almost on contact, the outer shell blackening and bursting into flame as the laser continued driving energy into the center. Eggs were a different story entirely. After 15 seconds of direct exposure the shell remained intact and the contents barely warm, a reminder that smooth, light colored surfaces can reflect a surprising amount of incoming energy.

As the tests scaled up, so did the results. Chunks of imported lava rock glowed brilliant orange and began to melt under sustained exposure, while a small piece of sterling silver softened and pooled slightly without ever reaching a full melt, highlighting the difference between an intense focused burst and the steady high temperatures needed to break down denser metals. One particularly interesting result came from a solar panel positioned at a distance across the test area, which registered a slight voltage increase when the beam struck it, suggesting that the same energy can still be harvested as usable power even after traveling through open air.

The final test brought everything together. A small tree stood at the far end of the test area looking completely unassuming right up until the robot arm swung into position and locked onto the trunk. Smoke came first, then a clean line began to form in the wood as the beam burned steadily through. Within seconds the top half toppled and hit the ground with a thud. For all the raw power involved, the cut it left behind looked almost surgical.
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