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Tech

I went to the so-called ‘steroid Olympics,’ to understand why Silicon Valley is obsessed with peptides

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I am sitting in the sweltering Nevada heat watching a man struggle to lift a bar over his head. If the man manages to do it, he will win $250,000.

The man is Boady Santavy — a two-time Olympic weight-lifting contestant from Canada — and he has muscles that look culled from the Marvel Cinematic Universe: massive, cartoonish arms that might as well belong to a superhero rather than a real human.

Santavy is attempting to beat the world record for the men’s snatch — a lift of 183 kilograms, or approximately 403 pounds. After a tortured few seconds, Santavy drops the bar — an official “no lift” — and, with a look of animated dismay on his face, hobbles away, visibly cursing.

Santavy is one of a small horde of 42 athletic contestants — weight lifters, swimmers, and track runners — that have gathered in Las Vegas over Memorial Day weekend to compete in the Enhanced Games, a unique (and, by now, quite notorious) athletic competition in which almost all of the participating athletes are on performance enhancing drugs.

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Broadly derided by critics as the “steroid Olympics,” the games have taken the deeply unprecedented step of juicing many of their athletes to the gills — anabolics, testosterone, peptides, human growth hormones, and more are all in circulation. All of that chemical enhancement has taken place under the watchful eye of a team of medical professionals. Indeed, the competitors — a hodgepodge of athletes from different ages, skill levels, and backgrounds — spent 12 weeks in the United Arab Emirates at an elite compound, where they trained for the weekend’s event while working closely with doctors who tailored their “protocols” — or drug cocktails — to their individual needs.

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA – MAY 24: (L-R) Kristian Gkolomeev, Shane Ryan and James Magnussen are seen during the Enhanced Games at Resorts World Las Vegas on May 24, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Image Credits:(Photo by Greg Doherty/Getty Images for Enhanced)

The athletes are also being paid “appearance fees” just to participate in the contest and, like Santavy, any competitor who happens to break a world record or place first during their competitive feats will be gifted extra cash — up to $1 million in the case of the 100 meter sprint and 50 meter freestyle.

In other words: Enhanced has taken the rulebook for professional athletic competition and aggressively spiraled it out the window.

Why am I, a technology journalist, covering this event?

Odd as it might seem for a place associated with weak-limbed nerds, Silicon Valley is largely to blame for Enhanced. Indeed, the bizarre spectacle is the work of a former startup that was founded by veterans of crypto, AI, and biotech firms, and that has been backed by the likes of mega-investor Peter Thiel and former Coinbase executive Balaji Srinivasan. The event is also at the forefront of a growing industry that Silicon Valley has embraced with open arms — that of human enhancement, in which injectable drugs and ingestible supplements serve as a source of both physical empowerment and good business.

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Traditional athletic health organizations, of course, hate it. The World Anti-Doping Agency — the regulatory body for the Olympics — has called the Enhanced Games “dangerous,” and Travis Tygart, the CEO of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, describes it as a “clown show that puts profit over people.”

Steroids have long been viewed warily by the international health community, and even federally approved consumer drugs have stirred some concern among health professionals.

However, Enhanced’s organizers argue that they are actually the good guys — that they are trying to fix a persistent bug in organized sports that has existed since forever. That bug is that a whole lot of athletes are already doping — they’re just doing it secretly. The secrecy increases risk, as there may be limited medical oversight of how the athletes are using them. Conversely, in the Enhanced version of sport, athletes self-admittedly do the drugs under the careful supervision of a team of medical professionals.

If Enhanced were merely trying to improve sports safety, that would be one thing. But the truth is that it isn’t just an athletic competition — it’s also a business. The games are the work of Enhanced Group, Inc., a newly public company that enjoyed an IPO earlier this month at a $1.2 billion valuation. Enhanced sells personalized health treatments, including peptides, GLP-1s for weight loss, testosterone injections, and other physically “enhancing” drugs. The company also recently partnered with an AI company, Rezolve Ai, to launch a digital telehealth platform.

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Enhanced wants to take what it’s done in Vegas and transform it into a global business: a distribution network for consumers looking to bulk up and make themselves more youthful. The drugs that Enhanced sells have been cleared by the FDA, but there is some concern that by normalizing steroid use, the company could have a trickle-down effect on the wider culture, leading some consumers (notably young ones) to seek less regulated, more dangerous compounds that could end up having disastrous results. This concern hangs over Enhanced’s athletic competition, which has largely been read as a big advertisement for its own business — as well as the peptide industry itself.

One nation, under peptides

I am one of some 200 journalists from around the world who touch down in Vegas two days prior to the games. Enhanced, which provides us with a dedicated workspace, regular meals, and press time with athletes and Enhanced executives, is exceedingly nice to us but one can’t escape the nagging suspicion that it’s because we are an integral part of their business plan. As the skeptical oglers of this Barnum & Bailey-esque curiosity, our job is to report back to the masses, who will then know of its existence. In other words, we are free marketing for Enhanced’s business.

That business is part of an industry that is due for a gold-rush-like boom later this year, should a certain deregulatory deliverance occur.

In February, U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. went on The Joe Rogan Experience and said he was a “big fan” of peptides. Kennedy (who, himself, can look enhanced at times) also implied that he planned to encourage the FDA to make some peptides more accessible to the public. Kennedy appears to have made good on that promise because, in July, the FDA will convene a pharmaceutical advisory committee that considers whether restrictions on certain previously banned peptides will be loosened.

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Canadian weightlifter Boady Santavy fails at an attempt to break the world record during the men snatch competition during the Enhanced Games at Resorts World Las Vegas in Las Vegas, Nevada, on May 24, 2026. Image Credits:ETIENNE LAURENT / AFP via Getty Images

Since then, the peptide industry has stood at a bizarre crossroads, in which some startups are reportedly conjuring products based on chemicals that currently reside in a legal “gray” zone, in the hopes of being first-to-market if and when the government eases up on them. Others are sticking to only FDA-approved products. A hot spot of this frenzy has been Silicon Valley, where techies are both using and investing in peptides with mutually aggressive gusto. Companies like Superpower, an AI longevity startup that sells FDA-approved peptides, and Noho Labs, a peptide startup backed by Elad Gil, have risen in prominence, while elite clubs like the AGI House have begun hosting peptide injecting “parties” — as personal use among the valley’s elite booms.

But peptides aren’t just gaining steam in the Bay Area; they’re also seeing a groundswell of use throughout the country, as fitness culture sees an aggressive upswing. Recent reports show that teens and twenty-somethings are turning to peptides to “looksmax” — the trendy new term that denotes any extreme effort to beautify one’s self — while the gym is increasingly seen as one of the key hubs of cultural life for young people. This country-wide push for self-improvement has been fueled by a social media landscape that champions the superficial. The progenitor of “looksmaxxing,” the 20-year-old online influencer “Clavicular,” has been a prominent, not to mention controversial, figure in the popularization of peptides. Yet he is only one in a sea of online voices, including podcasters like Joe Rogan and Andrew Huberman, who have recently promoted or platformed the topic.

This is all about “health,” right?

Peptide producers — including the executives at Enhanced — have sworn that their primary concern is consumer “health.” At the same time, they don’t seem to mind admitting that they’re also interested in money.

Maximilian Martin, the 29-year-old CEO and co-founder of Enhanced, is a calm defender of his company’s unconventional practices. Martin, who previously founded a bitcoin mining company and is always impeccably dressed in a suit and has an affable salesman’s smile, meets with journalists for a press conference on Saturday, where he answers questions with an even-keeled good nature, speaking soberly about how his company plans to monetize the creation of a new generation of chemically-altered mutants.

Appropriately, X-Men comes up.

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“People have been using performance enhancements for a long time. If you look at, for example, Hollywood, and you look at Marvel superheroes, they’re all enhanced,” Martin offers. “Like Hugh Jackman doesn’t look like he looks at his age because he has such a clean diet and sleeps eight hours a night, right? So that market is already there. The peptide market in the U.S. today is already 85 million people. Most of that market is served by unsupervised, unregulated substances that people are taking. What we’re doing is we’re entering that market with a pathway for people to get to those benefits that they’re looking for in a safe and medically supervised way.”

Christian Angermayer, Enhanced’s billionaire co-founder and executive chairman, is more succinct. “I’m a capitalist,” he tells journalists bluntly. He doesn’t see a disconnect between profits and health. “There is no reason why something that is good should not also be a business.”

German entrepreneur and Enhanced Games co-founder, Christian Angermayer, talks with the press ahead of the Enhanced Games at the Resorts World in Las Vegas, Nevada, on May 22, 2026. The Enhanced Games is a multi-sport event that allows athletes to use performance-enhancing substances without worry of drug tests. Image Credits:(Photo by ETIENNE LAURENT / AFP via Getty Images)

Let the games begin

May 24th, the actual day of the games, is a sweltering blur of events — all of which take place inside a miraculous $50 million open-air stadium that has been constructed in a matter of weeks for the express purpose of hosting the games. The complex houses a track, swimming pools, and an expansive pavilion for the weightlifters. Surrounding risers are filled with an audience that cheers enthusiastically despite the hot sun.

Yet while the scene may superficially call to mind the Olympics, the vibe is much less a serious sporting event than it is an uncomfortable cocktail of America’s Got Talent, WWE, and Gladiator. Beautiful influencers fill the stands in youthful, colorful herds, and an announcer narrates the day’s events with a sonorous boom that makes it feel vaguely like we’re all sitting court side at WrestleMania. Later in the evening, The Killers — a staple of Vegas entertainment culture — will play a brief concert to close out the games.

The athletes, meanwhile, stalk the grounds like mythical titans, their bulking, unreal muscles glistening in the sunlight.

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Martin is seen throughout the day, walking to and fro in his impeccable suit. This suit becomes progressively more wet throughout the evening, as he keeps rushing down to the pool to hug the swimmers who win their races. Angermayer glides about the event with a breezy energy, a tranquil smile affixed to his face. He drops by the press tent briefly to glad-hand.

Other staples of the tech industry — like Bryan Johnson, the mega-wealthy biohacker who plans to live forever — are also involved. Despite no known professional athletic achievements, Johnson spends the night commentating on the spectacle in a Charles-Barkley-esque, retired athlete kind of way. Later he and his girlfriend (whose vagina Johnson regularly tweets about) are seen walking past the media tent; Johnson is dressed in a bizarre outfit that makes him look a little bit like the Sleepytime Bear from Celestial Seasonings.

(L-R) US sprinter Marvin Bracy-Williams, US sprinter Fred Kerley, French sprinter Mouhamadou Fall and Liberian sprinter Emmanuel Matadi in the men’s 100m during the Enhanced Games at Resorts World Las Vegas in Las Vegas, Nevada, on May 24, 2026. Image Credits:(Photo by ETIENNE LAURENT / AFP via Getty Images)

The actual competitions are thrilling enough — and, in general, there seem to be a couple categories of athletes that have come to compete.

There are people like James Magnussen, a retired swimmer from Australia who has won Olympic medals in the past and sees the games as an opportunity to get back in on the action. Magnussen, an image of whose massive body spread virally throughout the web earlier this year, has spoken supportively of the peptide industry, and once said that the combination of peptides and testosterone made him feel like he was “18 again.” He will fail to break any records, however, and places last in two races.

Then there are people like Hafthor “Thor” Bjornsson — a massive Nordic body builder and competitive weight-lifter who has self-admittedly done a lot of steroids in the past and sees this competition as an opportunity to do them under closer, safer supervision.

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Bjornsson is recognizable to many because he starred in Game of Thrones as Ser Gregor Clegane, the brutal knight who does the dirty work of the Lannister family and whose go-to fight move is to crush his opponents’ skulls with his bare hands. (On press day, a female journalist asks Bjornsson if he will crush her skull, and he politely obliges with a pantomimed head combustion.) During the games, Bjornsson thrillingly attempts a world record deadlift of 1,135.4 pounds, but ultimately fails to muster the strength.

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA – MAY 24: (L-R) Maximilian Martin, Co-Founder & CEO, Enhanced Games and Cody Miller speak during the Enhanced Games at Resorts World Las Vegas on May 24, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Image Credits:(Photo by Greg Doherty/Getty Images for Enhanced)

Finally, there are a few competitors like American swimmer Hunter Armstrong, who are abstaining from any supplemental intake altogether. Why is Armstrong even competing? It’s pretty simple: the money, Armstrong tells journalists. That’s the answer that a lot of athletes have given for their participation, in fact. Armstrong has Olympic ambitions and wants to keep himself in the running by not tainting his record. He also has a personal aversion to doping.

“The Olympic movement is something that is very important to me,” Armstrong tells the journalists. “Outside of personal reasons, if I were to go into some kind of protocol I would lose that opportunity.”

Armstrong is one of several competitors who will win their races (in the swimmer’s case, the 50-meter backstroke) despite not being “enhanced.”

The day’s events unfold at a steady pace and, despite organizers’ promise of a titanic extravaganza of unlocked human potential, the event, while entertaining, largely pales in comparison to the Olympics or even, say, a really thrilling football game. The whole thing ends on a weirdly convenient high-point: the competition’s last race of the night — the men’s 50-meter swimming freestyle — culminates with Enhanced’s first and only world-record. Kristian Gkolomeev, a hulking colossus from Greece (he is six feet, eight inches tall), cuts across the pool at a breakneck 20.81 seconds, besting the previous record by 0.07 seconds. The entire crowd erupts in cheers and the venue’s lights blare red in a gameshow-style spasm of celebration. The other swimmers pump their fists in the air victoriously, and Martin again rushes the field in his suit, intent on hugging the dripping Gkolomeev.

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LAS VEGAS, NEVADA – MAY 24: (L-R) Maximilian Martin, Co-Founder & CEO, Enhanced Games and Kristian Gkolomeev, winner of the men’s 50m free, are seen during the Enhanced Games at Resorts World Las Vegas on May 24, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Greg Doherty/Getty Images for Enhanced)Image Credits:Greg Doherty/Getty Images for Enhanced

The future is enhanced?

The critics of the Enhanced Games say it isn’t really about health, it’s about money. Yet it’s difficult to escape the sense that the games are also about something else, which is vanity — both that of America and the event’s organizers. America has always been the country where fitness culture extends beyond health into the realm of self-aggrandizement, and the Enhanced Games — a showy pageant embodying that principle — fits right in with the next big era of American self-regard. After all, the location of the event — the nation’s hedonism-fueled “Sin City” — hardly screams “health.” Las Vegas is the locale of spectacle and consumption — of barely-remembered nights in which revelers live for the moment, not the long-term. The organizers could have set the games in the symbolically purifying environs of the Swiss countryside or Joshua Tree, but instead they chose to set it in a place where people commonly risk their futures over a game of cards for a fleeting chance at glory.

Similarly, injecting yourself with drugs to make your muscles big doesn’t necessarily seem to be about long-term wellness as much as it’s about looking good in the moment — tomorrow’s potential health consequences be damned.

The glory for the event’s organizers, meanwhile, resides in their ability to usher in a new industry, commemorating it — as they have — with an extravagant ritual that, in their own words, heralds future “scientific breakthroughs” and “human advancement” (not to mention revenue). The gamble for them is on whether this industry does or does not blossom in the coming months, but like the consumers of their supplements, they appear to be living in the moment.

One place where limited glory is felt is the press corps towards the end of Enhanced’s three-day extravaganza. Around midnight, when the games are finally over and the crowd is dispersing, our hot and tired cohort retreats blearily to the media center — a florescent-lit workroom in the nearby Resorts World hotel. As I’m readying to leave, I make a pitstop to the bathroom and, after some necessary relief, turn a corner and run smack into Martin. He appears to be in a brand new suit (or perhaps the one he’s been wearing has simply dried), and he is admiring it in the bathroom mirror. He is undoubtedly preparing for the late-night press conference that’s scheduled to occur soon.

Having not actually spoken to him yet, I am at a bit of a conversational loss. What sort of patter can two men who are essentially strangers offer one another in a public bathroom late at night? How can I sum up the last 72 hours? “Congratulations,” my tired brain lands on, as I head for the door.

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“Thank you,” he says, nodding briefly, then turns back to the mirror.

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Reformat everything to make documents more palatable to AI

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Websites are being redesigned for consumption by AI models, and now a coalition wants to extend the trend to digital documents.

The LF AI & Data Foundation, under the Linux Foundation, has formed a working group to steer the development of DocLang, an AI-friendly document format that aims to help enterprises feed their files to AI systems.

The DocLang group, founded by IBM, NVIDIA, Red Hat, ABBYY, HumanSignal, and Forgis, contends that existing formats like PDF, Markdown, HTML, and LaTeX are ill-suited for AI document parsing.

In late 2024, IBM developed an open source toolkit called Docling to facilitate AI document parsing, not unlike Microsoft’s MarkItDown or the Marker project. Docling provides a way to convert various file formats into structured AI-ready data. DocLang expands upon that foundation with a standard for exchanging structured output across different systems.

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“DocLang is designed to solve one of the foundational problems in enterprise AI: documents were built for humans, not machines,” said Maxime Vermeir, VP of AI Strategy at AI automation biz ABBYY in a statement. “By introducing a minimal, standardized, and AI-native representation of document structure, layout, meaning and governance, DocLang creates a far more deterministic foundation for modern AI systems.”

The new DocLang format is necessary, the spec authors argue, because existing formats were designed for rendering and lose semantic information, structural relationships, or geometric context when AI models turn them into tokens. The specification explains that Markdown lacks sufficient scope, that HTML is excessively verbose, and that LaTeX allows too much ambiguity. 

Essentially, DocLang is optimized for LLM tokenizers through markup that maps between DocLang elements and LLM tokens on a 1-to-1 basis. The spec relies on a limited XML vocabulary that aligns with LLM tokenizers to produce optimized prompts. It is lossless, so the AI conversion doesn’t do away with valuable info. It’s designed to support common graphical elements like tables, formulas, charts, and multimodal content. And it’s an open standard.

DocLang could also help keep costs under control. According to AI Cost Check, having an AI model conduct an OCR scan on a PDF requires about 1,200 input tokens and 150 output tokens as a baseline. 

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That’s inconsequential to corporate AI customers on a one-off basis but demands attention at scale. And because AI models have highly variable token costs, companies may find they are spending more than they anticipated to have their AI system ingest PDFs, particularly if the documents are long and complicated or an expensive frontier model is used.

“PDFs were designed for rendering, not understanding,” said Jon Knisley, AI Value and Enablement Lead at ABBYY, in an email to The Register. “Every time a PDF enters an AI pipeline, structure, meaning and layout get lost, so the model’s accuracy ends up bottlenecked by document quality rather than model quality. Teams compensate by building custom parsers at every integration point, which results in brittle, one-off work, and a new engineering sprint for every new document type.”

According to Knisley, that has measurable cost.

“Ambiguous structure forces the model into guesswork, which drives up hallucination risk and burns tokens deciphering layout instead of extracting meaning,” he explained. “With DocLang, customers can expect better accuracy, lower costs, fewer tokens consumed, faster performance and more consistent outputs. The exact savings depend on the use case and document complexity, but our initial benchmarks show 4x to more than 30x lower cost depending on the model evaluated.”

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Knisley also cited governance advantages, noting that document provenance data and metadata can get stripped when documents gets moved. DocLang, he said, keeps that information attached.

ABBYY, which offers AI document processing, has created the DocLang Interactive Benchmark to illustrate the potential token savings of feeding DocLang documents to AI models. A PDF of IBM’s 2025 annual report, for example, results 8,421 input tokens and 512 output tokens while a DocLang version requires only 5,310 input tokens and 498 output tokens. What’s more, the DocLang version results in lower latency (2.7s vs 4.2s) and delivers better quality (the AI missed one subsection and mangled a table merger in the PDF).

“It’s still early, and we won’t overstate adoption,” said Knisley. “The standard is open and free to build on, and the group is actively inviting more technology providers and enterprises to join. The early response has been encouraging, and we’re optimistic about where it goes from here.” ®

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Engineering Is Critical to Boosting Food Security

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Nearly 750 million people face hunger today, according to the U.N. World Food Program. And by 2050, global demand for food is expected to increase by 50 percent from 2010 levels, the World Resources Institute says.

A smart agriculture special-issue report recently released by the IEEE Smart Agri-Food Initiative says meeting the demand will require technology to expand food production. The report highlights research, case studies, and new ways of applying technology to inform farmers, engineers, and policymakers.

Leading the initiative is IEEE Fellow John Verboncoeur, chair of the smart-food program and professor of electrical and computer engineering at Michigan State University, in East Lansing.

“Food security is becoming a systems-engineering problem,” Verboncoeur says. “We’re no longer talking only about tractors and irrigation. We’re talking about sensing, communications, computation, automation, and sustainability all working together.”

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Although not formally trained as an agriculture scientist, Verboncoeur’s first involvement with smart agriculture was as an undergraduate at University of Florida in 1985-86, where he helped develop an SmartAg aeroponics system for NASA for the International Space Station. It used mist to spray the plants’ roots and lightweight pneumatic structures to hold the vegetation in place.

He has also chaired the executive committee of Michigan State’s SmartAg Initiative since it launched in 2017. He chaired the program’s leading interdisciplinary efforts to apply engineering and digital technologies to farming and food systems.

Verboncoeur connects the shift of using engineering as a force multiplier for farming to lessons learned from the IEEE Smart Village program, which supports projects and organizations bringing electricity and educational and employment opportunities to remote communities. Agriculture, he argues, requires the same systems-level mindset.

“The challenge isn’t just inventing technology,” he says. “It’s making systems practical, affordable, and deployable.”

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From digital twins to autonomous harvesting

A central theme across the Smart Agri-Food Systems report is the convergence of automation, data analytics, and sustainability.

One paper, “Smart Agriculture, Precision Agriculture, Digital Twins in Agriculture: Similarities and Differences,” addresses the confusion regarding how researchers and practitioners define and apply the technologies to farming.

The paper was written by Dilan Onat Alakuş, a research assistant in the software engineering department at Kırklareli University, in Türkiye, and Ibrahim Türkoğlu, a software engineering professor at Fırat University, in Elazığ, Türkiye.

Unclear terminology can lead to inefficient investment and poor adoption of the technologies, the two authors say. They note that agricultural methods based on traditional practices and intuition lack a thorough analysis of their environmental and economic impacts.

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They describe how three technologies can benefit farmers:

Smart agriculture systems integrate sensors, artificial intelligence, robotics, and analytics to improve efficiency and sustainability at scale.

Precision agriculture focuses on location-specific decisions. Farmers use GPS-guided equipment to map fields, deploy drones to monitor crop health, and install field sensors that track soil moisture and nutrient levels in targeted zones. The tools allow farmers to apply water, fertilizer, and pesticides only where needed—which can reduce waste and lessen environmental impact.

Digital twins create virtual replicas of an agricultural area. The resulting models simulate the farmstead, crops, and irrigation systems, allowing growers to test scenarios and predict outcomes before implementing changes.

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The authors emphasize that the categories overlap in practice. A digital twin might draw data from precision agriculture systems and feed recommendations into smart agriculture platforms.

Clearer distinctions help farmers select appropriate tools and avoid unnecessary complexity and costs, they say.

“This study contributed to conscious agricultural practices by differentiating agricultural technologies,” they wrote, adding that clearer definitions can increase productivity.

The report shifts from theory to application in a paper describing bustani, which means my garden in Arabic. The Bustanica project in Saudi Arabia is an automated hydroponic vertical farming system developed by researchers at the Prince Mohammad Bin Fahd University, in Al-Khobar, Saudi Arabia. The “Bustani: A Microcontroller-Based Automated Hydroponic Vertical Farming Solution” paper was written by Hussah Alotaibi, a computer engineer at Saudi Aramco, the country’s national oil company; Abul Bashar, Widad Karsou, and Shehvar Khan, researchers in the university’s computer engineering and computer science department; and Salahudean Tohmeh from the university’s robotics laboratory.

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The Bustanica system combines hydroponics with aeroponics, in which plant roots hang in the air and receive nutrients through a misting system. Together, the approaches allow crops to grow in compact indoor environments, using far less water than traditional methods.

The method integrates IoT sensors that continuously monitor water chemistry and reservoir conditions.

The system grows crops in controlled indoor environments. A closed-loop design recirculates water to reduce waste. Sensors measure pH levels, nutrient concentration, and water levels. An Arduino Mega processes the sensor data. A NodeMCU ESP8266—a low-cost, open-source IoT platform—handles Wi-Fi communication and cloud connectivity.

The system sends the data through Google’s Firebase cloud platform, which acts as a real-time bridge between sensors and control systems.

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A mobile app lets users monitor and control the system remotely. It displays real-time data on lighting, nutrient levels, and water pump activity. When conditions move outside optimal ranges, automated dosing pumps adjust the levels as needed.

Engineering can’t solve all the world’s problems. But it absolutely has a role to play in helping the world feed itself.” John Verboncoeur, chair of the IEEE Smart Agri-Food initiative

The system operates as a feedback loop, collecting data, transmitting it to the cloud, analyzing the conditions, and automatically triggering adjustments.

LEDs simulate sunlight. Ultrasonic sensors measure water levels. Electrical conductivity sensors track nutrient concentration. During testing, the system maintained stable environmental conditions and adjusted dosing dynamically as readings changed.

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The authors describe the outcome as “a fully functional and automated vertical sustainable farm that creates desirable growing conditions, along with an Android application that provides real-time monitoring and notifications.”

Beyond automation, bustani reflects a broader shift toward merging agriculture with consumer technology and smart-home systems. Future plans include integrating the Amazon Alexa virtual assistant and machine learning tools for plant disease detection and growth analysis.

Robotics and labor challenges

The “Toward an Efficient Tomato Harvesting Robot” paper addresses autonomous harvesting, a long-standing challenge in agricultural robotics. Tomatoes in the field vary widely in size, shape, and ripeness, and they can bruise during handling. The paper was written by IEEE Senior Member Hyoung Il Son—a professor of biosystems engineering and robotics at Chonnam National University in Gwangju, South Korea—and his graduate students Jongpyo Jun, Jeongin Kim, and Jaehwi Seol.

The paper describes how robotics is increasingly being used to target crops once considered too delicate or variable for automation.

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The researcher combined 3D machine vision, robotic arms, suction-based grippers, and rotating cutting tools to build a harvesting machine capable of operating in unstructured outdoor environments. The system aims to reduce reliance on manual labor while improving harvesting efficiency and consistency.

Agriculture as a systems problem

Verboncoeur says the developments highlighted in the papers reflect a broad transformation in how engineers view the agricultural industry.

“Agriculture used to be seen primarily as managing the challenges of planting, watering, and fertilizing plants, and using machines to make the process less labor-intensive,” he says. “Now it’s also a data problem, a communications problem, an energy problem, and a resilience problem.”

Another featured paper, “Sustainable and Smart Agriculture: A Holistic Approach,” examines how technology can address environmental and demographic pressures. The paper was written by Surender Singh and Sannihit , researchers at the computer science and engineering and the civil engineering departments at Chandigarh University, in Mohali, India.

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Farmers must increase food production while reducing environmental damage from depleting water resources, overapplication of fertilizer, deforestation, and greenhouse gas emissions, the authors say. They describe smart farming as “a revolution in food production” that can allow farmers to generate higher yields from existing resources through connected technologies and data systems.

The authors highlighted the issue of rapid urbanization. By 2050, they report, nearly 70 percent of the global population will live in cities, increasing pressure on food supply chains and distribution systems.

Wireless sensor networks will play a central role in the transformation, the researchers say. The networks use small, connected devices to monitor soil moisture, temperature, humidity, light intensity, and crop conditions. The system transmits the data to cloud platforms, where machine learning models analyze trends and recommend actions.

The authors emphasize that decision support, not automation alone, drives the greatest value of crop harvest. Farmers can integrate the information into crop management strategies to improve productivity while reducing their environmental impact.

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They also note increasing collaboration between industry leaders such as Caterpillar, CNH, John Deere, and Kubota and technology companies including Bosch, Google, Intel, and Microsoft. Challenges remain, however, in communication reliability, sensor cost, and scalable data infrastructure, the authors say.

SmartAg beyond the farm

The implications of the tech advances that make farming more efficient extend beyond agriculture. Many of the same technologies—remote sensing, wireless sensor networks, AI analytics, and cloud platforms—support transportation, energy, and industrial systems.

The convergence explains IEEE’s growing involvement. Modern agriculture now combines electronics, communications, computing, and control systems.

Agriculture requires that integration, Verboncoeur says: “The challenge isn’t just inventing technology. It’s making systems practical, affordable, and deployable.”

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What’s next for smart agriculture?

The special issue marks an early stage for the IEEE Smart Agri-Food initiative, which plans to develop standards; create structured ways for farmers, researchers, governments, and agribusinesses to work together; and devise deployment strategies for smart systems.

Future research is likely to focus on interoperability between platforms, data sharing, and scalable deployment models. Digital twins are expected to play a larger role as computing power and sensor density increase. Simulating agricultural systems before applying changes in the field will become commonplace, experts predict.

Adoption depends on more than technical capability, though. The central tension moving forward lies between innovation and practicality.

“Farmers face challenges in adopting such technology due to cost, electricity availability, communication infrastructure, and vulnerability of connected devices,” Singh and Sannihit wrote.

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Smart agriculture offers improved efficiency, in addition to reducing the inputs of water, fertilizer, and time that would otherwise be spent on tasks machines can handle autonomously. But the benefits matter only if systems function reliably across diverse environments—from industrial farms to small, family-run operations in food-insecure regions.

For IEEE, agriculture now sits within core engineering domains. The stakes extend beyond technology itself, Verboncoeur says.

He adds that: “Food insecurity affects stability, health, education, and economic development. Engineering can’t solve all the world’s problems, but it absolutely has a role to play in helping the world feed itself.”

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Satya Nadella warns that AI could hollow out entire industries, echoing the damage done by globalization

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Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella published a sweeping essay on Sunday laying out what he describes as the defining economic challenge of the AI era: the risk that a handful of frontier models will absorb the expertise of entire industries and commoditize it, leaving businesses stripped of their competitive moats.

“The last thing any of us want is a world where every company across every sector is ceding value to a few models that eat everything they see,” Nadella wrote in the piece, titled “A frontier without an ecosystem is not stable,” which he posted on X. “If all the value is accrued by only a few models, the political economy will simply not tolerate it. There is no societal permission for an AI future that hollows out entire industries.”

The essay is unusually philosophical for a sitting CEO of a $3 trillion technology company. But it arrives at a moment when the theoretical risks Nadella describes are becoming tangible — and, critically, when Microsoft itself is grappling with the very dynamics he warns about.

Nadella introduces “token capital” as the new currency of enterprise AI strategy

At the center of Nadella’s essay sits a conceptual framework built on two pillars he calls “human capital” and “token capital.” Human capital, he writes, “comprises the knowledge, judgment, relationships, ingenuity, and pattern recognition of its people,” while token capital refers to “the firm’s AI capability it builds and owns.”

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The two are not in tension, he insists. “Importantly, human capital does not become less valuable as token capital grows. It only becomes more valuable!” he writes. “I believe human agency will be the driver of token capital growth. Humans will set ambitious goals, connect dots across domains, build relationships, and recognize patterns that matter most. Without human direction, you have compute running in circles.”

This framing is a deliberate counterweight to the narrative that AI will simply replace human workers or, at the enterprise level, dissolve the intellectual property that differentiates one company from another. Nadella is arguing that the real danger is not AI’s capability but its tendency to centralize — and that the solution requires a fundamentally new architecture for how businesses interact with the technology.

He describes the real opportunity as “not in picking the best model but instead in building a learning loop on top of models where human capital and token capital compound.” The key test of a company’s sovereignty in this new era, he writes, is whether it can “switch out a ‘generalist’ model without losing the ‘company veteran’ expertise built into their learning system.”

This is the essay’s most actionable claim — and its most provocative. Nadella is telling enterprises they need to decouple their institutional intelligence from whatever frontier model they happen to be running, creating portable knowledge systems that survive vendor changes.

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Why Nadella is comparing AI concentration to the outsourcing crisis that gutted industrial economies

Nadella draws a pointed historical parallel to make his warning concrete. “Think about what happened in the first phase of globalization where entire industrial economies were hollowed out by outsourcing,” he writes. “The GDP numbers looked fine on the surface, but the displacement was real and the consequences are still being felt. Let us not bring that dynamic into the AI era, with a small number of AI systems capturing all the economic returns, while entire industries find their knowledge commoditized right out from underneath them.”

The globalization analogy is not accidental. It reframes the AI concentration debate from a narrow technology question into a political-economy argument — one that regulators, policymakers, and voters can grasp. By invoking the social costs of offshoring, Nadella is signaling that the stakes extend well beyond the enterprise technology stack. He is warning that if the AI industry fails to distribute value broadly, the political system will intervene to force the issue.

“In my view, our priority has to be building a frontier ecosystem, not just a frontier model, so value flows broadly across every company, every industry, and every country,” he writes. He grounds this in an older platform philosophy: “This is the ethos I’ve grown up with where platforms enable more value on top than is captured inside, and where every company can continuously innovate and build value of its own.” It is a direct echo of the Windows-era argument, updated for the age of inference — and it carries a similarly self-interested subtext, given that Microsoft’s cloud business sits squarely in that platform layer.

Microsoft’s own runaway AI costs reveal the gap between Nadella’s vision and operational reality

What makes Nadella’s essay so striking is its timing. He published it on a day when Reuters reported that Microsoft shareholders filed a proposed class-action lawsuit in Seattle federal court, accusing the company of inflating its stock price by failing to disclose slowing growth in its Azure cloud business and the need to spend billions of dollars on AI infrastructure. The suit names Nadella and Chief Financial Officer Amy Hood among the defendants.

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As the Yahoo Finance report on the lawsuit noted, Microsoft allegedly “aggressively promoted its AI developments, specifically its ‘Copilot’ assistant and close financial alliance with ChatGPT creator OpenAI, to artificially boost investor optimism,” while understating infrastructure strain and capital risks. Microsoft also reported $37.5 billion of capital spending in its second quarter, up nearly 66% from a year earlier and above the $34.3 billion that analysts projected.

Microsoft’s internal cost pressures around AI have surfaced in other concrete ways this year. The company is canceling the majority of its internal Claude Code licenses in its Experiences and Devices division, effective June 30, 2026. Monthly usage rates reached 84 to 95% by April 2026, and per-engineer API costs ranged between $500 and $2,000 monthly, according to Windows Forum. The cancellation came after Microsoft exhausted portions of its annual AI budget due to token-based billing, as Fortune had reported in May.

The Claude Code episode illustrates, at the micro level, the exact dynamic Nadella describes at the macro level. When a company’s AI usage is metered by the token — the fundamental unit of compute that powers model inference — the more productive the tool becomes, the more expensive it gets. The term “token capital” in Nadella’s essay carries a double meaning: it refers both to a firm’s proprietary AI capability and, implicitly, to the actual tokens consumed in running it. Building a learning loop that compounds is aspirational. Paying the bills for that loop is operational reality.

Uber, Meta, and Amazon are all hitting the same AI spending wall — and it validates Nadella’s warning

Microsoft is not alone in this bind. Uber burned through its entire 2026 AI coding tools budget in just four months after incentivizing employees to adopt the technology through an internal leaderboard ranking teams by total AI tool usage. Uber has since instituted a monthly $1,500 cap per employee per agentic coding tool, according to TechCrunch. At Meta, an employee created a leaderboard called “Claudeonomics” to track which workers consumed the most AI tokens. Amazon, meanwhile, has pushed employees to “tokenmaxx” — use as many AI tokens as possible.

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The emerging pattern is clear: enterprises adopted AI coding tools aggressively, saw genuine productivity gains, and then discovered that the consumption-based economics of frontier models created budget crises that traditional software licensing never would have. Bryan Catanzaro, vice president of applied deep learning at Nvidia, captured the tension bluntly in an interview with Axios: “For my team, the cost of compute is far beyond the costs of the employees,” he said.

These cost dynamics land differently in the context of Nadella’s essay. He prescribes a three-layer architecture — evaluation, reinforcement learning, and retrieval — designed to sit between a company’s workforce and whatever frontier model it subscribes to. Companies, he argues, need to build “private evals” that “capture whether a model is actually improving against outcomes that matter to the business (not just external benchmarks!),” alongside “private reinforcement learning environments” that “let models grow stronger on real traces from inside the organization” and a knowledge base that “makes institutional memory queryable and use of tokens more efficient.” He calls the resulting system “a hill climbing machine” that, “unlike most assets, it compounds.”

Other Big Tech CEOs are echoing Nadella’s fears about AI models devouring enterprise knowledge

Nadella’s concerns do not exist in isolation. Other technology leaders have been raising similar warnings throughout 2026, though none have offered as prescriptive a response.

Snowflake CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy warned in a February podcast that the biggest software companies risk being reduced to mere data sources. “The big model makers want to create a world in which all of the data for all of the enterprises is easily available to them,” Ramaswamy said, describing everything else as “a dumb data pipe that feeds into that big brain.” He added that Snowflake needs to operate with a “fear” that enterprises would abandon software-specific AI agents in favor of all-inclusive agents that hoover up data from everywhere.

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Box CEO Aaron Levie struck a similar note in a January LinkedIn post. AI models can now perform high-level knowledge work across nearly every profession, from law to strategy to scientific research, he argued. “The question that we will have to wrestle with is, in a world where everyone has access to the same expert intelligence, how does a company differentiate?” he wrote.

The combined effect of these statements is a shared diagnosis from three very different corners of the enterprise technology market: the current trajectory of AI development threatens to collapse competitive differentiation across entire industries. Nadella’s essay stands apart from the others because it moves beyond diagnosis and proposes a specific architectural remedy. But the prescription is impossible to separate from the prescriber’s interests.

Microsoft sits in precisely the platform layer that Nadella’s framework would make indispensable — the company builds its own frontier models, operates the cloud infrastructure those models run on, and maintains deep partnerships with the leading independent AI labs. A world in which every enterprise builds a proprietary learning loop on top of commodity foundation models is, conveniently, a world in which Microsoft sells the picks and shovels to all of them.

Nadella’s Scout controversy and shareholder lawsuit reveal the tension inside Microsoft’s own AI strategy

The essay also arrives just ten days after Nadella publicly rebuked one of his own executives for outlining a plan to “make people addicted” to a new AI tool called Scout.. Microsoft corporate vice president Omar Shahine had written an internal memo describing a three-phase plan to transform Scout “from addictive app to agentic platform,” with the first phase focused on features that “make people depend on it daily.” Nadella responded on an internal message board: “This is absolutely a non-goal! If anything we are doing the exact opposite. We want to make sure AI empowers and adds real value to human endeavor and broad economic growth!”

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The Scout incident and Sunday’s essay together suggest Nadella is actively constructing a public philosophy of AI that emphasizes broad value creation over extractive engagement — whether or not every corner of Microsoft has internalized that message. One anonymous Microsoft employee told 404 Media, as the Post reported, that the leaked Scout document was “very troubling,” adding: “It feels like one of those ‘saying the quiet part out loud’ moments.”

For technical decision-makers evaluating Nadella’s essay, the practical implications are significant. He is arguing that choosing an AI model matters less than building the learning infrastructure around it. He is arguing that the ability to swap models without losing institutional intelligence is the critical test of AI sovereignty. And he is warning that companies that fail to build these systems will find their expertise absorbed and commoditized by the models themselves. “You can offload a task, or even a job, but you can never offload your learning,” Nadella writes. “The future of the firm is the ability to compound that learning across people and AI.”

The question Nadella’s essay cannot answer is whether Microsoft will practice what its CEO preaches

Whether Nadella’s vision materializes depends on a question his essay carefully sidesteps: whether the platform providers who build and host the frontier ecosystem will resist the temptation to capture the value flowing through it. Nadella insists that “platforms enable more value on top than is captured inside.” But Microsoft’s own trajectory this year — the ballooning capital expenditures, the Claude Code budget crisis, the shareholder lawsuit alleging concealed costs, the internal memo about making users addicted — suggests the economics of restraint are harder than the philosophy of restraint.

Nadella ends his essay with the claim that broad value distribution “is the stable equilibrium we should build together.” He may be right. Ecosystems have historically outperformed walled gardens over long time horizons. But stable equilibria require every major player to forgo short-term extraction in favor of long-term compounding — and right now, the AI industry is burning through budgets in four months and spending 66% more on infrastructure than analysts expected. The CEO of the world’s most valuable technology company has written an eloquent argument for why the AI economy needs to work differently. The open question is whether his own company’s balance sheet will let him prove it.

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I Built an AI Grading Tool. Then a Student Thanked Me for Words I

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Two school days. That’s all it took.

In 2024, I chaperoned field trips two days in a row, for two different grade levels, and came back to roughly 450 ungraded assignments.

I knew what to do, I’ve done it before, mark them credit or no credit and move on. Students get something out of that. They did the practice. But if any of them were practicing it wrong, nobody catches it, nobody tells them, and the misunderstanding rides along into the next unit.

That pile of work led me to build an AI grading assistant. And this past April, I removed its most automated feature: the one that could return an AI-generated grade and comment to a student before I had reviewed it.

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Building that feature was easy to justify. Removing it taught me which part of grading a teacher can’t hand off.

Most of what students turn in to me isn’t a clean essay. I teach engineering, and my students submit designs, schematics, code, and photos of physical work. That’s part of why many teachers I know still don’t grade with AI. They’ll use it to scaffold a unit or soften an email to a parent, but grading with it usually means pasting work into a chatbot one assignment at a time, which is so slow I can grade it faster myself. So, I built my own tool.

I teach mechatronics, and if mechatronics teaches you anything, it’s that efficiency matters. You optimize the system and eliminate friction. I brought that mindset to the product I built, and the logical endpoint was auto-return. The AI could evaluate the work, draft the grade and comment, and send it back to the student without another click from me, late submissions included. I had spent hours tuning it to grade against my assignment, handouts, instructions, and rubric.

Then a student came up to me one day, happy about the encouraging comment on an assignment. The comment had motivated him to redo the work and resubmit it.

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When AI Takes Control

The problem was that I didn’t write the comment. I hadn’t even seen it.

If it had passed by my eyes and I’d confirmed it, edited it, or decided it belonged there, this would be a different story. But in that moment, the student thought the encouragement came from me, and I wasn’t actually in the exchange.

Nothing about the feedback was inaccurate. That almost made it harder to explain. After more than two decades in a classroom, I couldn’t put words to what felt wrong. I just knew it did. The issue wasn’t whether AI could draft useful feedback. It could. The issue was whether a student should receive a teacher’s judgment when the teacher hadn’t made one.

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So, I removed auto-return, and the automatic grading of late work went with it. What replaced it is a review dashboard: the AI drafts every grade and comment against my rubric and lays it out in front of me. I can edit, override, reject, or return the feedback in one pass. It’s still fast. But now my eyes and my judgment touch every grade before a student sees it.

That changed how I think about human review. It can’t mean glancing at a score and clicking approve. It must mean checking the student’s work against the rubric and owning the result.

The software can propose a judgment. It cannot own one.

Policy is starting to move the same way. New York City’s public school guidance now says AI must not replace educator decision-making, and other states are weighing rules on human review and student data. The rules will keep changing. The principle shouldn’t; a student’s grade needs a person who is accountable for it.

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When I walked one of my administrators through the tool, what he liked most wasn’t the time savings. It was that it requires a rubric. Teachers write rubrics for big projects, but the daily, low stakes work rarely gets one, and that’s exactly the work that gets marked credit or no credit and never comes back with feedback. The trade runs both ways: students get clearer expectations up front and comments on work that used to get a checkmark.

He had two concerns, both fair. Parents and students should know when an AI-assisted tool is grading, so it belongs in the syllabus. And if a student contests a grade, the teacher should re-grade it by hand. We agreed the second should happen anyway, with or without AI. Humans make grading mistakes too.

My students know I built the AI tool. What they care about isn’t the technology. It’s whether the feedback is fast, the rubric is clear, and the grade is fair. A few times the tool has docked points for work it missed, almost always because a screenshot cut off the edge of the page or the writing was too faint to read. Those students came up to me, I looked at the work, and I gave the points back. I want that. A grade should be something a student can question.

What surprised me is that a student will challenge the AI long before he’ll challenge me. A kid will walk right up and say, “The AI got this wrong, I should have full credit.” That same kid won’t tell me, to my face, that I made the mistake and owe him ten points. Both of us can be wrong, but the machine is easier to push back on than the teacher, and that’s good for the student. The grade still passes through me. The draft between us just makes it easier to speak up. If a grading system makes students afraid to challenge the result, the system is wrong.

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AI Grading Advice

If your school is wrestling with AI grading, start with the disclosure. Don’t say “AI may be used.” Say what that means: comments and grades are drafted by AI and reviewed by the teacher. Then answer the harder questions. Where does student work go? Is it stored, or used to train models? How secure is the platform, and has anyone independent reviewed it?

We are teachers, not graders. We grade, yes, but we also sit in IEP meetings, call parents, design lessons, and try to notice the student who is quieter than usual. If a grading assistant hands me back the hours I spent marking daily work, and I spend them on better lessons and better feedback, everyone wins.

But when a student asks, “Why did I get this grade?” the answer cannot be, “Because the system said so.”

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It has to come from me.

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Running on Steam in a literal sense

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I slipped under the wire and got a demo of “Character Limit” submitted to Steam just in time. Now for the stressful part: It’s live in Steam Next Fest.

In April, the development of Character Limit had reached a point where it could be tested by actual players. It did fantastically well at Dreamhack Birmingham, and I had also started doing testing on iPhone and iPad with Testflight.

However, later that month, registration for something known as Steam Next Fest was coming to a close. It’s a promotional festival held a few times a year, focused on getting players to try out demos for games that have yet to be released.

Since I want the game to be completed long before the busy fall iPhone season, that meant the next Next Fest I could take part in was in the middle of June. I figured there was plenty of time to get the Dreamhack demo to a better and more robust state, so it could be downloaded to players’ computers to try out.

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But, since WWDC was also happening the week before Next Fest, that meant I would face a busy time here at AppleInsider, which would impact any development.

So, the decision was made to leave the Testflight build ticking along on iPhone, and to return to it when the game is in a much better place. Instead, I allocated my time to focus just on the Mac and PC demo.

It was both a very good and very stupid decision.

Fixing the demo

Getting the demo working as perfectly as possible for Next Fest wasn’t just to ensure the game got more promotion through a major digital storefront. It also forced me into shoring up the demo so it could be used by the actual public.

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So far, the game was made with my hardware and setups in mind. To make it work for practically any player in the world, I had to make sure anything that would break or be an edge case was handled gracefully, since any combination of hardware would be thrown at it.

Cue a few weeks of fixing bugs in number distribution, making an actual tutorial screen, and localization foibles that I had missed before.

It was then sent to some colleagues and friends for testing. And I’m glad that I did.

An edge case I didn't consider, and the fix. Image credit: William Gallagher

An edge case I didn’t consider, and the fix. Image credit: William Gallagher

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William Gallagher of this very site tried the game demo out. Partly because I had to work out how Xcode notarization worked, which was tricky but not difficult.

It turns out that William has an insane display ratio because he uses an ultrawide screen. Due to the way the game functioned, playing full-screen meant you missed the bottom and top sections of the interface.

For a word game, it helps if you can see the letters you’re turning into words. Or even just see the Quit button on the main menu.

This was fixed quickly by making a floating section of the interface that was the correct aspect ratio, that would be visible in the middle of the screen when viewed by an ultrawide. All the content of the game would then be put into that box, similarly anchored to the center.

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This worked surprisingly well and was practically the last stumbling block for the demo itself.

While not everything has been fixed, it’s just got enough “done” to be usable as a proper demo.

As a consequence, I have many changes to transfer from the demo into the full game. It’s work I would’ve had to do anyway before release, so doing it all now rather than later was a good move.

Steam pains

While making the game and working with Apple’s Notarization system is one battle, Steam is quite another.

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The tricky process of setting up a Steam page for the game has already been done. While you can set up a separate store page for a demo, you could also just add the demo download button to the main sales page.

There are reasons to go either way, but I went with the one main sales page approach. Partly because it would focus traffic onto that one page, partly from laziness.

However, for some reason, Steam requires you to submit effectively everything you would need for the separate store page for the demo, even if it doesn’t exist. That includes the text for the page, which I had to write.

Other elements make sense, like platform specifications, capsule art images, and the name, since they would be used elsewhere.

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Then it came time to upload the demo, which led to a multitude of problems.

The first issue was administrative, as I previously had to transfer the game from one Steamworks account to another, due to having signed up wrongly to begin with.

A personal account and one owned by a limited company differ in many ways, which meant a second account had to be made and the store listing transferred over.

It turns out that you can transfer the game as one listing, but the demo is a separate listing and doesn’t necessarily get transferred over with the main title. I spent so long failing at uploading the demo because of this missing element, and then I had to wait most of a week for it to transfer.

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Screenshot of a desktop backup application window showing job configuration fields, source and destination file paths, options for filters and encryption, and buttons for saving or cancelling the backup job

There’s a graphical SteamPipe interface for Windows, but you’re stuck with the Terminal on macOS for some reason…

The second problem is Steam’s uploading system. There is an option to do so from the website, but there’s no documentation explaining how to use it properly, so it was a no-go.

The usual way is a SteamPipe upload, using the Steam SDK. This is a process that involves a ton of work, including installing a command-line version of Steam, constructing a build and an upload script, and then setting the launch options.

I understand fully that this is a system designed more for the big developers with massive teams and people who truly know what they’re doing. For a first-time indie, this is massively intimidating.

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That is, until you realize that the SDK download includes a graphical interface that does a lot of the heavy lifting for you. Except it’s Windows-only and not available on the Mac.

I had a Windows PC nearby, so it wasn’t a difficult procedure. But it is disheartening that there’s not a macOS graphical interface available from Valve.

After getting the game demo uploaded, both it and the store details were submitted for review. The demo was apparently fine and dandy, but the store section was not.

Apparently, while you’re encouraged to make the images of the capsule art be different so that players can tell the demo apart from the main game, you also cannot add more words to the art other than your game name.

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They objected to me using the words “Demo Edition” in the art. Also, my logo was being covered by a demo corner banner that wasn’t really mentioned previously.

Sure, my mistake for not fully understanding. It meant some tweaks and a few more days of waiting for a re-review and eventually being accepted.

On June 9, the second day of WWDC, Steam’s email confirmed that the store page met its requirements, and that the demo could be published. That evening, Character Limit became available to play in demo form on Steam.

Happiness and trepidation

I have written before about how Steam is a big deal for me. As a gamer with a Steam account value that could buy a reasonably priced car at current prices, I am very familiar with Steam,a nd have used it for many, many years.

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Registering and having a Steam listing for something that I made was an emotional experience. Just that hit hard.

I didn’t expect putting the demo live to hit even harder.

I can now open my Steam library on my Mac and see “Character Limit Demo” on the long list of (mostly unplayed) games. I can now click it and open the game on my Mac or my PC.

Seeing it on there did actually make me weep a little bit. A stupid little game that I have been noodling on for most of a year is now in an application I regularly open up.

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Steam desktop client window showing the Character Limit game page, with dark interface, game banner at top, community tabs, play button, and navigation sidebar listing various games on the left

Seeing the demo in Steam was a big deal.

It’s probably a feeling that authors get when they see their work on Amazon or in their local bookstore. Except it’s a game and I can’t walk into a physical location and hold the game in amazement.

After walking around the block for some air, I checked it ran OK, and it does.

This was an extremely big and happy moment for me. But it was cut short with the daunting realization that this isn’t the finish line.

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The rest of the game has to be put into place for the final version. Research into more languages and modes for future updates, too.

Then there’s the ever-continuing slog of marketing and promotion before the game’s release. That’s an inevitability.

But, more immediately, there’s the fear that the demo will not be well received by anyone. The last thing anyone creating anything needs is for people to complain about your baby, even if it’s entirely justified.

Writing on the Internet for over a decade certainly gives you a thick skin for criticism of your words. But this is a level of apprehension and worry that I’ve not had to deal with in a very long time.

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That’s not even taking into account the eventual battle to get the finished product in the App Store. That’s next.

Here’s hoping Gabe Newell’s money-generator audience is somewhat kind during this week’s all-important Steam Next Fest.

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Xbox Is Reportedly Closing Ninja Theory, Double Fine And Compulsion Games

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Xbox is preparing to shut down or sell at least three of its studios — Double Fine, Ninja Theory and Compulsion Games — according to reports from The Verge and Bloomberg on Monday. 

Ninja Theory employees were informed on Monday that the studio would be closing, according to The Verge, but the team is attempting to find a buyer that can keep them operational. Ninja Theory is the studio behind the Hellblade series and it was featured in the recent Xbox Summer Game Fest showcase, revealing a new entry due in 2027.

Double Fine is the legendary studio behind the Psychonauts games, Brütal Legend, Broken Age, Keeper and all manner of LucasArts adventures, founded by Tim Schafer and friends in 2000. Double Fine leaders are in active negotiations to buy themselves back from Xbox rather than be closed altogether, Bloomberg said. 

Compulsion Games is in a similar position, according to the report. Compulsion is the Montreal studio behind the uber-stylish games Contrast, We Happy Few and South of Midnight, the latter of which came out in April 2025.

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Bloomberg reported that several other studios under the Xbox Game Studios banner are also negotiating for their futures and are at risk of being shut down. As it officially stands, the Xbox Game Studios umbrella covers dozens of studios, including Arkane, Bethesda, Halo Studios, id Software, Obsidian, Playground Games, ZeniMax and Activision Blizzard King. We have contacted Xbox for clarification on the reported closures and buyout talks.

Microsoft’s modern game-studio acquiring spree kicked off in 2018 with the purchase of Undead Labs, Playground Games, Ninja Theory and Compulsion Games, plus the formation of The Initiative. This momentum continued building at a concerning pace in 2020 and 2021, when Xbox acquired eight more studios under ZeniMax Media, including Arkane, Bethesda and id. Everything came to a head in 2022 with the announcement that Xbox planned to purchase Activision Blizzard for $69 billion, the largest acquisition in video game history. That deal finally went through at the end of 2023, after a lengthy battle with regulators.

Since the acquisitions, Microsoft has enacted multiple massive rounds of layoffs affecting thousands of employees in its gaming division, and also shuttered well-known studios, including The Initiative. Unfortunately, Double Fine, Ninja Theory, Compulsion and the other at-risk Xbox studios are in good company.

Longtime Xbox division head Phil Spencer stepped down this year and was replaced by new CEO Asha Sharma, alongside other executive-level changes. Also on Monday, Xbox Game Studios head Craig Duncan left the company; he first took the role in October 2024. Employees across Xbox are bracing for more layoffs in 2026 after an ominous public memo from Sharma dropped in mid-June, just as the glow of Summer Game Fest fully faded.

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6 Small SUVs That Depreciate The Fastest (And 6 That Hold Their Value)

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Compact SUVs are the largest market segment in America according to a 2025 study by S&P Global, and competition within the segment is fierce. Long-standing favorites from the likes of Toyota and Honda go head-to-head against upstart competitors, with the best of the bunch offering a winning mix of practicality, comfort, and affordability.

With so many small SUVs on the market to pick between, buyers can afford to be choosy. There are many different factors that influence a buyer’s final decision, with depreciation being a particularly important factor for many. Most buyers would strongly prefer that their shiny new SUV doesn’t plummet in value during their ownership, although some do exactly that.

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Using data from two trusted sources, we’ve compared depreciation rates from a wide range of small SUVs to pick out the models that lose value at the fastest and slowest rates. There are some common themes between models at each end of the spectrum: For example, the highest depreciating models tend to hail from luxury brands, feature electric powertrains, or both. At the other end, the models with the best value retention are offered by mass-market brands with good reputations for long-term reliability. If you’re in the market for a new budget-friendly small SUV and want to know which models to stay away from, you’ll find the answers here.

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Loses value: Lexus RZ

EV technology is rapidly evolving, and as a result, the spec sheets of cars that are just a few years old are already starting to look a little dated. A good example is the Lexus RZ, which arrived in 2023. Even at launch, its 220-mile range was far from exemplary, but today, it’s even further behind its rivals. To its credit, Lexus has managed to boost the RZ’s range slightly in the intervening years, and a 2026 RZ now achieves between 264 and 301 miles, depending on trim. However, that’s still low by today’s standards: For context, a base-spec 2026 Nissan Leaf offers 303 miles between charges.

Add in the effects of battery degradation and a used RZ will offer a range that’s simply too small to be appealing to most buyers. It depreciates heavily as a result, with CarEdge estimating that RZ owners can expect to lose 60% of their initial investment after a period of five years. Meanwhile, KBB is even less positive about the RZ’s future resale value, predicting a 66% drop in value over the same period of time.

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Holds value: Honda CR-V

Honda unveiled the CR-V TrailSport Hybrid trim for the 2026 model year, but even without the added dose of all-terrain capability, it’s easy to see the appeal of the popular SUV. The CR-V is affordable to buy, starting from $32,370 (including a $1,450 destination charge) for 2026, but buyers with larger budgets can spring for the top-spec Sport Touring Hybrid. The latter offers a premium audio system, a 204 horsepower hybrid powertrain, and a long list of other additional features.

As well as being more powerful than base trims, the hybrid CR-V is also more efficient. The all-wheel drive hybrid CR-V hits an EPA-estimated 37 mph combined, while the front-wheel drive version achieves 40 mpg. Add in the durable materials in the cabin, the intuitive infotainment, and Honda’s strong reputation for reliability, and the result is a car that’s a sensible choice for a huge range of buyers. That wide-ranging appeal helps keep used values high, with CarEdge estimating that a new CR-V will depreciate just 29% after five years and KBB predicting a 46% reduction compared to the original sticker price.

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Loses value: Chevrolet Blazer EV

It isn’t just luxury EVs that lose value fast. The Chevrolet Blazer EV might wear a humble bowtie logo on its hood, but current data suggests that owners can still expect to lose money at the kind of rate that you’d usually see from a premium or luxury car. CarEdge puts the Blazer EV’s depreciation rate at 60% over five years, while KBB estimates that the car will be worth 67% less than it was when it was new.

The Blazer EV has proven to be unpopular with buyers from the get-go, taking the unenviable title of Chevy’s least-sold SUV in America. Even its electric sibling, the Equinox EV, has proved to be significantly more popular. That’s despite the 2026 Blazer EV featuring a range of up to 312 miles and starting from $46,495 (including a $1,795 destination fee), which is a few thousand dollars less than the price of the average new car. If you move up the trim range, things quickly get pricier, with the all-wheel drive SS trim costing north of $60,000.

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Holds value: Subaru Crosstrek

The latest Subaru Crosstrek is far from perfect, but it’s an appealing option, especially in hybrid form. Its combination of affordability and all-conditions capability make it a great alternative to rivals from the likes of Honda and Toyota, and the Subaru offers similarly strong value retention to small SUVs from those brands.

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Estimates for exactly how much owners can expect to receive for their 5-year-old Crosstrek vary between sources, with CarEdge suggesting the car will only depreciate 34% over that time. Meanwhile, KBB predicts a 48% depreciation after half a decade. Either way, that puts the Crosstrek towards the front of the pack for holding its value, and given its sub-$30,000 starting price, buyers will be losing very little in dollar terms.

Unlike many of its rivals, the Crosstrek is also made in America at Subaru’s Indiana assembly plant. It’s not the brand’s only American-made model either, with the Outback and Ascent SUVs also being built in the same facility.

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Loses value: Land Rover Range Rover Evoque

It’s made by a luxury brand with a poor reputation for long-term reliability and it’s far from cheap when it’s new, so it’s natural that the Range Rover Evoque depreciates fast. Accelerating that value loss is the fact that it’s also not very efficient, and despite its rapid depreciation, it isn’t all that rapid on the road either. The typical owner of a new Range Rover won’t mind any of those things, but for many used buyers, an aging Evoque isn’t going to be an easy sell.

Despite its somewhat limited appeal, a 5-year-old Evoque won’t have lost quite as much value in percentage terms as some of its rivals. Still, with predicted depreciation rates of 52% and 63% from CarEdge and KBB respectively, it’s among the poorest performers for value retention. Buyers who do decide to roll the dice on a used Evoque can at least enjoy one of the nicest cabins in the segment and a top-tier sound system, even if the threat of wallet-bruising repair bills might loom large.

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Holds value: Toyota RAV4

Toyota redesigned the RAV4 for the 2026 model year, but it follows the same core formula as before. Efficiency is still one of its key selling points — in fact, it’s even more of a focus with the latest generation, which is only available as either a hybrid or plug-in hybrid. A range of trims are also available to cater to a wide spectrum of buyers, with the base trim starting from $33,495 (including a $1,595 destination fee).

Further up the trim range, the Woodland trim beefs up the RAV4’s appearance with Rigid Industries fog lights, roof rails, and all-weather floor mats. At the very top, the Limited trim offers the most comfortable, premium experience. A 2026 RAV4 Limited costs at least $44,895 before optional extras are factored in.

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Buyers of all trims will be able to take comfort in the fact that the RAV4’s perennial popularity has helped earn it strong value retention rates. CarEdge and KBB are notably split on exactly how far ahead of its rivals the RAV4’s value retention falls, with the former predicting only a 28% drop in value after 5 years but the latter saying that the car will lose 51% of its sticker price. Regardless of which estimate proves more accurate in the long run, the RAV4 remains among the best SUVs in its class for holding its value.

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Loses value: Jaguar F-Pace

By now, most enthusiasts will already be well aware of Jaguar’s impending all-electric relaunch. The brand’s upcoming EV has not yet hit the road at time of writing, but Jaguar dealers are still busy selling off the last of their old stock. The F-Pace SUV can still be found at dealers, with the cheapest 2026 trim starting just under $60,000 and the SVR 575 Final Edition trim costing close to six figures.

The gas engine in the base trim is slightly underwhelming given its asking price, offering 246 horsepower and a 6.9 second 0-60 mph time. The mild hybrid variant bumps those numbers up to a more respectable 395 horsepower and 5.1 seconds, but both lag far behind the Final Edition. It might be significantly more expensive, but the top-spec trim does receive a supercharged 5.0-liter V8 engine making 567 horsepower and propelling the car from 0-60 mph in just 3.8 seconds.

No matter whether they pick a base example or a top-spec Final Edition, buyers of the 2026 F-Pace can expect to lose most of their investment after 5 years of ownership. CarEdge predicts that the SUV will depreciate 65% after half a decade on the road, and KBB forecasts a very similar 66% depreciation rate.

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Holds value: Toyota Corolla Cross

Slotting below the RAV4 in Toyota’s SUV lineup, the 2026 Corolla Cross is an entry-level crossover for buyers who want the style and practicality of an SUV but don’t want to spend a fortune. It’s equipped with a competitive amount of standard tech and offers cargo space and legroom that’s on par with most of its rivals.

It’s efficient too, with the EPA estimating that the Corolla Cross Hybrid should be capable of hitting 42 mpg on a combined cycle. In the real world, our testing saw the car average slightly less than that claimed figure, averaging around 39 mpg over the course of the test period. Prices for the non-hybrid variant start at $26,830 (including a $1,595 destination fee), while the hybrid costs around $30,000.

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The Corolla Cross doesn’t win any points for driver engagement, but as a sensible, wallet-friendly runaround, it ticks all the right boxes. That sensibility appeals as much to used car buyers as it does to new car buyers, and as a result, the small SUV holds its value well. Estimates for exactly how well a new example will hold value differ, with CarEdge predicting a 30% drop in value over 5 years but KBB suggesting a 50% drop is more likely.

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Loses value: Land Rover Discovery Sport

Compared to the Range Rover and Defender lines, the Discovery is the forgotten child of the Land Rover stable. Bosses have been on record discussing how the next generation of the Discovery and its smaller relative, the Discovery Sport, need to be better differentiated from the Defender. For now though, the current generation soldiers on. The 2026 model year has seen the launch of some new trims and additional options, but fundamentally it’s still the same SUV that’s been in Land Rover’s lineup for years now.

Until its relaunch, both the Discovery and Discovery Sport are stuck with high depreciation rates that reflect the fact that they’re overlooked by many buyers. Land Rover’s reliability record is also patchy at best, which doesn’t help matters. The Discovery Sport is the smaller of the two Discovery SUV models, and it’s expected to depreciate 59% after 5 years according to CarEdge and 65% over the same time according to KBB.

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Holds value: Hyundai Venue

Compact SUVs don’t get much smaller than the Hyundai Venue. It’s one of the cheapest new cars you can buy in 2026, with a starting price that only just surpasses the $20,000 mark. Depreciation estimates for the car differ in their assessment of how much of its value it’s likely to retain 5 years after it leaves the lot, with CarEdge being more positive about its value retention than KBB. The first says buyers can expect to lose only 36% of their original investment, while the second predicts a 54% depreciation rate.

In dollar terms, the Venue’s depreciation is among the lowest of any small SUV even if KBB’s less optimistic depreciation rate is assumed to be true. Owners won’t spend a lot at the fuel pump either, with the EPA estimating that the SUV should hit 31 mpg combined. That translates to a fuel savings of $1,000 compared to the average new vehicle over the course of 5 years.

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Loses value: Cadillac Optiq

As previously mentioned, luxury cars tend to depreciate fast, as do electric vehicles. The Cadillac Optiq is both a luxury SUV and an electric vehicle, and so it’s no surprise that it sheds value pretty rapidly. It’s still a relatively new model, but estimates generally agree on how much it can be expected to lose over five years. CarEdge predicts a 57% drop in value, while KBB forecasts a slightly larger loss, at 61%. That’s not shockingly bad for an EV, but it’s still more than most other small SUVs.

We tested the Optiq shortly after it was launched and found it to be a typical Cadillac in all the ways that matter: It was quiet, comfortable, and well appointed inside, without much of the over-the-top gadgetry that some of its rivals offer. Like virtually all new cars, it still has a prominent infotainment screen, but we found it generally straightforward to operate and not too intrusive. Aside from the odd omission, like the Optiq’s lack of Apple CarPlay compatibility, we didn’t find much to dislike about the smallest Cadillac EV.

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Holds value: Honda HR-V

The HR-V is Honda’s SUV equivalent of the Civic, with shared underpinnings and a similarly affordable price tag. We spent time with the car at the launch of the current generation and liked its interior and standard equipment levels, although we found the sound of its CVT to be grating when the SUV was driven on the highway. Noisy transmission aside, the HR-V is a good entry point into Honda’s SUV lineup, and as a bonus, it looks less cheap than its price tag would suggest.

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Buyers can expect the HR-V to hold its value well over its first 5 years on the road, but like many of the top performing small SUVs here, estimates differ on just how much it will be worth. According to CarEdge, the HR-V will lose 31% of its sticker price over that time, while KBB suggests that a deprecation rate of 48% is the more likely scenario. Individual factors like mileage and condition can also play a significant part in resale value, but overall, the HR-V remains towards the top of its class.

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How we selected these small SUVs

Every platform uses a slightly different methodology and different datasets to predict how fast a new vehicle will lose value, so to gain a balanced overview of predicted depreciation rates, we averaged data from two trusted sources. We based our picks for this list on the mean average of predicted depreciation rates from CarEdge and KBB, with each of our fast depreciating picks losing 55% or more of their initial value over their first five years on the road. Our top picks for value retention are each forecast to depreciate an average of 45% or less, putting them towards the very top of their segment.



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Judge Says Trump’s Attempt To Rewrite History At National Parks Is Illegal

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from the America-isn’t-your-playset dept

What’s most disturbing about Trump’s “Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History” executive order isn’t its fully-blinkered, jingoistic take on American history where America does no wrong and is almost always white right. I mean, that’s pretty awful on its own, but it’s the flip side of pretending whites do no wrong: pretending any victims of whites or any contributors of other races/colors/creeds simply don’t exist.

It’s the sort of thing dictators do. It’s the sort of thing novelists write about. It’s the sort of thing we Americans used to be able to criticize wholeheartedly because our country would never stoop so low as to rewrite history to please whoever was currently in power.

We no longer have the high ground. But we might be able to start making our way back to the top of the hill. It’s not because Trump et al are getting better or smarter or simply a bit less hateful. It will be because the courts are doing what they’re supposed to be doing: slowing this budding fascist’s roll.

A federal judge in Massachusetts has ordered the Trump administration to reinstall displays it removed from National Parks sites over the past year as part of a crackdown on diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) content and climate change information.

[…]

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Judge Angel Kelley sided with the challengers on Friday, finding that the federal government’s action “sets a dangerous precedent of censorship and sanitization” while undermining the “integrity” of the National Parks system.

The decision [PDF] leads off with the ideal this nation and its national parks are supposed to embody…

Often referred to as “America’s largest classroom,” National Parks serve in that spirit by telling the stories both of those who write history and those who go unheard. The beauty of history is the unvarnished storytelling of a time gone by and the delivery of undeniable truths. The Government’s stewardship of these park sites thus carries a responsibility to present history in full rather than in favored fragments.

… before detailing the hideous destruction being perpetrated by the Trump administration:

Unfortunately, the Government has disregarded these principles. Under the guise of promoting American dignity, this Administration seeks to share a limited history by ordering the removal of all signs, displays, and interpretive exhibits at National Parks that do not align with its preferred narrative, thereby telling half-truths. In recent months, the Government has torn down exhibits in Philadelphia’s Independence National Historical Park memorializing the legacy of people enslaved by the country’s first President; removed signage detailing climate threats at Fort Sumter in South Carolina, one of the most environmentally endangered sites in the country; and wiped away descriptions of history and science at countless National Parks across the United States. Not only does this undermine the integrity of the National Parks; it sets a dangerous precedent of censorship and sanitization.

Dozens of instances of censorship and erased history are listed in the lawsuit. And it’s all the sort of thing you’d expect from this administration:

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By the date of the filing of this action, Defendants had removed dozens of signs related to climate change, civil rights, and diverse communities.

[…]

In addition, Defendants have removed multiple signs involving slavery, abolition, immigration,
labor, women’s suffrage, and civil rights

The court says the order violates the law repeatedly. Not only does it steamroll existing laws governing the National Park Service and its congressional oversight, it fails to justify its own existence with even the briefest nod to serving the public’s interest. Most damningly, the executive order ignores the facts in favor of pushing the administration’s preferred version of US history:

[T]he Order fails to rationally connect any facts to the action taken. It claims that the removals will “restore Federal sites . . . to solemn and uplifting public monuments that remind Americans of our extraordinary heritage.” However, the Order fails to explain how unearthing and displaying the historical contributions of marginalized groups detracts from celebrating “our extraordinary heritage.” Indeed, the NPS’ purpose in installing these materials in the first instance was to attract new audiences to National Parks by celebrating diverse experiences.

In other words, this executive order is basically just a Truth Social rant pretending to be a lawful directive.

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[T]he Order fails to rationally connect any facts to the action taken. It claims that the removals will “restore Federal sites . . . to solemn and uplifting public monuments that remind Americans of our extraordinary heritage.” However, the Order fails to explain how unearthing and displaying the historical contributions of marginalized groups detracts from celebrating “our extraordinary heritage.” Indeed, the NPS’ purpose in installing these materials in the first instance was to attract new audiences to National Parks by celebrating diverse experiences.

The order concludes by using Trump’s self-serving rationalizations against him, which is exactly the sort of thing I’d love to see more of in future court orders rejecting this administration’s fascist advances:

Because Defendants deemed it important to strip the parks of these undeniable truths in anticipation of the 250th Anniversary of our great Nation, it is equally important that our shared history be honestly told and fully restored by the 250th Anniversary to properly honor the remarkable achievements of the United States.

LOL. Stick that in your White House lawn MMA fight, you asshat. Restore what’s been destroyed, says the court: that would be “truth and sanity,” rather than this steady stream of atrocities this administration continues to inflict on the US.

Filed Under: bigotry, censorship, erasing history, interior department, national park service, trump administration

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Huawei’s HarmonyOS 7 brings familiar visuals and a performance boost

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Huawei has unveiled HarmonyOS 7 at its developer conference in China.

The update introduces a redesigned interface with glass-inspired visual effects and new AI-powered features, some of which look quite similar to Apple’s often criticised Liquid Glass design that continues in iOS 27.

The company also claims there is a noticeable performance boost over the previous version. The update is set to roll out across Huawei’s ecosystem of smartphones, tablets, PCs, wearables and smart home devices.

HarmonyOS 7 introduces a more transparent, layered design language, with glass-like buttons, sliders and interface elements appearing throughout the operating system. Furthermore, Huawei has also added new 3D effects that can transform lock screens and other parts of the interface into more dynamic scenes.

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Beyond the visual refresh, Huawei is putting AI front and centre – because, of course, it is. The company says its upgraded assistant can now handle more in-app actions and complete a wider range of requests. Crucially, this does not require users to jump between apps. New AI-powered photo editing tools are also on the way, alongside an updated Intelligent Agent Framework. The framework aims to make automated tasks more reliable.

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Huawei is also promising a performance improvement. According to the company, HarmonyOS 7 delivers a 15% uplift compared to HarmonyOS 6.1. However, it has yet to provide detailed benchmarks showing exactly where those gains will be most noticeable. In practice, users can likely expect smoother app launches and improved responsiveness across the system.

The developer beta for HarmonyOS 7 is available from today for eligible devices, while the finished version is expected to arrive later this year.

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While the new AI features will attract plenty of attention, the redesigned interface could end up being the bigger change for everyday users. The glass-inspired look gives HarmonyOS 7 a noticeably different feel. Meanwhile, the promised performance improvements suggest Huawei is focusing on substance as well as style.

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OneOdio Studio Max 2 review: DJ headphones without the wire

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We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

OneOdio Studio Max 2: Two-minute review

Despite the number in the name, I’ve taken to considering the OneOdio Studio Max 2 to be more like a ‘pro’ version of the originals rather than a completely new pair of headphones. I’ve been testing them for several weeks, and the experience doesn’t feel hugely changed (even though the price is).

The originals upon which they are based were released in early 2025, and after I finished my review, I found myself using them daily. They’re always plugged into my guitar amp or keyboard for when I want to do some music practice; a few select features made them uniquely handy for making music.

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