Tech
Electrify America Shifts From Prepaid Accounts to Direct Card Payments
Electric vehicle fast-charging network Electrify America is changing how it collects your money. Over the coming weeks, the company will eliminate app-based account balances and auto-reload features, shifting instead to direct credit or debit card billing for each charging session. As someone who frequently charges an EV across multiple networks, I see this as a positive change that should simplify the experience for drivers.
Electrify America operates DC fast chargers (up to 350 kW) and Level 2 chargers across the US and Canada, primarily along highway corridors and at retail locations. It’s one of the largest public EV charging networks in North America, with more than 5,600 DC fast chargers at 1,080 locations as of early 2026, a distant second behind Tesla’s 33,000-plus Supercharger ports.
Until now, Electrify America’s payment system has operated like a transit card. Customers would preload funds into an account, and the app would automatically replenish it with a preset amount when the balance ran low. That model created a friction point that anyone who’s tried to get a leftover balance refunded knows well. It wasn’t exactly difficult, but it introduced an annoying extra step.
I have spent a lot of time at EA chargers over the years, but these changes will be more impactful for occasional EV drivers.
Now, Electrify America will place a temporary authorization hold on your payment card in $20 increments at the start of each session, then charge only for the energy you actually use. If you spend less than the authorized amount, the release time for any remaining hold will vary depending on your bank. Existing accounts currently holding a balance, like mine, won’t go away. EA says those funds will be applied first to your next session, with any remaining amount billed to the card on file.
For frequent Electrify America customers, the practical difference is minimal. However, for occasional EV drivers — someone who rents an EV while on vacation — or an owner who mostly charges at home and only hits a DC fast charger a few times a year, this removes a real barrier. I can also see this simplifying paperwork for businesses that use a corporate card or expense reports when recharging company cars. You no longer need to pre-fund an account you might not use again for months. Just show up, plug in and get billed.
Once the currently held balance is gone, users will be charged per session to a saved debit or credit card.
The approach also aligns Electrify America’s payment system more closely with Tesla Supercharger billing, where sessions are charged directly to a payment method on file with no prepaid balance. It’s a convenience baseline that EA should have hit a while ago, but better late than never.
Electrify America’s discounted digital pass subscriptions will be unaffected by the change.
Tech
If you’re buying a new TV for the World Cup, look for these 5 key features
The 2026 World Cup is here, and if you’re still thinking about buying a new TV to watch the tournament in, we’d like it if you could take a beat and consider these five key features.
Big sports tournaments are usually when retailers bring out the big discounts, but before you snap up the cheapest deal you can find, we’ve laid out five features to give some thought to before you hit buy.
From size to HDR performance to motion processing, taking these five areas into consideration will help you in your search, and hopefully lead to you having the best AV experience to watch the tournament in.
Size


Bigger is, genuinely, better. Unless you’re not able to fit a bigger screen in your living room, we’d always recommend that you go for a bigger size than you currently have.
The scale is the obvious benefit. Jumping from 55- to 65-inches reaps positives in terms of immersion. And of course, if you have multiple people around for a watch party, then having a bigger screen means you aren’t all cramming for space on the sofa and craning your necks to see what’s happening.
The last few years have seen a rise in the number of affordable, large-screen TVs. TCL’s 98-inch C7K is available for £1999, but for something considerably less expensive but still plenty big, Sharp’s 70GK4245K could be yours for less than £450.
Sound


George Lucas once said that sound is 50% of the experience. He was talking about films of course, but we’d say the same applies to anything, especially if we’re talking about sports.
Hearing the roar of the crow, feeling the intensity when something happens on (or off) the pitch, or the hush of the silence before a penalty is taken – sound matters and brings immersion to the experience of sports. So don’t buy a TV with tinny sound.
That’s easier said than done when even TVs that rack £3000 asking price have a sound that’s average. And a TV that has good sound might not have as good picture. As always, if you know (from reading our reviews, of course) that TV sound is on the weaker side, give it a boost with an external sound system.
We’d also avoid most of the built-in audio modes on TV, such as sports. Very rarely do they provide the kind of all-encompassing, immersive experiences they suggest they can.
HDR


While not every sports tournament is produced and broadcast in 4K, the last few football tournaments have been in available in HDR. For the 2026 World Cup, you can view the tournament in 4K HLG HDR on the BBC iPlayer.
More expensive TVs offer a better HDR experience because they can hit higher levels of brightness and produce a better colour experience. If you want to watch the World Cup in the best way possible, we’d suggest having a look at 4K TVs priced within the £1000 to £2000 price range for a better HDR experience. We have you covered with out best 4K TV list.
Picture mode


Leading on from the previous point is picture mode. Vivid (or Dynamic) is an option for some, but we find that too garish in terms of brightness and colours; and also brings in issues with the motion processing negatively affecting picture quality.
Film (or Movie) may offer the best, most accurate colours; but this mode is often for watching in the dark or when the curtains are drawn (considering some of the match times, this might be more useful).
The picture mode we’d suggest you watch the World Cup in, is Standard mode. Standard mode gives blues and greens a boost – helpful for bringing that rich green tone of the grass – and while it adds some processing to the mix, it’s less heavy on the picture than it would be with Vivid.
It’s also brighter than Film modes and will have more of impact if you’re watching during the day, but a lot of the matches at the World Cup will be on evening/night-time in the UK.
Motion Processing


If you’re going to use Standard picture modes (or any mode other than Film/Cinema), your TV is going to automatically add some motion processing unless you dive into the settings and disable.
If you prefer motion processing for your sports, there are some TVs that do it better than others. Sony, Panasonic, LG are towards the top of the list; Samsung not far behind without tweaking the settings a little bit, with the likes of TCL and Hisense behind and a little less consistent.
Motion processing performance can vary depending on the price. Some cheaper TVs do away with it completely (Roku models tend not to have it), but sometimes it’s better to have an affordable TV that doesn’t do it, than one that does it poorly.
Tech
Congress Lets Decades-Old Spying Law Lapse Amid Trump’s Controversial DNI Nomination
Congress failed to extend a key surveillance law on Thursday night, according to a report by Politico. This effectively means that Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) will expire for the first time since 2008, as the House isn’t expected to vote again until June 23.
The House rejected a proposal that would’ve extended the law until July 2, on a 218-198 vote. The extension actually required a two-thirds majority, but didn’t even get a simple majority. Nearly 20 Republicans joined with Democrats to block the motion. A few hours later, Oregon Senator Ron Wyden blocked a couple of proposed extensions for the law in the Senate.
This law has been around nearly 20 years through multiple presidencies from both parties. So what’s the issue right now? There are some who don’t like it when the government engages in massive warrantless surveillance programs, sure, but that never stopped the law from being renewed before. Reporting indicates that Congress was close to a three-year extension, until President Trump announced he planned to install political ally Bill Pulte as director of national intelligence.
Democrats have raised concerns over Pulte’s appointment on the grounds that he has no intelligence experience and fears that he could use sensitive information gathered via Section 702 for political or personal purposes. Pulte regularly insinuated Fed board member Lisa Cook fired engaged in mortgage fraud, an allegation that has since been debunked; Cook was removed from her post by President Trump last August.
Trump has since nominated Jay Clayton, the top federal prosecutor in New York City, for the intelligence job. However, he has suggested that Pulte could take the job on an acting basis. “There needs to be a clear guarantee that Mr. Pulte will not serve as acting DNI,” Senator Mark Warner wrote in a statement.
As for Section 702, it lets the government conduct warrantless surveillance of foreign targets located outside of the United States. It also allows agencies like the NSA and the FBI to spy on Americans if the action is “reasonably likely” to collect information about foreign intelligence.
As one would expect, authorities have played fast and loose with that whole “reasonably likely” thing. Law enforcement agencies have been caught with their hands in the data cookie jar a lot since 2008. The surveillance-based FISA court found tens of thousands of improper database searches in 2017 and 2018 alone. A judge also ruled in 2019 that the FBI and NSA committed multiple violations of either the law or privacy-minded court orders when collecting data from phone and tech companies.
House Democrats are pushing for “meaningful reforms” of the law. “Section 702 is a critical foreign intelligence authority, but we cannot in good conscience vote for reauthorization without significant reforms to protect both national security and the constitutional privacy rights of Americans,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and other leaders said in a joint statement.
Tech
Andrew Yang thinks the next big startup opportunity is lowering the cost of living
Entrepreneur and former presidential candidate Andrew Yang has a theory about where the next wave of startup opportunity lies, and it starts with a question most founders aren’t asking: what if the business model was giving money back instead of extracting it?
Yang was inspired by Mark Cuban. Not by his wealth, or his celebrity, but by Cost Plus Drugs — Cuban’s startup that sells pharmaceuticals at cost. Yang made a list.
“Housing, education, food, fuel, transportation, media, and wireless,” Yang told TechCrunch on a recent episode of Equity. “The things we all spend money on.”
He picked wireless and last September launched Nobile Mobile, a new mobile virtual network operator that provides cell service for a fraction of what traditional carriers charge and gives customers money back if they use less data.
As AI threatens to compress wages and displace workers, Yang sees a business opportunity in bringing down the cost of living. Cost Plus Drugs, Noble Mobile, dumb phone makers like Light Phone, and even online grocery store Misfits Markets are early examples of an emerging business category where the startup’s value proposition is the margin it gives back to the customer.
“AI is going to suck up a lot of the value and the jobs, and then Americans are going to look up and say, ‘How do I meet basic needs?’” Yang said. He believes meeting people’s needs “less expensively” is “a very rich vein of opportunity.”
That instinct didn’t emerge from nowhere. Yang first launched himself into the public eye during his 2020 presidential campaign, during which he advocated for Universal Basic Income as a means of combating AI-related workforce displacement and wealth concentration. The campaign didn’t succeed but the thesis has only grown more relevant.
Yang is still an advocate for UBI, arguing that the value generated by AI companies needs to be redistributed into the hands of the average American. But whether the government will be the vehicle for that redistribution, or whether it will just use any collected wealth to “plug a hole and do something not terribly productive,” Yang is less certain.
“There is room for a direct connection between the money and the people,” he said.
That’s where the market comes in. Where policy fails, Yang argues, market incentives can step in. Noble Mobile is his attempt to prove the point. Since its launch last September, the company has grown to “thousands and thousands” of customers and is bringing in “millions in revenue.”
“We’re unit profitable per customer, but we just share the profits with our subscribers with the idea that it’ll make you happy, you’ll stay around, and maybe you’ll tell your friends and family,” Yang said.
The pitch is simple. Yang noted that the average monthly savings of $50, invested and compounded over 40 years, could amount to $24,000 — enough for a retirement down payment. And in this economy, who isn’t thinking about little ways they can upgrade their personal finance?
Whether investors will share that enthusiasm is another question entirely. Even if the opportunity is real, capital is concentrated heavily in AI right now, while consumer-facing businesses with thin margins and a social mission are a hard sell.
“I had at least one investor say to me around Noble Mobile, ‘Love you, Andrew, want to work with you — if you could just make this an AI company, we’ll invest,’” Yang said.
The tide might be changing, though, simply because even the most wealthy, extractive companies need an economy in which consumers have enough buying power to purchase their products.
“The value being concentrated in the hands of a handful of folks and firms is just bad for everybody,” he said. “There are some folks I know in Silicon Valley who are open to that for a variety of reasons…[like] they just don’t want to have to hire private security.”
Yang encouraged founders and investors to take on problems they’re passionate about and find a way to build a valuable enterprise on top of it.
“Think bigger and more broadly about trying to tackle problems and don’t subscribe so much to groupthink, because there are some valuable opportunities out there,” he said.
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Tech
Silicon Valley venture capitalist and LA billionaire reportedly weighing Seahawks bids

The list of potential buyers for the Seattle Seahawks is starting to look like an NFL Pro Bowl roster of billionaires, venture capitalists and global business leaders.
Billionaire financier Todd Boehly is the latest high-profile name linked to the franchise, according to a report from Semafor, joining a field of prospective bidders that reportedly includes venture capitalist Vinod Khosla, steel executive Aditya Mittal and former Boston Celtics majority owner Wyc Grousbeck.
Boehly, the chairman and CEO of Eldridge Industries, is best known in sports circles for ownership stakes in the Los Angeles Dodgers, Los Angeles Lakers, Chelsea FC and the Los Angeles Sparks. Before launching Eldridge, he helped build the credit-investing business at Guggenheim Partners.
The Seahawks could fetch as much as $9 billion, a price tag that would eclipse the $6 billion sale of the Washington Commanders in 2023 and set a new record for an NFL franchise.
The Seahawks are being sold by the estate of late Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, following instructions in his estate plan directing that his sports holdings ultimately be sold and the proceeds used for philanthropic purposes. In February, Allen’s estate formally listed the Seahawks for sale, shortly after the franchise captured its second Super Bowl title.
Among the other reported bidders is Khosla, the Sun Microsystems co-founder, founder of Khosla Ventures and an early backer of OpenAI, DoorDash and Stripe. Khosla — who also owns a small slice of the San Francisco 49ers — reportedly submitted a letter of intent as part of the bidding process.
Khosla spoke in Seattle last year, saying at the time: “I have found that the person who learns faster is way better at building businesses than the person who is a deep expert.” His firm has backed Seattle-area startups including Loti, Mudstack, Viome and Lexion, which was acquired by Docusign in 2024. It is also an investor in Seattle’s AI2 Incubator.
The Seahawks sale is shaping up as one of the largest ownership transfers in professional sports history, attracting investors from Wall Street, Silicon Valley, international industry and private equity.
For Seattle’s technology community, the process marks the beginning of a new era.
Since purchasing the team in 1997, Allen helped transform the Seahawks into one of the NFL’s premier franchises.
Formal bids are expected in the coming weeks, according to Semafor.
Tech
Educators: Why Are You Thinking of Leaving the Field?
School’s (almost) out for summer.
When it comes time to throw open campus doors for the new school year in the fall, research tells us one out of every seven teachers won’t be returning — either because they moved schools or left the profession entirely.
But when the going gets tough, teachers don’t necessarily want to leave. Even when they’re burned out, they still love what they do.
So, the concerning data throughout the country tells a story about how stark the conditions of the teacher workforce are. In Wisconsin, for instance, teachers say they are exiting the profession at the highest rate in 25 years thanks to a range of issues, from poor leadership to safety concerns like students bringing guns to school.
Worse, shrinking student populations and rising costs have forced school districts like Portland Public Schools to make staff cuts in the face of astronomically high budget gaps. Early career teachers are thinking hard about whether they even want to continue in their chosen field.
That’s why we at EdSurge want to hear from educators who have recently left or plan to leave their jobs for another sector: What was the deciding factor? What could your school (or district or state-level leaders) have done differently to change your mind?
Your responses will help shape our coverage, and we may be in contact for an interview.
Tech
Why I Recommend These AI Voice Recorders For Interviews And Notes
AI goes beyond digital interfaces like ChatGPT and Claude and it’s now showing up in physical productivity-boosting devices. One of the most useful examples I’ve found is the AI voice recorder. A device slightly larger than a credit card, an AI voice recorder captures, transcribes, and analyzes conversations in real time. It acts as your own personal automatic note taker.
As a freelance writer and entrepreneur who has countless interviews, webinars, client conversations, and Zoom meetings each week, I’ve personally tried two AI voice recorders: the Comulytic Note Pro and the iFlyTek AI Recorder S6. And there are several other similar devices out there at varying price points. Each device is smaller than an iPhone 17 Pro Max.
The Comulytic actually came with a magnetic case to fit onto my phone. That way, it’s within reach and ready to record the moment I answer a call. It sends its recordings and transcripts to a cloud storage system, which I can access via an app. The iFlyTek AI Recorder S6 is a little larger and reminds me of the digital voice recorder I used in college 20 years ago. It’s slim, rectangular, and a little smaller than my palm. Unlike the Comulytic, this one has a screen where I can see the transcription, AI-generated summaries, and other features. It can also record videos. The Comulytic and iFlyTek AI voice recorders have changed the way I do meetings and classes. Here’s how.
I can engage in the conversation, not note-taking
Science says that handwriting notes is better for your brain compared to typing, which is why I still enjoy note-taking the old-fashioned way. However, in my line of work, where I’m spending most of my day writing and typing and talking, doing things the old-fashioned way can be downright painful at times, regardless of whether you’ve got one of the best and most reliable mechanical keyboards. I get cramps in my hands and wrists, even with proper form and daily stretching. And if I’m trying to take notes while in a client meeting or online session, I’m not able to give one or the other my full attention. Even with pages of notes, I still feel like I missed part of the discussion.
Using AI voice recorders to do some of the lifting has made my work easier, physically and mentally. Instead of dashing to take notes and pick out all the important details, I can be present in the conversation. When my wrists and hands are aching after a day of writing, I’m more selective about the notes I take. But using an AI voice recorder, I can focus on what’s being said instead of how I’m capturing the information for later. It removes a lot of risk on my end because I know I will have all of the most salient pieces of information without having to pick and choose in the moment. Clients have to repeat themselves less, which saves us both time.
I receive an action-ready to-do list after the meeting
At the end of a meeting, I review my notes and figure out what needs to happen next, usually in the form of research, deliverables, or other tasks. My next steps are only as good as the notes I took, and again, if I miss a key detail or otherwise couldn’t fully immerse myself in our conversation, the rest of the process suffers.
Both of my AI voice recorders analyze the conversations and present me with action steps, summaries, and follow-up items. I know exactly what needs to happen next based on the meeting. And it’s in a digital form in the same place where I’m already doing my work. As a rule, I always end client meetings by repeating a summary and takeaways so that the client has the opportunity to clarify anything we spoke about or what our next steps are. I still do this, and AI picks it up and runs with it. I’ve discovered that taking notes doesn’t have to compete with active listening. Conversations feel more natural since I’m not constantly staring at my keyboard or notepad. I love that my new process removes a layer of mental clutter and allows me to contribute in a more meaningful way.
I get clear, word-for-word transcriptions
One of the most valuable features of an AI voice recorder for me is seeing what was said. This goes beyond basic call recording, which, truthfully, I loathe. I don’t want to listen to a 30-minute phone conversation to find one key piece of information. When I have a digital transcript, I can use CTRL + F to search for keywords and find exactly what I need in seconds. Transcripts are a major time-saver for me, and AI voice recorders create them without a separate tool.
With the Comulytic, transcription is free and happens in real time. The iFlyTek does transcription too, but has a limit of up to 300 minutes per month. Beyond that, I need a paid subscription. With both devices, I can go back and look at notes from past calls and have searchable documents. It seems like a small convenience, but transcripts have become incredibly valuable to me over the years. Details that seem insignificant during a meeting might be important days or weeks later when I’m in a different phase of a project. I don’t have to hunt through notebooks or the pile of sticky notes on my desk. All of my records are centralized in one place (well, two since I use two devices for different purposes). Plus, I save money by not having to upload recordings into separate software or transcription apps that convert audio to text.
I can take notes on calls or meetings when I’m on the move
When I’m not writing about tech or working with clients, I’m a travel freelance writer exploring mountain towns and hiking trails and unique attractions. And when I’m traveling, sometimes I still need to take client meetings. I used to lug around my laptop and pop into a coffee shop or cafe when I needed to take calls. The best note-taking apps were handy enough, but now I have an easy, one-touch way to record conversations without needing them. It takes notes on my behalf no matter where I am.
One of the biggest benefits is that these devices work offline. I don’t have to be connected to Wi-Fi because each device has internal storage, and when I regain internet access, the content will sync to my account automatically. Even when I’m not speaking with clients or stakeholders, this makes AI voice recorders useful for capturing my own thoughts. Some of my best ideas come when I’m walking in the park or hiking to see a waterfall. Sometimes I meet people unexpectedly and want to get their story on the spot. I have come to appreciate how much flexibility an AI voice recorder provides. I don’t have to plan my workflow around the availability of a laptop or internet connection.
Not everyone is on board with AI voice recorders, and here’s why
As much as I appreciate AI voice recorders, I understand why some people are hesitant to embrace them. AI isn’t perfect, so there’s a risk of contextual misunderstanding. For example, AI might analyze your conversation and give an inaccurate summary or oddball to-do’s. Hopefully you’ll be able to spot this if you were immersed in the conversation, and it’s an easy fix. I haven’t experienced it (yet).
Some people are also put off by the idea of having AI listen to their conversations. Questions naturally arise about where the content is stored, who can access it, and whether the content is truly private. No one wants sensitive business information or client records on display, especially if it involves intellectual property. I believe transparency is essential. If I’m recording a meeting with AI, I let clients know. Most people appreciate being informed beforehand.
Tech
Today’s NYT Mini Crossword Answers for June 13
Looking for the most recent Mini Crossword answer? Click here for today’s Mini Crossword hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Wordle, Strands, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.
The Mini Crossword is a long one today, as always on Saturday. World Cup watchers, 4-Down is for you. Read on for all the answers. And if you could use some hints and guidance for daily solving, check out our Mini Crossword tips.
If you’re looking for today’s Wordle, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands answers, you can visit CNET’s NYT puzzle hints page.
Read more: Tips and Tricks for Solving The New York Times Mini Crossword
Let’s get to those Mini Crossword clues and answers.
The completed NYT Mini Crossword puzzle for June 13, 2026.
Mini across clues and answers
1A clue: Sentry’s “Stop!”
Answer: HALT
5A clue: ___ vera (succulent)
Answer: ALOE
6A clue: “That feeling should fade”
Answer: ITLLPASS
10A clue: $1,000,000, informally
Answer: MIL
11A clue: One of the Three Stooges
Answer: MOE
12A clue: Caller of balls and strikes
Answer: UMP
13A clue: ___-1 (class of drugs that includes Ozempic and Wegovy)
Answer: GLP
14A clue: Crunchy tendril used in Asian cuisine
Answer: PEASHOOT
17A clue: ___ Stadium, former home of the Mets
Answer: SHEA
18A clue: Silverstein who wrote “The Giving Tree”
Answer: SHEL
Mini down clues and answers
1D clue: Student’s slip
Answer: HALLPASS
2D clue: The “A” of GOAT
Answer: ALL
3D clue: Chop (off)
Answer: LOP
4D clue: Collective objective … or what the ends of 1-Down, 6-Across and 14-Across lead to
Answer: TEAMGOAL
6D clue: “Okay, it’s my turn”
Answer: IMUP
7D clue: The “T” of GOAT
Answer: TIME
8D clue: All by oneself
Answer: SOLO
9D clue: Month #9: Abbr.
Answer: SEPT
15D clue: Librarian’s warning
Answer: SHH
16D clue: Tee-___ (giggle)
Answer: HEE
Tech
Deep Robotics Puts Its Lynx S10 Prototype to the Ultimate Test by Equipping the Robot with Bear Paws on Arctic Ice

Deep Robotics sent a modified version of its compact Lynx S10 robot on a research vessel bound for the Arctic Ocean. The goal was straightforward. Engineers wanted to see how the small machine would handle real polar conditions that humans approach with extreme caution. The prototype completed its mission and became the first quadruped robot to step onto Arctic Ocean ice floes.
Given its size and capabilities, the standard Lynx S10 stands out. Even with the battery fitted, it weighs less than 20 kg, allowing one person to transport it to the field and get it up and running quickly. The robot’s sixteen precision joints enable it to fold and twist into tight locations that larger robots cannot access, such as rubble and narrow tunnels. On flat terrain, it moves at 8 meters per second. Furthermore, it can clear obstacles up to 50 cm tall, transition between rolling on wheels and walking on legs as the terrain becomes more difficult, and even rise into a bipedal position when extra height is required.
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Four ultra-wide-angle cameras with high dynamic range lenses, as well as front and rear LiDAR units, feed into a next-generation omnidirectional perception system for clear vision. The robot can generate maps, select paths, and avoid obstacles on its own. That’s because the machine is built to withstand a beating; its IP66 rating guarantees dust, rain, and heavy fog will not knock it down. And it will continue to function in temperatures ranging from -20 to 55 degrees Celsius. The battery life easily exceeds 3 hours, and if the power runs low, the robot can find and travel to a charging station on its own. The effective payload capacity is slightly more than 8 kilograms, with a maximum structural load of 120 kilograms.

When the Lynx S10 was dispatched on the Arctic expedition, the team made a few particular changes. They replaced the standard wheels with large biomimetic paws resembling polar bears’ broad soles. Anti-slip patterns were added to the contact surfaces to promote grip, and crampons provide the robot with extra traction on firm ice. They also tightened the seal on the body to fulfill the IP67 standard. In certain cases, they even increased the surface area of the limbs, allowing the legs to operate as paddles while the robot wades through mixed ice and water.

The studies tested this robot’s boundaries, as we were dealing with snow that periodically masked pools of melt water capable of swallowing a person or a machine whole. The bear-paw feet and crampons kept the robot firmly planted as it crawled and walked over slick, low-friction terrain. There was even one case where the machine simply glided over terrain that appeared solid but was actually sitting on a hidden water pocket. Later studies moved into zones with ice and water mixed together, and the robot’s improved legs simply carried it through the muck.

Now, these runs were more than just a publicity stunt, because the Lynx S10 prototype is still in development and was in alpha when it went on the trip. Deep Robotics worked with professionals at Sun Yat-sen University, Westlake University, and Hangzhou Dianzi University to create the best paw design and control algorithms. Every time the robot stepped on the ice or paddled across the icy water, the crew learned more about its balance, traction, and performance in freezing conditions.
Tech
Buying a laptop may soon come with an instant carbon score thanks to AI
When shopping for a new laptop, most buyers compare specifications like performance, battery life, display quality, and price. But a new AI-powered initiative could soon add another metric to that list: carbon footprint.
Researchers are developing AI agents capable of calculating and displaying the environmental impact of consumer electronics in real time, potentially giving shoppers instant access to sustainability information before making a purchase. The effort aims to bring the kind of emissions transparency already available in services like flight booking platforms to the world of consumer technology.
Today, consumers can easily compare the carbon emissions of different flights through services such as Google Flights. However, similar information is often difficult to find when purchasing electronics, despite the significant environmental impact associated with manufacturing, shipping, and operating devices like laptops, smartphones, and tablets.
The proposed AI system would automatically gather data from multiple sources, including manufacturing information, supply chains, energy consumption estimates, and transportation data, to generate an environmental score that consumers can understand at a glance. The goal is to make sustainability as visible and accessible as price tags and product specifications.
AI could make sustainability information easier to understand
One of the biggest challenges facing environmentally conscious shoppers is the complexity of carbon accounting. Determining the total emissions associated with a laptop can involve analyzing raw material extraction, component manufacturing, assembly, transportation, packaging, and long-term energy use.
Researchers believe AI agents are uniquely suited to handle this complexity because they can collect, process, and summarize large amounts of environmental data far faster than traditional reporting methods. Instead of forcing consumers to sift through lengthy sustainability reports, AI could generate simple, easy-to-understand comparisons between competing products.

The technology could also help manufacturers improve transparency. Companies may be encouraged to disclose more detailed environmental data if AI systems begin incorporating sustainability metrics directly into purchasing decisions.
The broader push comes amid growing concerns about the environmental impact of technology and artificial intelligence itself. Data centers, AI training, hardware manufacturing, and cloud infrastructure all contribute to increasing energy consumption worldwide, making sustainability reporting an increasingly important topic across the tech industry.
The future of shopping may involve environmental scores alongside prices
The concept extends beyond laptops. Researchers envision AI agents eventually helping consumers evaluate the environmental impact of a wide range of products, from smartphones and appliances to vehicles and household goods.

Such systems could also evolve into personal shopping assistants that automatically recommend products based not only on budget and features but also on sustainability preferences. While the technology is still in development, it reflects a broader shift toward greater transparency in consumer purchasing decisions. Just as nutrition labels changed how people buy food, carbon-impact information could eventually influence how consumers shop for technology.
For buyers, that means future laptop shopping may involve more than comparing processors and battery life. An AI-generated carbon score could become another key factor in deciding which device ends up in their bag.
Tech
Anthropic Blocks All Customers’ Access To Fable 5 And Mythos 5
It’s to ensure compliance with a government directive citing national security concerns.
Anthroic has disabled all of its customers’ access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5 in order to ensure compliance with an order it received from the government on Friday, June 12. All its other models and its Claude chatbot are not affected. The company said in its announcement that the US government wanted it to suspend all foreign nationals’ access to its newly launched AI models, whether they’re inside or outside the US and even if they’re Anthropic employees, citing national security concerns.
While the US government didn’t specify those concerns, Anthropic believes that it’s because the government heard about a method of jailbreaking Fable 5. The company has just launched the Fable AI model, which was designed to bring many of Mythos’ capabilities to the public, on June 9. If you’ll recall, Mythos is its state-of-the-art cybersecurity model that’s only available to its Project Glasswing partners. Fable’s capabilities “exceed” any previous model Anthropic has launched. It beat Pokémon FireRed during the company’s tests, for instance, while Claude failed to beat Pokémon Red, the original game it was based on.
Anthropic listed the measures it took to ensure that Fable was secure in its post. It said it instituted strong safeguards to “reduce the likelihood that Fable is misused for tasks related to cybersecurity” and added that its “safeguards are so strong that many users have complained that they are overly broad.” The company also explained that any provider cannot possibly ensure perfect resistance to jailbreak attempts, and every model is vulnerable to jailbreaks made especially for it. “We aimed to make jailbreaks either narrow (in the case of non-universal jailbreaks) or very expensive to produce (in the case of universal jailbreaks), and to combine this with thorough monitoring to quickly detect and shut down any successful attacks,” it said about its defense strategy.
The government apparently gave the company verbal evidence for one potential narrow, non-universal jailbreak that an unnamed entity shared with officials. Anthropic promised to share more details over the next 24 hours, but it clarified that it disagrees that a potential jailbreak should be cause for recalling a commercial model.
“As we have stated publicly, we believe the government should have the ability to block unsafe deployments, as part of a statutory process that is transparent, fair, clear, and grounded in technical facts,” Anthropic, which has been vocal about its warnings about the need for more AI oversight, wrote. “This action does not adhere to those principles.”
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