TL;DR
Google capped Meta’s Gemini access due to compute constraints. Meta told staff to use AI tokens more efficiently and is shifting to its own Muse Spark model.
Google capped Meta’s Gemini access due to compute constraints. Meta told staff to use AI tokens more efficiently and is shifting to its own Muse Spark model.
Google has placed limits on Meta’s use of its Gemini AI models because it cannot provide as much computing capacity as the social media company wanted, the Financial Times reported on Sunday. The restrictions have affected several Google clients, with Meta hit particularly hard.
The move has had a knock-on effect on Meta’s internal projects. The company has told staff to make more efficient use of AI tokens, according to three people familiar with the matter cited by the FT. Both Google and Meta declined to comment.
Meta had initially relied on Gemini, which proved better than its own Llama open-source models, to automate safety processes like removing harmful content and wiping out scams. It has increasingly been shifting workloads to Muse Spark, a new internal model, as it looks to reduce dependence on external AI providers. Google itself is so compute-constrained that it agreed to pay SpaceX $920 million a month for access to 110,000 Nvidia GPUs, calling it “bridge capacity” to meet surging demand for Gemini Enterprise.
The situation illustrates how the AI compute shortage is reshaping relationships between the industry’s largest companies. Google, which owns one of the world’s largest pools of AI infrastructure and is spending over $180 billion on capex this year, still cannot serve all of its customers’ demand. That it is rationing access to a company as large as Meta, while simultaneously renting GPUs from a rocket company, is the clearest signal yet that AI infrastructure buildouts have not kept pace with consumption.
For Meta, the dependence on a competitor’s AI models was always an uncomfortable arrangement. The company cut 8,000 jobs in May and redirected billions toward AI infrastructure, with capex guidance of $115 to $135 billion for 2026. It has reassigned 7,000 workers to AI-focused roles and launched Muse Spark under its Superintelligence Labs division. The Gemini restrictions accelerate a transition Meta was already pursuing, from relying on external frontier models to building internal alternatives capable of handling critical workloads like content moderation at scale.
The broader pattern is consistent across the industry. Demand for AI compute is growing faster than even the most aggressive infrastructure spending can supply. Google is buying capacity from SpaceX. Anthropic is renting an entire data centre from SpaceX. Meta is being told to use fewer tokens by its own cloud provider. The AI boom’s most tangible bottleneck is not algorithms or talent. It is the physical infrastructure required to run them.
Two of Amazon’s top Prime Day MacBook Air deals have been extended, resulting in discounts of up to $450 off.
After many M5 MacBook Air deals sold out during Prime Day, two of the top choices at Amazon have been extended into the weekend. Save $450 on the 13-inch MacBook Air M5 with 16GB of RAM and 1TB of storage.
On sale for $1,149.99, only select colors are available at press time due to the increased demand after Apple raised prices on Thursday.
Buy 1TB 13″ MacBook Air for $1,149.99
Need additional screen real estate? The standard 15-inch MacBook Air with Apple’s M5 chip, 16GB of memory, and a 512GB SSD is also marked down to $1,149.99, reflecting a $350 price cut off Apple’s new MSRP.
You can compare prices across retailers in our MacBook Air Price Guide for offers on CTO models as well.
Apple is still expected to update the Mac Studio with the M5 Ultra in 2026 and an M7 Ultra version in 2028, but don’t expect major changes to the form.
The Apple Silicon chip series consists of four tiers, with the standard base model, Pro, and Max variants appearing in every generation. The fourth, the Ultra chip, hasn’t seen a release since the M3 Ultra, with the M4 Ultra skipped entirely.
The Mac Studio is the model of Mac to get if you want the massive number of cores that the Ultra model provides. If Mark Gurman’s “Power On” newsletter for Bloomberg on Sunday is accurate, you won’t have to wait long for the next release.
Gurman writes that there are two updates to the Mac Studio on the way. The near-term model will be the M5 Ultra, which is due to arrive later in 2026.
The second update is further in the future, with an M7 Ultra expected sometime in 2028.
The lack of an M6 Ultra release seems to correlate with another Gurman story from June 25. One that has Apple skipping the higher-end M6 chips in favor of bringing out AI-oriented M7 Pro and Max versions in 2027.
As for what to expect when those Ultra-equipped models arrive, Gurman provides bad news if you want more than just performance improvements.
He is informed that internal changes have been made to the Mac Studio. Chiefly, this consists of a better heatsink, which will improve thermal performance under heavy loads.
A major redesign is not anticipated for the M5 Ultra model. As for the M7, there’s a slightly better chance, but Apple’s tendency to stick to model designs for long periods of time doesn’t bode well for a revamp.
One curiously absent element from the report is any mention of the M5 Max model. Gurman only talks about the Ultra, and doesn’t refer to any other versions of Mac Studio in the newsletter.
Previously, in March, he did refer to Mac Studio models in plural form for the 2026 launches. The lack of a Max reference in the latest report could simply be a decision made during the writing process, in that he didn’t feel the need to bring it up.
Micron, the Boise, Idaho-based memory chip maker, has captured Wall Street’s heart. Whether the love affair endures will heavily depend on how long the AI-driven supply crunch for memory chips lasts.
Micron promises that it has shored up its position for the long term, which would allow it to withstand a sudden drop in demand or overcapacity of supply. And Wall Street has become a believer, helping Micron briefly surpass the market valuation of Meta and Tesla for the first time on Thursday, though it floated back down by Friday to nearly match them.
Specifically Micron closed Friday’s trading with a market cap close to $1.27 trillion, while Meta was at $1.39 trillion and Tesla was at $1.42 trillion. Micron’s stock has soared over 236% in the past month alone, closing Friday at $1,132 a share. In comparison, it spent years upon years before mid-2025 at below $100 a share.
It’s a dizzying rise for a company that most consumers associated with the tiny memory cards that, back in the day, were commonly needed to boost PCs, smartphones, or other device storage.
Wall Street isn’t sweating over that product line. Micron is benefiting from the AI data center buildout boom that has created a shortage of system memory chips, both DRAM and NAND, which Micron makes, particularly High-Bandwidth Memory (HBM). A single AI server requires magnitudes more memory than a laptop.
AI system makers like Nvidia, as well as the hyperscalers building their own systems, are buying up large quantities of memory, such as Microsoft, Amazon AWS, Google, Meta and Oracle. This is forcing all the other companies who need memory to hoard it as well, from PC makers like Dell and HP, to other kinds of device makers.
This lack of supply, which has been dubbed RAMageddon, is predicted to persist into 2027. And it’s already driving up the price of consumer electronics like Apple products and Xbox consoles.
With the whole tech industry clamoring for more memory, Micron’s delivered blockbuster third-quarter earnings last week. Revenue quadrupled year-over-year to $41.45 billion, and profits skyrocketed from $1.88 billion to $28.2 billion over the same period. Micron also provided a positive outlook, forecasting fourth-quarter revenue of between $49 billion and $51 billion.
And Wall Street, which has been eager to find more public AI-related companies that may do as well as Nvidia, became even more enamored.
The historic problem for memory chip makers like Micron and Samsung is that building out manufacturing facilities to increase capacity is a time-consuming, expensive endeavor. And demand often falls just as companies can increase capacity, creating a glut and subsequent price drop.
Micron got ahead of any AI bust chatter by emphasizing a series of long-term supply agreements, including with Nvidia and AI lab Anthropic, that would presumably protect it. The company said in its earnings presentation that it has signed 16 strategic customer agreements across the data center, consumer, and auto market segments, which it expects to fundamentally transform its business model.
That seemed to convince a number of analysts that this company could be another long-term, profitable investment. In a research note, William Blair tech analyst Sebastien Naji noted demand growth continues to outpace the rate that new cleanroom space can come online.
“Given the strong likelihood of continued ASP growth in the coming quarters and improving revenue visibility thanks to a rapidly expanding set of long-term agreements (SCAs) with key customers, we see potential for more durable earnings growth and reiterate our Outperform rating,” Naji wrote.
Whether Micron really can sustain itself for long-term without a bust cycle remains to be seen. But for a brief moment on Thursday, this U.S. company was more valuable than some of the industry’s giants.
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Riot Games is changing how its Vanguard anti-cheat runs on PCs, pulling back from its always-on behavior and limiting when it’s active on players’ machines. With a new update, Vanguard will no longer automatically start when a PC boots – at least not for everyone. Instead, it can run only…
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Because they dry fast, they’re also great for swimming. They’ve replaced traditional rash guards for a lot of people. I wear mine to the beach and into the pool. When I go on vacation, I take three or four sun hoodies with me and often end up doing laundry in town when I no longer have any sun hoodies that aren’t salty from sweat and/or the waves of the ocean in Maine.
On a hot, sunny day, they’re also often cooler than bare skin. Yes, long-sleeve sun hoodies do bundle you up, but because the fabric is so light and breathable—and I wear mine just a little baggy—they block sunlight and shed heat so well that I find them more comfortable than any other clothing or no clothing.
Here are four favorites from my sun hoodie collection—I have a few more that I wouldn’t recommend or that are now past season and out of production.
Heavy Rotation: The sun hoodie I wear the most is the EMS Sunguard Overhead Hoodie. It’s very soft and comfortable with a generous cut that wicks sweat away. I wear it in the city pool, and after a few minutes sitting back on the lounge chair, it’s dry enough to wear into a grocery store without it dripping everywhere.
Heavy Duty: The heaviest sun hoodie I have, and the one I’d wear up a mountain, is The North Face Summit Series Direct Sun Hoodie. This is a slightly thicker hoodie, though it’s still light and very breathable. Because it has a zipper, you can also get more ventilation if you need it, so the weight is never an issue. When zipped all the way up, the shirt also has a collar to protect your neck and jaw from wind or sun. There is a proprietary finish applied to the fabric of The North Face’s SPF-rated clothing, which varies by garment.
More Discreet: “Day-to-night” garments that transition seamlessly from the office to a casual dinner and a night out are something of a cliche in women’s fashion. But sometimes you really do want something that can pull double duty. When I’m going to be wearing a sun hoodie into a bar or restaurant, I reach for the Blackstrap Brackish Sun Hoodie, which looks more like a regular shirt than any other arrow in my quiver. I have it in the shark tooth jory, a red and black pattern that looks like something I’d wear even if I was not trying to keep the sun off my back. I also really like that it’s safe to wipe lenses off on—I’ve scratched up too many pairs of eyeglasses and am extremely careful about what I’ll wipe them with.
Totally Natural: I tested an earlier version of the Free Fly Bamboo Lightweight Performance Hoodie and really like it. Bamboo is supersoft and is naturally odor-resistant, though less than wool. This hoodie wears a little on the warmer side and only offers SPF 20 protection, but it dries relatively quickly, and the loose cut is excellent.
Hoodies with shorts are a little controversial in some quarters, but I am happy that our colleagues at GQ have blessed the look—repeatedly. The single best way to wear a sun hoodie is with swim trunks. You may think swim trunks are just for the pool or the beach, but I would submit that they have the potential to become the male equivalent of yoga pants, which you can wear everywhere in the summer (again, GQ agrees). Luckily, I’ve also been testing some of those.
Eye-Catching: These Minnow Boardies in a red-and-white striped pattern called Gondola have a Venetian flair. They’re on the short side (6-inch inseam) but are stretchy and soft. They’re advertised as comfortable enough for all-day wear, and I can confirm they are—into the pool, out of the pool, off to happy hour. They are showstoppers, but you’ll need a dark and neutral-colored sun hoodie to pair with them.
Today’s best phone cameras are astonishingly capable when it comes to taking pictures. With large sensors, wide apertures and a wealth of extra software features, they can take images that rival what you’d expect from pro-level mirrorless cameras.
I’ve thoroughly tested all of today’s best camera phones, including the iPhone 17 Pro, Galaxy S26 Ultra and Leica Leitzphone in my time as both phone reviewer and professional photographer.
But I still wouldn’t ever want to fully replace my camera with just a phone. I have a few key reasons why.
While cameras have come in all shapes and sizes over the last few decades, they’re designed to be held the same way, with your fingers naturally resting in the same places when pressing the shutter button. They feel like a natural fit and even smaller compact cameras such as the Fujifilm X100VI or my own Leica Q3 43 still allow you to hold them up to take your shot in a typically comfortable way.
Phones aren’t built to be cameras first, so they naturally force a different way of holding them. The big touchscreens mean you have to delicately hold the phone by its edges to avoid accidentally touching something on screen, and with no viewfinder, there’s no option to hold them up to your eye, as you would with most regular cameras.
When holding a phone like a camera, it can feel like you have to be exceptionally delicate with it, especially if you’re quickly shooting one-handed. I often worry I’m going to drop it.
Phones are small and thin (at least compared to most cameras), making it difficult to get a firm grip, and tapping an on-screen button to take a photo always feels awkward. I worry about dropping the phone as I shuffle my fingers around into the right position. Even those phones that offer physical shutter buttons on the edge (or let you use the volume key as a shutter) still feel like you’re holding them in a way they were never truly designed for.
Sure, you can get camera grips or cases that help bulk out the phone to give you something to hold onto and some of those even offer shutter buttons and settings wheels to let you use them like a compact camera. I’ve tried many of them, but none feel as good as holding an actual camera.
Today’s best phone cameras can take truly stunning images. I’ve been blown away by the photos I’ve been able to capture with Xiaomi and Leica’s Leitzphone, especially when using its filmic color profiles. But even this phone — arguably the best camera phone money can buy — doesn’t fully compete with a real camera.
Leica and Xiaomi’s Leitzphone can take some beautiful images, but even so, its quality isn’t on par with an actual Leica camera.
And how can it? While it has a larger image sensor than most phones, it’s still tiny compared to the vast majority of cameras out there. As is its lens. It’s why all smartphone cameras have to rely heavily on software image processing to squeeze every bit of quality they can from their sensors. Some take this way too far with images that can look seriously overprocessed, with heavy-handed sharpening being a common factor in most phones’ quality.
In reality, if you just look at these images on your Instagram feed, you’d probably never realize they were taken on a phone. The often “crunchy”-looking over-sharpened aesthetic a lot of phones produce typically only becomes apparent when you zoom into the fine details. But those signs will still be there, often alongside increased saturation and an over-reliance on HDR techniques to control highlights and shadows.
Pro cameras with larger image sensors and higher-quality lenses can produce far more natural-looking details without an algorithm stepping in.
The Google Pixel 10 Pro uses generative AI to add detail back into its images when taken at over 30x zoom. It’s a neat idea in theory, but I’d rather know that everything in my images is what I actually captured and not what an algorithm thinks should be there.
Speaking of algorithms, I can say with certainty that I don’t want generative AI anywhere near my photos. That’s becoming increasingly difficult to avoid with phone cameras. Google proudly boasted that it uses generative AI to upscale its zoom photos on the Pixel 10 Pro while some of Samsung’s new camera features involve using AI to replace items of clothing on your subject. Apple’s upcoming iOS 27 will even allow you to change the perspective of an image after you’ve taken it, using AI to create an angle that you never actually took in the first place.
Almost all phones offer some kind of AI in their image-taking workflow. Even phones that aren’t actively changing the background or other elements in your images are still using generative tools to upscale your photos to make them look “better.”
The result is that it’s difficult to say that you’ve really taken an image when you don’t know how much of it has been reconstructed by software. Oppo explained that its recent Find X9 Ultra doesn’t use any generative AI when in its Master mode — and honestly, you can tell; shots in its regular mode can certainly look over-processed, especially when it comes to the artificially-lifted shadows. Switching to Master mode (and thereby bypassing all the AI) is the way to get the best-looking shots from this phone. I found the same when using the camera on the Honor Magic 8 Pro.
I didn’t realize the Oppo Find X9 Pro was using generative AI in its telephoto zoom shots, but that’s clearly what’s happening here as it’s tried to artificially recreate the face of the person in the foreground — and it’s not done it well.
Call me a purist, a luddite or a technophobe, but AI has no place in my photography — either at the point of capture or when I’m editing my images later. I want to know that what I captured in my finished shot is what I, the photographer, actually wanted in that frame, not just what an algorithm spat out.
I own and frequently use cameras that are decades old. My Pentax K1000 film camera was released in 1976, while one of my favorite digital cameras — the Sony RX1R — is now 13 years old and still going strong. A phone’s life cycle is much shorter, with even top models receiving security updates for only up to seven years.
This Yashica A was released in the 1950s making it around 70 years old yet I was still able to take some great photos with it.
Once that support period is over, your phone is simply not safe to use and it’s time to upgrade. Sure, the idea is that by then, new technology would be available, so the phone you’d be upgrading to would be even better than your old one. But it still means that the phone camera you’re used to shooting with, which delivers the look and tones you like, simply isn’t going to hang around as long as a regular camera.
That lifespan can really sting, especially as advanced camera phones tend to demand more money — like the £1,700 ($2,245) Leitzphone. Are you better off buying one expensive device that does everything for a shorter period of time, or spending less on a regular phone and also buying a camera that’ll last you much longer? That’s a decision only you can make.
The Pixel 10 Pro has a long software support period of around seven years.
I might be vain here, but as a professional photographer, I simply wouldn’t want to be seen only taking photos on a phone. It doesn’t matter if that phone is the best in the world at taking images; there’s a certain stigma around it that suggests a level of amateurism. I’m not really talking about what it looks like to strangers on the street — if anything, using a phone allows you to blend in and become effectively invisible, which is amazing for things like street photography.
I’m talking about more professional scenarios. If I turned up to a shoot for a commercial client paying me five figures for my images and all I used was a phone, I don’t think I’d ever get work from that client again. I could argue all I want that the quality is good enough, that they’re paying for my expertise and that the end images will still be great but it wouldn’t matter. That client would see the phone and wonder why the hell they’re paying so much for someone to take some snaps on a phone — they could have done that themselves and saved a ton of money in the process.
Some of my shoots involve a lot of gear and setup. If I turned up just with a phone, I’d never get hired again.
Don’t get me wrong, I don’t believe that only the best gear can take the best photos — I’ve done commercial shoots using Canon’s cheapest 50mm “nifty fifty” lens and had images taken with that lens licensed for luxury photo books. Most clients care about the images, not the equipment you’re using to get them. But there’s a balance to be struck here and using professional gear suggests that you are a professional. Turning up to a shoot — commercial, wedding, whatever — and pulling out my iPhone for the job isn’t going to do my photography career any favors.
I’ve saved my most important one for last because it’s the biggest stumbling block for me when using a phone as a camera for extended periods. If I’m taking images — whether wandering around a Tuscan village on holiday, taking photos for my YouTube channel or on set for a commercial job — I don’t want distractions that pull me away from the creative mindset I’m trying to maintain.
Using my phone for any purpose already means battling with near-constant incoming notifications from my email, from Slack, WhatsApp, Instagram and many others. It’s a perpetual onslaught of things going on that makes it increasingly difficult to concentrate on the task at hand. Sure, you can turn Do Not Disturb on — and I do — but I also don’t want to miss important phone calls or other messages I might need to act on. So I don’t like switching things off altogether either.
One of the reasons I’ve enjoyed using film cameras recently is that there are absolutely zero distractions so you can focus completely on staying in the moment.
Using a dedicated camera feels like choosing the right tool for the right job. Unlike our phones, it’s not trying to be something else by doing 1,000 other things in the background. My camera doesn’t come with bubble-pop games pre-installed and it’s not vibrating every ten seconds while my friends share memes on our WhatsApp group. Using the camera means shutting off from everything else going on in my life and focusing on the joy of image creation.
I don’t want one device that can do all the things. Sometimes it’s better to have a product that does only one thing but it does that one thing exceptionally well. And just as I don’t want a wrench that’s also a DAB radio and a meat thermometer, I don’t want a camera that’s a games console, an exercise tracker and my portal to social media.
It’s why I — and many other photographers around the world — have also really enjoyed getting into analog film photography recently as it strips out even more of the technology and allows for a more simplistic, arguably more authentic way to take images.
I use my camera increasingly as a way of finding some zen in the chaos of life and not feeling like I’m constantly switched on. It’s why my camera makes me feel more inspired. Picking it up means making an intentional decision to want to go and take photos, not just whipping out my phone to get a quick snap if I happen to see a cute dog. That intentionality invokes a deeper sense of creativity. And more often than not, it results in better, more meaningful photos.
I took this on an iPhone 14 Pro, so I know that phones can take exceptionally good images. I’d just rather use a regular camera for my real photography.
As the adage goes, the best camera is the one you always have with you, but that doesn’t mean it’ll always be the one you can take your best photos with. I love using phone cameras and I’m thrilled that I can have something so capable in my pockets for those occasions where I don’t have my camera with me.
But phones will always be supplementary cameras for me — great for those spur-of-the-moment opportunities or for shooting behind-the-scenes content. And yes, I will sometimes opt to use it on those outings where I don’t want a camera round my neck. But I’ll still always have a regular camera for my work and whether it’s a modern digital or a vintage film camera, it’ll always be the thing I reach for when I want to switch off from the world and truly focus on the joy of taking photos.
From Dublin, the company will support core regulated activities across risk, compliance, trading, operations and technology.
Trading 212, a European online investment platform, is set to open a new European hub based out of Dublin, a move that will generate 40 jobs over the course of the next three years. The expansion will enable the Dublin location to support Trading 212’s core activities across risk, compliance, trading, operations and technology.
Headquartered in London, Trading 212 was established in 2004 and employs more than 750 people globally, with a client base in the UK, EU, Australia and other international markets. The Dublin office, located at Sobo Works, Windmill Lane, will serve as a strategic EU regulatory and capital markets hub within the company’s post-Brexit multi-hub operating model.
The future roles will include specialist positions across trading, risk, compliance, finance, technology and operations. The new team will play a critical role in delivering and supporting a multi-asset execution function and strengthening Trading 212’s European regulatory operations and governance capabilities.
Commenting on the announcement, Michael Byrne, the CEO of Trading 212 Ireland, said: “Dublin is central to Trading 212’s international growth. As our hub for equity, ETF and CFD execution, Ireland gives us world-class regulatory infrastructure, deep talent and a position bridging Europe’s two most important financial markets.”
Michael Lohan, the CEO of IDA Ireland added: “Ireland has built a thriving ecosystem for financial services and technology companies, underpinned by a highly skilled workforce and a culture of innovation. Trading 212’s decision to invest here further strengthens our fintech cluster and highlights our competitive offering internationally.”
Late last week, Future Cast – an innovation, education and R&D nonprofit focused on the construction and quarrying industries – also announced a significant investment and job creation. The organisation has invested €3.25m into developing a 200-year old Co Leitrim church into a 10,000 sq ft centre for innovation, R&D and science.
The funds will also enable the creation of 15 new jobs over the coming years, with opportunities for jobseekers in concrete and material science, machine design, prototype development and specialist training.
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Japanese telecommunications operator KDDI Corporation disclosed a data breach where threat actors gained access to one of its email systems used by five other internet service providers (ISPs) in the country.
The company says that it discovered the compromise on June 17 and responded immediately by blocking the attacker and implementing defense measures.
The investigation determined that the hackers exploited a vulnerability in an unnamed third-party software that KDDI Corporation used on its system.
“Although technical defensive measures have already been implemented for the system, there remains a possibility that customers’ email addresses and passwords were obtained by unauthorized third parties as a result of the incident,” KDDI warns.
KDDI is one of Japan’s largest ISPs, with 45,000 employees and an annual revenue of $32.4 billion. It is a public entity that has operated since 2000, following the merger of IDO, DDI, and KDD, Japan’s former state-monopoly international telecommunications provider.
The company says that the incident impacted the following five ISP operators and their email services:
Although the investigation into the incident is still underway and the exact number of impacted accounts has yet to be determined, KDDI said it may have exposed the email addresses and passwords of up to 14,22 million customers.
This figure includes current and former customers, as well as inactive accounts that may no longer be in use.
Another mitigating factor, according to KDDI, is that some passwords were stored in hashed and/or encrypted form, meaning that they cannot be readily abused for account hijacks even if exposed.
However, KDDI did not specify what type of encryption was used or what percentage of accounts had passwords stored in plaintext.
KDDI says it has been contacting affected ISPs since June 17 and has also notified Japan’s Personal Information Protection Commission and the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications.
The company is currently working with affected ISPs to implement additional security measures to mitigate the risks arising from this exposure.
Meanwhile, customers who may have been exposed are advised to reset their email account passwords as soon as possible. If two-factor authentication (2FA) is available, it would be prudent to set it up as well for additional protection.
Security teams log 54% of successful attacks and alert on just 14%. The rest move through your environment unseen.
The Picus whitepaper shows how breach and attack simulation tests your SIEM and EDR rules so threats stop slipping by detection.
Most of your riding gear shows clear signs of wearing out. Boots split, gloves thin out, and jackets fray. With these, you can tell when it’s time for a replacement. But helmets are arguably sneakier, because, contrary to appearances, they do have a lifespan – and it’s not tied to how scruffy they look.
The five-year rule serves as a rough yardstick for when it’s time to replace your helmet with a new one. It may sound harsh, especially if you’ve spent money on customizing your beloved helmet, but there’s a pretty solid reason behind it. The component at fault is the EPS liner, which is basically an expanded polystyrene foam that sits between your skull and the hard outer shell.
This liner is made out of the same material that cushions a new TV inside its box; because it’s foam, it will absorb some of your sweat when you ride. Then, when it dries out, it shrinks a little and stiffens. It’s estimated that the foam will shrink 3 to 5% annually. Use a helmet for five years, and the problem starts to add up.
Helmet manufacturers recommend you stick to the five-year rule, too. helmet. Arai, for example, suggests that owners replace helmets after five years of use. It appears the foam degrades even when the helmet isn’t in use, though, as the company caps its warranty at seven years from the date of manufacture. Shoei also draws the line at five years from the first retail sale. In fact, it goes a step further, recommending a new helmet even if the EPS liner still looks good and the helmet has never been in a crash.
There are ways to tell if it’s indeed the time for a replacement, in case you want to double-check. You can start with the shell and hunt for cracks or any deformation by running your fingers over it. Then there’s the EPS itself. If it starts showing through on the inside, that means it’s either too worn out or has shrunk significantly, meaning it’s time for a change.
A more surefire way is to wear the helmet, fasten the strap, and give your head a little shake. If the helmet twists around or doesn’t fit as it used to, that’s your cue. Of course, if you ever crash, you should replace it right away, no matter how fresh it looks. At that point, the question turns to what to look for when buying a new motorcycle helmet.
Sometimes, it’s about the mileage rather than the actual passage of time. Generally, the five-year rule assumes you’re clocking somewhere around 6,000 to 8,000 miles a year. That works out to about 40,000 to 50,000 miles over five years. Commuters who ride more than that should replace helmets after two or three years, because the liner may wear out much faster. Frequent riding also means more mishaps, including drops. These are usually fine, but can still cause damage in some cases.
Even if you’re on the other end of the spectrum and barely use your helmet, though, you’ll still have to replace your helmet after five years. Moisture can slowly evaporate out of the foam or seep in; either way, it’s bad for the liner. Storing it carefully can probably stretch that out a bit, but why risk it? Besides, if your helmet is super old, it may miss out on the comfort and safety upgrades available on newer units, like the MIPS helmet technology that minimizes rotational forces in a crash.
Signals from AirPods solved two crimes: a woman was arrested for refusing to leave an Apple Store, and a Bangladeshi presenter’s iPhone was stolen, all in this week’s Apple Crime Blotter.
The latest from an occasional AppleInsider feature, looking at the world of Apple-related crime.
A school board vice president in upstate New York has been indicted on child pornography and child endangerment charges, and child sex abuse material has been found on his iPhone. That’s according to court documents cited by CNY Central.
Travis J. Longo, the 46-year-old former vice president of the Cazenovia Board of Education, allegedly “engaged in a pattern of sexually explicit communications with a child under the age of 12.” A search of the iPhone 17 Pro Max, authorities say, led to the offending images, which were discovered by a Department of Homeland Security agent.
Following his arrest, the rest of the board unanimously voted to compel Longo’s resignation.
A 59-year-old Texas woman was arrested for criminal trespass after she refused to leave the Apple Store at Orland Square Mall in Illinois.
According to Southwest Regional Publishing, the incident took place in April. The woman went to the Apple Store to have her iPhone serviced, but was unhappy with the service.
After she “became loud,” she refused to leave the store, declaring that the mall was “public property.”
After refusing to leave, she was charged with criminal trespass.
On Memorial Day weekend, a crime victim followed a signal from a pair of stolen AirPods, which led police to a trove of stolen materials.
WLAF explains it started when a Kentucky man reported that numerous items had been stolen from his vehicle and that, when he followed the Find My iPhone signal, his AirPods were showing as located near a Popeyes.
The victim also noted that his stolen credit card had been used at a Love’s Travel Stop and viewed surveillance footage showing a GMC Sierra.
Police later located the vehicle, in which the alleged thief was asleep in the back.
The man claimed he was innocent and offered to let the detective search the car, which soon turned up credit cards belonging to the victim. Along with items paid for with those cards, some of which had receipts.
The man, currently on probation in Florida, was charged with theft of property under $2,500 and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, and more charges are expected.
In another car burglary case solved with the help of an AirPods signal, a Wyoming teenager has been arrested in connection with a series of car break-ins.
According to Wyoming News Now, the teenager has been accused of breaking into eight cars in a Cheyenne neighborhood and stealing AirPods, guns, and other items.
That AirPod theft led the owner to track them, which had the teen’s residence pop up repeatedly. He was eventually arrested at the courthouse, while there in connection with an unrelated case, and he also had an outstanding warrant in yet another case.
He was charged with six counts of burglary and two counts of aggravated burglary.
A man from the Pennsylvania town of Jersey Shore has reported that his iPhone, and also a Rolex, had been stolen from him in a “disturbance.”
Fox 56 reports the incident took place on June 11 and a 2013 silver Chevrolet Silverado was “involved.” It is described as a “theft [with] no force.”
On May 31, an “unidentified person” entered the Children Aid Society in the Bronx and took an iPad and a laptop.
Per News 12 Brooklyn, the NYPD is “looking to identify someone they say is wanted” in the burglary. Anyone with information is urged to notify police.
Neel Hurerzahan, an actress and cricket show presenter based in Dhaka, Bangladesh, had her iPhone 17 Pro Max stolen in mid-June.
According to Daily New Nation, Hurerzahan posted a picture of the possible thief on her Facebook page.
“This afternoon, this man in the picture (white shirt) ran away from Shilpakala Academy with my iPhone 17 Pro Max (orange),” she wrote, asking for help in finding the device.
Another media professional from Asia reported having an Apple product stolen. This time it was Kim Hwan, a South Korean broadcaster who was in Guadalajara, Mexico, to cover the World Cup.
According to Asia Business Daily, Kim said on Instagram that his bag, containing his MacBook, was stolen from a hotel lobby, and that the computer contained “broadcasting materials.”
Kim went on to track the computer, first to a Walmart and then to the vacant lot behind it, where he ultimately found both the MacBook and an iPad. He believed that the thief “became aware of the tracking and abandoned the devices before fleeing.”
However, Kim has not recovered other items, including cash, a credit card, and his ID.
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