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Best Over-Ear Headphones of 2026

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Focal Bathys: French audio company Focal is known for its high-end speakers and headphones. You might call it the Bowers & Wilkins of France. Back in 2022, it finally did done what a lot of high-end audio companies have had to do in this age of on-the-go wireless music listening: They made active noise-canceling Bluetooth headphones. Easily one of the best-sounding wireless headphones, the pricey Bathys (now down to $600 from their list price of $850) feature not only wireless connectivity but also a built-in digital-to-analog converter for USB wired listening with any computer, smartphone or tablet with USB-C. Read the full review.

Noble Fokus Apollo: Noble is an audiophile brand known more for its in-ear monitor headphones, but it released a wireless noise-canceling headphone called the Fokus Apollo a couple of years ago that sounds terrific and features a special dual-driver design that combines a 40mm dynamic driver with a 14.5mm planar-magnetic driver (the upgraded $699 Fokus Apollo Pro arrived in May of 2026). The result is rich, open sound, with tight bass and excellent treble detail and clarity, especially for a wireless headphone (it sounds a tad better in wired mode but it’s not a huge difference). It’s more dynamic than many monitor headphones that have a flatter, more neutral sound profile, but it still leans toward being an accurate, well-balanced headphone.

Anker Soundcore Space One: While the newer Soundcore Space 2 offer a more streamlined design and beter performance across the board, the Soundcore Space One by Anker are still a decent at less $100, offering a strong feature set along with good sound quality and performance. They can’t compete sound-wise with many of the premium noise-canceling models, but you don’t feel like you’re giving up that much on the sound front to save a good deal of money. They lack a bit of that natural, refined quality you look for in a great set of cans, but the Space One sound respectable, with decent clarity and bass definition and measure up well to the more expensive Soundcore Space 45.

CMF Headphone Pro: Nothing started out with a few different wireless earbuds but has now branched into the over-ear headphones market with its eye-catching Nothing Headphone (1) and the budget-oriented CMF Headphone Pro, which also have a pretty unique look and feature interchangeable ear pads in a few different color options. I was expecting all that much from these headphones, but after using them for a week, they check a lot of boxes for a top value headphone, including a comfortable fit (they pretty lightweight at 283 grams), decent build quality and good sound quality that’s highlighted by powerful bass that can be dialed up or down with a slider control on the left ear cup (you can also tweak the sound in the companion app). The Skullcandy Crusher 2 headphones have a similar slider, but the CMF’s bass doesn’t get to head-rattling levels (the Crusher 2’s bass literally makes the headphones vibrate).

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Earfun Wave Pro: Earfun has made some very solid budget earbuds, and now it’s entered the full-size ANC headphone space with a few different over-ear models, including the Wave Pro (add the code EWPROCNET at checkout on Amazon to receive an additional 10% off). While they may not sound as good as premium noise-canceling headphones from Bose or Sony, they’re comfortable to wear, feature decent sound with punchy bass (they’re a bit lacking in clarity and bass definition compared to more expensive models), and they offer respectable noise canceling (you can toggle between two levels of ANC) and voice-calling performance. The headphones do come with a cable for wired listening — you can plug into an inflight entertainment system — but the noise canceling cuts off when you’re in wired mode, which is unfortunate.

Edifier W830NB: The Edifier W830NB remain a good value noise-canceling headphone pick. They look slightly more premium than their predecessor, W820NB Plus, and and are fairly lightweight (265 grams) and comfortable, with cushy memory foam ear pads. They also sound very good for their price, offering decent clarity and fairly well-defined bass with an amply wide sound stage (they lack the refinement and depth of higher-end headphones, but you can’t expect the world from sub-$80 headphones). You can tweak the sound profile in Edifier’s companion app for iOS and Android.

QCY H3 Pro: QCY is another Chinese brand like Tribit, Earfun and plenty of others that make budget-priced headphones that sound better than you’d think they would for their relatively low price (the company says the Q stands for quality, C stands for creative and Y stands for youth). Its new-for-2024 H3 Pro headphones are similar to models in this price range from 1More, Tribit and Edifier, but they arguably sound a touch better and I found them relatively comfortable to wear, as they feature a lightweight design and memory foam ear pads.

Bose QuietComfort Headphones: When Bose released its new flagship QuietComfort Ultra Headphones in late 2023, it also replaced the QuietComfort 45s with a slightly updated model simply called the QuietComfort Headphones. Like the QC 45s, this model carries on the comfortable tried-and-true legacy QuietComfort design that’s been around for a few generations that a lot of people continue to love. The QC Ultra Headphones add Bose’s new Immersive Audio feature and have a more refined design with some metal parts (they also have Bluetooth 5.3 instead of Bluetooth 5.1). But the QuietComfort Headphones still have good sound (the Ultras offer a small step up in sound quality), excellent noise canceling and strong voice-calling performance.

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Sony WH-1000XM5: Sony has released its new-for-2025 WH-1000XM6 headphones, but its former flagship model, the XM5 is still an excellent headphone that’s often on sale for closer to $300. Their noise-canceling, voice-calling and sound isn’t quite as good as what the XM6 offers (the XM6 sounds a little more detailed with improved bass performance) and the XM6 has a dual-hinge design that allows them to fold up, not just fold flat. As a result, the XM6’s case is a little smaller. Additionally, the XM6 is powered by a new QN3 chip that Sony says delivers 7 times the performance of the QN1 chip found in the XM5s. All that said, while the jump in performance from the XM5 to the XM6 is certainly noticeable, it isn’t huge; the XM5 still offers good sound, noise-canceling and voice-calling performance that should satisfy most people. Read my Sony WH-1000XM5 review.

Sennheiser Accentum Plus: If you can’t afford Sennheiser’s flagship Momentum 4 Wireless headphones or other premium models from Bose, Sony and Apple, the Sennheiser Accentum Plus is a good midrange alternative that doesn’t quite offer the same performance as those higher-end models. However, it does offers better build quality and sound than most budget noise canceling headphones. In essence, these are a slightly stripped down version of the Momentum 4 Wireless and share a similar aesthetic and the same touch controls but feature different drivers (the Momentum Wireless 4 have larger 42mm drivers and offer richer, more detailed sound with slightly better bass performance). Still, these sound good for the money, offer respectable noise canceling and support USB-C audio wired listening and the AptX Adaptive audio codec that’s compatible with some Android devices.

Master & Dynamic MH40 (2nd gen): All of Master & Dynamic’s headphones are well-built and have a unique retro-modern look. The higher-end MW75 has active noise canceling and sounds a little better than the updated MH40 ($400), which features new drivers and a new chipset that delivers improved sound and performance. The MH40 sounds more refined than its predecessor, with better clarity and definition, and now offers support for the AAC and AptX audio codecs, plus improved voice-calling performance. Additionally, you can plug its USB-C cable into a computer or Android smartphone for a wired digital connection for high-resolution audio. Battery life is rated at a healthy 30 hours.

Shure Aonic 50 Gen 2: Many of us liked Shure’s original Aonic 50 headphones, but they had relatively mediocre noise cancellation. Well, the 2nd-gen version addresses that issue — the noise canceling is much improved — and Shure has more than doubled the battery life to around 45 hours (they now have a quick-charge feature) and also shrunk the headphone’s carry case a bit, although it’s still not that compact. Those upgrades make the Aonic 50 Gen 2 a top noise-canceling headphone. The Aonic 50 Gen 2s are pretty heavy at 334 grams, they’re built sturdily and are also comfortable to wear, with nicely padded ear cups. They feature excellent sound quality with very good clarity and well-defined bass. Shure calls them a “studio headphone,” so the sound profile is fairly neutral, but you can add more bass in the EQ settings in Shure’s companion app for iOS and Android (engaging the Spatializer setting in the app expands the soundstage slightly but doesn’t make a big difference).

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Bang & Olufsen’s Beoplay HX: Bang & Olufsen’s Beoplay HX headphones are the successor to the company’s H9 series headphones (the X is the Roman numeral for 10) and, like those earlier H9 models, the HX headphones carry a list price of $599 (some colors are discounted at Amazon). That price makes it a direct competitor of Apple’s AirPods Max, which is heavier at 385 grams versus the HX’s 285 grams. I don’t know if the HX headphones are more comfortable than the AirPods Max, but I found the two models pretty equal in the comfort department over longer listening sessions, and these do feature the usual swanky B&O lambskin-covered memory foam earpads. Their sound measures up well to the AirPods Max’s sound — overall, it’s well-balanced, with deep, well-defined bass, natural-sounding mids (where vocals live) and inviting detail in the treble.

V-Moda M-200: V-Moda’s M-200 is one of the few wired headphones on this list. Released in late 2019, these clean- and detailed-sounding over-ear headphones have excellent bass response, and the cushy earcups mean they’re also comfortable to wear. Featuring 50mm drivers with neodymium magnets, CCAW voice coils and fine-tuning by Roland engineers — yes, V-Moda is now owned by Roland — the M‑200 is Hi‑Res Audio-certified by the Japan Audio Society. Other V-Moda headphones tend to push the bass a little, but this set has the more neutral profile that you’d expect from studio monitor headphones. They come with two cords, one of which has a built-in microphone for making calls. It would be nice if V-Moda offered Lightning or USB-C cables for phones without headphone jacks. Note that last year V-Moda released the M-200 ANC ($350), a wireless version of these headphones that includes active noise canceling. They also sound great, but their noise cancellation, call quality and overall feature set don’t match those of the AirPods Max.

Mark Levinson No. 5909: These are premium audio brand Mark Levinson’s first headphones and, yes, they’re really expensive at $999. They’re also really good. They have a sturdy design without managing to feel hefty on your head (read: they’re substantial but not too heavy) and they’re comfortable to wear over long periods, thanks to their nicely padded and replaceable leather-covered earcups and headband. Read our Mark Levinson No. 5909 hands-on.

OneOdio A10: The OneOdio A10s deliver more than you’d expect for their relatively modest price, which is why they’re featured on several of our best lists. They’re built better than you think they would be for around $90 and are pretty comfortable to wear. They have a dual-hinge design and feel sturdy, weighing in at 395 grams, making them perfect headphones for a workout. They sound surprisingly decent and have reasonably good noise canceling with a transparency mode (which has a slight audible hiss). The headphones also have very good battery life. No, they’re not as comfortable as Bose’s and Sony’s models (they do feel a tad heavy) and their sound lacks that extra bit of clarity, bass definition and depth that more premium headphones tend to deliver. They did exceed my expectations and come with a decent carrying case, even if the OneOdio logo splayed across it is a bit garish. 

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Technics EAH-A800: There’s a bit of an old-school vibe to the Technics EAH-A800 — and it’s not just the Technics brand, which Panasonic resurrected in the last few years. Their design is something of a throwback, but these headphones are comfortable and both fold up and fold flat. They feature a big, energetic sound with powerful bass and good detail, although they take a day or two to break in. 

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Stripe, Advent reportedly propose to buy PayPal for more than $53bn

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The two potential buyers want equal stakes in the US fintech, according to Reuters.

Stripe has made an offer to purchase PayPal in a joint deal with US private equity firm Advent International, Reuters reported on Tuesday (14 July).

Together, the companies have offered to acquire PayPal at $60.50 per share, valuing the fintech at more than $53bn, sources told the publication. PayPal is yet to respond to the offer, but the two buyers are seeking to advance discussions in coming weeks, sources said.

According to the proposal, Stripe – the Irish-founded fintech giant – and Advent want to hold equal stakes in PayPal rather than break up the company, Reuters reported. The offer is backed up by around $50bn in committed financing from banks.

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The two have offered around a 28pc premium to the fintech’s shares as of Tuesday. PayPal shares fell marginally yesterday, but gained more than 13pc in after-hours trading.

Bloomberg first reported Stripe’s interest in acquiring PayPal in February. According to the publication’s reporting at the time, Stripe was looking to buy up parts or the whole of the company.

Commenting on the reported offer, Chris Jones, managing director at PSE Consulting, said that alongside benefits of scale, there would also be “clear strategic logic” to the potential acquisition.

“PayPal’s wallet could build on the early success of Link, Stripe’s consumer-facing accelerated checkout, which already counts more than 200m consumer accounts, and would create further opportunities to exploit Stripe’s $1.1bn investment in stablecoin infrastructure through its purchase of Bridge,” he told SiliconRepublic.com.

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“Put Link and the PayPal wallet together and you’re looking at genuinely enormous reach at checkout – one of the largest combined pools of stored payment credentials anywhere in the world. That’s not a small thing in a market where reducing checkout friction is the whole game.”

PayPal posted a net revenue of $8.4bn in the first quarter of 2026, a 7pc increase from Q1 2025, and in February brought in a new CEO, tapping HP’s Enrique Lores for the job.

According to a company statement at the time, the “pace of change and execution [under former CEO Alex Chriss] was not in line with the board’s expectations”.

By June, PayPal had reportedly planned to shut down its venture capital arm. Company shares have dropped more than 80pc over the last five years.

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Lores told shareholders in May that redesigning processes around AI would enable growth at PayPal. He explained that removing duplicate management layers and accelerating AI adoption would create combined savings of at least $1.5bn over the next two to three years.

The same month, sources told Bloomberg that the company was planning to cut around 20pc of its workforce – or around 4,500 workers – over the next two to three years.

Meanwhile, Stripe was valued at $159bn earlier this year, marking a 50pc jump on its valuation a year prior.

The company is investing heavily in product development and making strategic acquisitions, including the programmable wallet company Privystablecoin orchestration platform Bridge and Metronome.

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Updated, 12.30pm, 15 July 2026: This article was amended to include a comment given to SiliconRepublic.com by PSE Consulting’s Chris Jones.

Don’t miss out on the knowledge you need to succeed. Sign up for the Daily Brief, Silicon Republic’s digest of need-to-know sci-tech news.

Enrique Lores, World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2023. Image: World Economic Forum/Greg Beadle via Flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

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Ireland looking ahead with launch of Quantum 2030 Implementation Plan

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The Quantum 2030 Implementation Plan sets out how Ireland will deliver on the ambitions outlined in the Quantum 2030 Strategy.

The Irish Government has published the Quantum 2030 Implementation Plan, which explores how the country intends to deliver on the targets and ambitions set out in the Quantum 2030 Strategy, which was first announced in November of 2023.

Designed to be implemented over the course of a year, the implementation plan is a collaboration between the Government, academia and industry, with the shared goal of  strengthening Ireland’s quantum research capabilities, developing talent, supporting innovation and enterprise engagement and maximising on opportunities arising from European engagement.

Government departments and agencies will improve policy delivery by reviewing current quantum activities and costs in order to generate a greater understanding of the ecosystem within Ireland. 

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In order to meet the targets set out by the plan, there are a number of key milestones to be reached, with a targeted start date of Q3 of 2026, including setting the Quantum 2030 online site to live; initiating the national skills mapping and gap analysis; establishing a quantum industry advisory group with a named chair; and securing Irish expert participation in at least three EU or ISO quantum standards bodies, among other goals. 

The news was announced by the Minister for Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science James Lawless, TD, who said: “The Quantum 2030 Implementation Plan provides a practical framework for turning our ambitions into action. 

“It reflects the commitment of stakeholders across industry, academia and Government to work together in building a vibrant and internationally competitive quantum ecosystem. 

“While Ireland cannot match the scale of investment available in larger countries, our size brings about precious advantages, namely the agility and cohesiveness of our innovation ecosystem. By working together across sectors, we can maximise the impact of our investments and ensure Ireland remains at the forefront of emerging technologies.”

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Ireland has a growing quantum sector in which there are a lot of moving parts. In early June, Irish-founded computing company Horizon Quantum announced it had chosen Dublin as the site for establishing a testbed for its second quantum computer

Other organisations operating within the quantum space and with links to Ireland also had big announcements this year, including Equal1, Horizon Quantum and the Tyndall National Institute

Don’t miss out on the knowledge you need to succeed. Sign up for the Daily Brief, Silicon Republic’s digest of need-to-know sci-tech news.

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Restoring Apple’s Power Macintosh 7200 That History Called a Failure Brings Some Needed Beige Box Redemption

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Apple Power Macintosh 7200 Restoration
Apple released the Power Macintosh 7200 in August 1995 as its new entry-level professional machine. Priced around $1,700 for the base 75 MHz model, it arrived during a rough stretch for the company. Leadership changes, intense competition from Windows 95 PCs, and the messy early days of the PowerPC transition left many products looking compromised. The 7200 shared its “Outrigger” case with the higher-end 7500. It brought three PCI slots to the lower end of the lineup for the first time and offered built-in Ethernet with both 10BASE-T and AAUI ports.



The PowerPC 601 CPU remained locked on the board, as Apple had promised a low-cost motherboard upgrade path that was always late and ultimately out of reach for anyone on a tight budget. The memory and cache buses were narrower than in a comparable system. Almost every early review and later collector roundup of these computers referred to the series as a “Road Apple,” implying that it was a second-rate Mac that never reached its full potential.

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Thirty years later, one restorer known as “This Does Not Compute” obtained one of these ancient machines to see if the old legends about it were real. That video of a 120 MHz model shows a system that has somehow survived all these years, with its original Quantum Fireball 1.2 GB SCSI drive still spinning. Surface dust had accumulated throughout the area, necessitating a thorough cleaning. The plastic parts that used to hold the casing together in one piece have grown so brittle that even handling them risks snapping them. The power button hinge had already failed, and attempting to remove the drive using a CD-ROM sled latch proved disastrous, as it snapped the first time.

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Apple Power Macintosh 7200 Restoration
The original battery in the PRAM had long gone vanished, which was a smart decision given the dangers of leaking batteries. There are no clear indicators of this happening, at least not at first inspection, but the surface-mount capacitors near the CPU heat sink are in a position that renders a catastrophic failure almost certain in the future. Disassembling it began with some care to maintain the fragile plastic feet, with a tape measure pushed up on one side as the hinged base slid open, allowing access to all of the internal components underneath. A single screw and a handful of clips were used to release the logic board, which slipped out and then lifted free. A gentle brush was used to remove some dust before carefully peeling off the passive heat sink that rested on top of the PowerPC 601. The old thermal compound appeared to have entirely dried up and was no longer doing its job. He also applied some fresh Arctic MX4 underneath it before reinstalling the sink.

Apple Power Macintosh 7200 Restoration
Following that, each and every surface mount part was clipped right off the board, leaving just short leads, and the pads were cleaned with flux and desoldering braid. New Tantalum replacements were installed due to their lower likelihood of leakage, however one of the ground pads lifted during the operation, posing an issue. A short bodge wire solved the problem for us. A small amount of electrolyte residue was discovered under one of the old cans, confirming that he had completed the task on time. Next, a 256 KB Level 2 cache card and an additional 1 MB VRAM module were inserted into their respective sockets. The original single-stick 16 MB RAM chips were replaced by a pair of matching 16 MB 5-volt EDO DIMMs, totaling 48 MB. To replace the missing PRAM cell, a new CR2032 adaptor was used.

Apple Power Macintosh 7200 Restoration
Case repairs necessitated the use of a 3D printer, and a new CD-ROM sled was the ideal match for the original geometry, fitting perfectly into place after we cleaned the Panasonic 4x drive and checked its through-holes for faulty capacitors. The power button had a replacement body printed up, and he just placed the original plastic face back on with hot glue. He also needed special enclosures for the external SCSI and video adapters, which would otherwise be blocked by the case lip. We got things resolved, which was a huge relief because we didn’t want another problem. Fortunately, a BlueSCSI unit provided him with a dependable modern method of reading from storage, despite the fact that the old Quantum drive is still working perfectly for testing.

Apple Power Macintosh 7200 Restoration
It won’t blow the doors off in terms of speed, but that isn’t the point. The CPU is stuck in place, and the bus width is limited, but based on how the restored device looks and what it can perform, it is not truly “broken” or “hopeless.” It starts up well, runs old software, accepts contemporary SCSI replacements, and even provides him with a workable desktop to play with, none of which are to be taken lightly. Still, the one remaining concern is the possibility of the casing cracking, which is a common problem with any mid-90s Apple case, but with a little capacitor adjustment and careful handling, he should be fine.

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Today’s NYT Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for July 19 #1856

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Looking for the most recent Wordle answer? Click here for today’s Wordle hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands puzzles.


Today’s Wordle puzzle is a bit of a challenge, and it only has one vowel, which can make guessing tough. If you need a new starter word, check out our list of which letters show up the most in English words. If you need hints and the answer, read on.

Read more: New Study Reveals Wordle’s Top 10 Toughest Words of 2025

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Today’s Wordle hints

Before we show you today’s Wordle answer, we’ll give you some hints. If you don’t want a spoiler, look away now.

Wordle hint No. 1: Repeats

Today’s Wordle answer has no repeated letters.

Wordle hint No. 2: Vowels

Today’s Wordle answer has one vowel.

Wordle hint No. 3: First letter

Today’s Wordle answer begins with C.

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Wordle hint No. 4: Last letter

Today’s Wordle answer ends with N.

Wordle hint No. 5: Meaning

Today’s Wordle answer means to agitate, stir vigorously or experience rapid, chaotic movement.

TODAY’S WORDLE ANSWER

Today’s Wordle answer is CHURN.

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Yesterday’s Wordle answer

Yesterday’s Wordle answer, July 18, No. 1855, was BOOTH.

Recent Wordle answers

July 14, No. 1851: STEAK

July 15, No. 1852: PSHAW

July 16, No. 1853: BUTTE

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July 17, No. 1854: LEGAL

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Ukraine’s new Starlink rival moves forward as Stetman prepares massive satellite network despite founder’s sudden death

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  • Ukraine’s Stetman prepares a 360-satellite network with SpaceX launch support
  • New leadership keeps Ukraine’s ambitious satellite project moving forward
  • The billion-euro constellation aims to strengthen Ukraine’s communication independence

Ukrainian company Stetman is currently preparing to launch its own low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite constellation, with service set to begin in 2027.

The company recently lost its founder, Dmytro Stetsenko, but the project is still on course after the appointment of a new CEO, Kateryna Diachenko.

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Quordle hints and answers for Sunday, July 19 (game #1637)

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Looking for a different day?

A new Quordle puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’s’. If you’re looking for Saturday’s puzzle instead then click here: Quordle hints and answers for Saturday, July 18 (game #1636).

Quordle was one of the original Wordle alternatives and is still going strong now more than 1,500 games later. It offers a genuine challenge, though, so read on if you need some Quordle hints today — or scroll down further for the answers.

Enjoy playing word games? You can also check out my NYT Connections today and NYT Strands today pages for hints and answers for those puzzles, while Marc’s Wordle today column covers the original viral word game.

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Best Smart Speakers for 2026: Big Sound and So Much More

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smart speakers on green grass with dry grass in background

The grass isn’t always greener on the other side.

John Carlsen/CNET

The smart speakers above are our current favorites, but you still have other options if you’re looking for something specific in audio performance. Options that didn’t make this list include:

Apple HomePod: I really like the HomePod’s sound, which is possibly the best in the business, but it’s simply too expensive for the average budget at over $250 to $300 — which is why Apple released a Mini version. The smaller HomePod doesn’t have quite the same incredible sound, but it’s a whole lot more affordable, which is why it ended up on the list.

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Echo Dot 4: I really like this Echo Dot and use it in my house, but it’s starting to become an older model and I’m not sure how much longer Amazon is going to sell it since there are new models like the Echo Dot Max.

Echo Show 11: This smart display offers surprisingly good sound with its updated design, but it’s more focused on the 11-inch screen, which is why it ended up on my picks for best smart displays instead.

Sonos Era 100: The Sonor Era 100 has incredible sound for its $199 price, but if you really want an elite model, why not go all the way and get the better Sonos Era 300? I chose the highest-end Sonos option for this list if your budget isn’t a problem, but the 100 is still an option for those who like Sonos features but want a lower cost.

Google Nest Mini: The Nest Mini second-gen speakers were fun little desk-side assistants for their time, but that time has largely passed now, especially with Google’s new and far superior Home Speaker available. That’s probably why Google is discontinuing this model.

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Bose SoundLink Home: Bose’s home speaker sounds great but the “Home” moniker is a bit misleading. This is a portable Bluetooth speaker that doesn’t have any smart capabilities and can’t even link with the Bose app, so it’s a thumbs down for this list.

Wiim Pro: The Wiim Pro is an interesting smart speaker receiver if you already have speakers you like and want to give Alexa/Google/Siri capabilities, but it’s not actually a smart speaker itself, so it didn’t make this list. I’m also waiting on the Wiim Sound, which is its own standalone smart speaker and could win a spot if it tests well.

Google Nest Audio: The Nest Audio is now entirely eclipsed by the newer Google Home Speaker, and this smart speaker has also been discontinued.

Denon Home 150: I chose the more versatile Sonos over the AV-friendly Denon brand for this list. However, if your home entertainment system uses Denon products and you’re very happy with them, it’s well worth investigating this $199 smart speaker from the same maker.

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Kimi: Threat or menace? | TechCrunch

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Chinese company Moonshot AI released a new version of its Kimi model this week, leading to a perhaps-inevitable wave of discourse about China and open source AI.

Moonshot said that although Kimi K3 “still trails the most powerful proprietary models, Claude Fable 5 and GPT 5.6 Sol,” the new open source model “demonstrated frontier-level performance across our evaluation suite, consistently outperforming other tested models.” Independent analyses from Arena.ai and Vals AI also suggested that Kimi is competitive with flagship frontier models.

The announcement, which coincided with a speech from Chinese president Xi Jinping at the World AI Conference in Shanghai, seems to have spooked Wall Street, with the Nasdaq dropping about 1% on Friday as investors sold off stocks in chip companies like Nvidia.

Many of the resulting posts from tech industry figures will sound familiar to those who remember the debate after another Chinese company, DeepSeek, released its open source R1 model in January 2025. Except now, everything seems heightened after the Trump administration’s tariff war with China, repeated fights over the national security threat supposedly posed by Anthropic, and as major AI companies prepare to finally go public.

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For example, David Sacks — the Trump administration’s former AI czar and now co-chair of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology — contrasted Kimi’s progress with a United States that is “tying itself in knots: politicians and bureaucrats are banning new data centers, piling on state regulations, and pushing for new federal agencies to pre-approve frontier models. This is how you lose the AI race.” (The news also gave him an excuse to take a dig at Anthropic, calling Claude an example of “woke lobotomized models” that are “the enemy American competitiveness.”)

And former Uber CEO Travis Kalanick echoed complaints that Chinese are “distilling off” (i.e., being trained on the outputs of) American AI models.

“If distillation isn’t enforced against, then everyone should be able to distill from everyone else.. otherwise one arm [would be] tied behind American models’ backs,” Kalanick wrote. (Of course, American models have also been built on top of Chinese ones, specifically Kimi.)

Meanwhile, OpenAI’s head of strategic futures Dean Ball said that Kimi is “a very good model” whose performance probably can’t be “explained away by distillation or anything like that,” adding that he’s “personally surprised the Chinese state continues to allow the open sourcing of models this good, given potential risks.”

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In fact, Ball suggested that “probable outcome of an open-weight-model-dominant world is full AI communism,” where AI is treated as “a ‘public good’ which will ultimately be provided by the state as a kind of ‘digital public infrastructure.’”

“This future strikes me as a dystopian hellscape, but I’ve never met an open-weight models advocate who doesn’t ultimately concede this is where things end,” said Ball. He even suggested that the Trump administration (which he used to work for) will eventually realize it needs to “create large amounts of regulatory risk around the use of open-weight Chinese models.”

“You don’t need to ‘ban open source’ (one of the dumber motifs of AI policy discussion),” Ball said. “You just need to direct every agency to issue soft law that creates FUD [fear, uncertainty, and doubt]. ‘A Federal Reserve Advisory Bulletin found that there may be backdoors in Chinese AI models.’ It needn’t be that well justified. You just create enough regulatory risk that every regulated enterprise backs off.”

However, Shakeel Hashim, editor of the AI-focused publication Transformer, argued that much of the worry is overblown, both because Kimi “likely does not have dangerous cyber capabilities,” and because the Chinese government will face “extremely similar incentives” to restrict open Chinese models once they develop those capabilities.

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America’s Missile Ranges Are Doing A Lot More Than Testing Weapons

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Few places on Earth are as deadly as a weapons test range. They’re usually some variation of sprawling rural salt flat, alpine tundra, or coastline where artillery batteries unleash barrages, jets practice bombing runs, and missile systems prove their accuracy. Once a combined-arms live-fire exercise begins, stopping it is no simple matter. Coordinating aircraft, artillery, armored vehicles, drones, and ground troops requires months of planning; when the rounds start flying, missions typically continue until objectives are met or ammunition is exhausted. Although everyone involved has the right to call “cease fire”, you’d better have a very good reason when the Range Safety Officer storms over to ask why you shut down their range.

Surprisingly, some of these cease fires can have nothing to do with equipment failure or medical emergency, as it’s universally justifiable to do so simply due to seeing an animal. In fact, it’s become increasingly common for a wildlife incursion to be the cited as a range-halting event. At New Mexico’s White Sands Missile Range, one of the world’s largest military testing facilities, the simple presence of the endangered Northern Aplomado Falcon can halt shoots or force exercises to be replanned entirely. Alternatively, if the threatened desert bighorn sheep happens to roam within a set of live range limits, it’s shouts of “unload” and “show clear” all around.

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Interestingly, rather than viewing these species as obstacles or obstructions, the U.S. military has taken ownership of their welfare and incorporated their protection into range management. Breeding seasons, migration patterns, and habitat requirements are built into training schedules through temporary pauses, seasonal restrictions, and carefully planned exercises. The result is an unexpected partnership between conservation and national defense: In some of the world’s most heavily militarized landscapes, endangered wildlife have found an unexpected sanctuary.

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How the U.S. military drafts the doctrine of wildlife conservation

Protecting endangered species on military land isn’t just a matter of serendipity. Every U.S. military installation complies with environmental legislation, including the Endangered Species Act, and many operate under Integrated Natural Resources Management Plans. These efforts are developed jointly by military environmental offices, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and state wildlife agencies, balancing military requirements with conservation.

Some efforts are remarkably straightforward. Range orders may designate seasonal exclusion zones, prohibit live-fire exercises during breeding seasons, or require environmental surveys before training begins. If sensitive species are detected in a training area, commanders may delay exercises, relocate activities, or temporarily close sections of a range. These measures often require little more than careful scheduling, but they make an enormous difference for vulnerable wildlife.

Other initiatives involve far closer collaboration. Many large military training areas now employ biologists to routinely monitor endangered plants and animal populations. This provides exercise planners with up-to-date information that allows military activities to proceed without harming critical habitats or active breeding grounds.

The result is an unusual but effective model of stewardship where wildlife benefit from habitats that remain protected from urban expansion, agriculture, mining, and many of the pressures that have driven species decline elsewhere. Today, Department of Defense-owned land supports more federally listed threatened and endangered species than any other federal land management agency, including America’s own national parks — though the latter remain substantially easier to visit thanks to the plethora of mobile apps associated with them.

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Wildlife thriving in the killbox across the globe

The results of these conservation efforts have been striking. The U.S. Department of Defense manages around 25 million acres of land, much of it remaining in a wildlife-permissive state. Although explosions, aircraft noise, and armored vehicles may seem incompatible with fragile ecosystems, many species have proven remarkably resilient when military activity is kept to a distant annoyance.

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The San Clemente Bell Sparrow on California’s San Clemente Island Training Range, the Louisiana Pine Snake at Fort Johnson, and the Red-cockaded Woodpecker, found across Fort Liberty, Camp Lejeune, and Eglin Air Force Base, have all maintained or recovered populations on military lands that now function as de facto wildlife refuges.

The U.S. military joins other government agencies in this conservation model, as NASA uses satellite imagery to protect animal populations as well. Additionally, other militaries likewise take part; the British Army’s Salisbury Plain Training Area protects one of Europe’s largest remaining expanses of ecologically important chalk grassland. In New Zealand, the Royal New Zealand Air Force routinely pauses activity at Kaipara Bombing Range to support the breeding of the vulnerable Fairy Tern. Even the heavily fortified Korean Demilitarized Zone has become one of Asia’s richest wildlife corridors.

It is a remarkable irony that landscapes designed to prepare for war have become some of the safest places for wildlife. Military training ranges will never lose their primary purpose: They exist to develop combat capabilities and ensure armed forces remain competent and credible. But the same restrictions that exclude humans have also limited human development, allowing biodiversity to flourish beyond the firing line.

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Open-Source Mid-Drive E-Bike Motor Has Lots Of Promise, And Hyphens

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[Pedro Neves] has a mid-drive e-bike, but he doesn’t own it — not truly, since he can’t repair the motor unit. For a hacker to be in that position, there are only two options: crack the old one and make it your own, or build your own from scratch. [Pedro] built his own and is open-sourcing it on his website for everyone to play with. Right now, that’s .step files and a BOM, so you’ll need to watch the design/build video on YouTube below to get the full picture.

His choice of a motor from an old battery-powered angle grinder is both thrifty and environmentally friendly, so we approve. His goal of 25 km/h seems like a reasonable speed limit, but may still be too fast for some countries’ regulations— so do check the local rules if you’re going to build this. Making the most of 3D-printed components is also a choice that makes the project more accessible, but don’t worry — the bearing surfaces are all metal. That includes the clutch bearing that will let you pedal home if the battery dies or the motor craps out. Well, unless the printed plastic axle gives up the ghost, but that got replaced with a CNC version, so it’s all good. Unless you’ve got legs like Hercules, it ought to hold.

If that’s not DIY enough, you could always build the motor yourself. This mid-drive is also part of a larger project [Pedro] is working on for a whole cargo bike, as he details in his video, which is a worthy project we’ve seen other examples of before.

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