Sometimes you just need a portable electric cookset. Maybe it’s during a major power outage when everyone’s huddled together over the warm glow of the family power station. Or maybe it’s at a tailgate party or picnic. In my case, it’s anywhere I decided to park my van over the last few months while testing two cooking systems from Stoke Voltaics.
Technology
Stoke Voltaics’ portable electric cookware review
Most portable cooksets are powered by a liquid fuel like propane. It’s inexpensive and readily available in canisters of all sizes. But sometimes you’d rather not deal with an open flame, pollutants, and the noise and smell that comes with it. Stoke Voltaics’ gear is powered by electricity, which can be easily supplied by a solar generator and replenished by the sun.
I tested the company’s new $219.99 Nomad Cooking System and existing $99.99 Joulle Kettle Pot. They’re not cheap, but portability and convenience rarely are.
Let’s start with the Joulle which is just an electric JetBoil — the ubiquitous “flash cooking” camping stove launched two decades ago. The size, graphics, insulated sleeve, handle, lid with integrated filter, are very very similar, right on down to the little pot’s ability to act like a French press for coffee. JetBoil even sold its own Joule variant at one point, which is perhaps why Stoke Voltaic promotes Joulle as the “Kettle Pot” on its website. Joulle does distinguish itself with a popcorn setting, so… take that, lawyers.
Each of the Joulle’s three settings pull different amounts of AC power. Move the slider to “Drink” to boil water at max power before automatically shutting off unlike the flame on a JetBoil. Move it to “Eat” to slowly bring a stew up to a simmer. “Pop” varies the power to ensure nearly every kernel placed inside becomes popcorn and then automatically shuts off to conserve power.
In my testing, I was able to boil about eight ounces (240ml) of water for coffee or tea in 3 minutes and 42 seconds while consuming 28.06Wh. Slowly heating up 19 ounces (570ml) of a hearty soup to a simmer took 8 minutes and 30 seconds and used 40.2Wh, while a single serving of popcorn took 7 minutes and used 16.69Wh. So that’s about 85Wh on any given day, or over 10 days of use from a solar generator with a modest 1kWh capacity.
I like that the Drink and Pop modes shut off automatically so I can just set it and forget it, without worrying about unnecessary power usage. Eat mode can require a bit of stirring to prevent things sticking to the bottom of the stainless steel surface. Joulle’s a bit bulky to wash (especially when using it as a French press) since the sink in my van is relatively shallow and I have to be extra careful with the water since it’s an electrical device.
Nevertheless, Joulle is so convenient that I’ve gone days without using my induction cooktop and pan on solo tips.
While Joulle integrates the heating element right into the pot, the Nomad Cooking System is modular. It comes with the AC-powered heating base, lid, clip-on handle, and two stackable aluminum pots with non-stick surfaces: one large 50-ounce pot for “bubbling” and a smaller pot for frying. The 8.5-inch diameter pots slot into the 6.8-inch diameter heating base using a proprietary connector.
The on / off button lets you dial up the power from 200W to 1000W in 200W increments. Yeah, they could have just done a 1-5 setting, but I like knowing how much power I’m pulling. The button also shows how long the unit’s been running. The electric base can only be turned on when a pan is inserted and shuts off when the pan is removed. Pressing the button will pause cooking while holding it in will turn off power completely.
I like that the pots heat up quickly and uniformly and cook enough food for one to two people. The pots also stay in place, which isn’t guaranteed with portable induction cooktops, especially when parked on a slope. The Nomad handle is also grippy and easy to attach and detach from the pans. The whole system is also very compact allowing it to be easily stowed away in a drawer, especially when using the carrying bag (which also helps prevent rattles while driving).
1/8
I do have some minor gripes. Washing up the Nomad pots requires hand-washing like the Joulle as they can’t be submerged in water. The system is also proprietary so you can’t use the base with other pots, and the Nomad pots won’t work on a gas stove or induction cooktop. And it’s kind of annoying that you can only use one Nomad pot at a time since you only have one base.
Stoke Voltaics’ gear might not be cheap, but the Nomad Cooking System and Joulle Kettle Pot are both super convenient and capable cooking systems that tuck away nice and small when not needed. If you can afford them, I can recommend both for anyone seeking gas-free portable cookware.
Technology
Apple not giving the iPhone 16 this one crucial feature is another example of its worst habit
After five joyous years as an Android user, curiosity got the best of me – I’ve been using an iPhone 15 for the last week or so to re-immerse myself in iOS and offer stronger contributions to our iPhone coverage.
Overall, I’ve been impressed by last year’s base-model iPhone. A lot has certainly changed since I parted with my iPhone 5S in 2019, and in the ten years between the launch of the iPhone 5S and iPhone 15, Apple has improved the iPhone in nearly every way, from the screen size (4 inches to 6.1 inches) to the battery life (a couple of hours to nearly all day) and connectivity (USB-C!).
Regrettably, there remains one thing that Apple did not improve in the decade of development between my previous and present iPhone, and it’s not been fixed with the new iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Plus either.
In the world of Android, 120Hz is the new normal for flagship and high-end phone displays, while budget options are commonly equipped with 120Hz or 90Hz displays. These days, 60Hz displays are the preserve of tablets and the cheapest budget phones. The iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Plus are, by modern standards, complete oddballs.
The 60Hz debacle has been a focus of debate here at TechRadar for years now; “Please, Apple – don’t do this to the iPhone 15” wrote Managing Editor for Mobile Computing Roland Moore-Colyer in the run-up to the phone’s launch back in 2023, and Phones Editor Axel Metz found that 120Hz changed his entire outlook on iPhones when he switched to the iPhone 15 Pro.
Apple is more than capable of producing high refresh rate phone displays, as the ProMotion displays on the iPhone 16 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro Max demonstrate. In my experience, the smaller the screen, the more the benefit of a higher refresh rate is felt, as your eye has less space to work with to accommodate jagged motion.
There is simply no user benefit to fitting iPhones with 60Hz displays, and the Samsung Galaxy S24 shows us that a company can deliver a flagship phone with a 120Hz display for $799, the same price as the iPhone 16. This partially counters arguments centered on component price or manufacturing costs.
So, why does Apple continue to sell iPhones with slow refresh rate panels? To me, this is simply the most egregious example of Apple’s famously blunt product stratification strategy, a considered choice to drive customers towards the more expensive iPhone 16 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro Max.
It’s a shame, too – I’ve been otherwise impressed by the iPhone 15, and our iPhone 16 review found that Apple’s latest flagship brings the base model closer than ever to its Pro counterpart. Understandably, the standard and Pro iPhones need to be separated somehow, but here, Apple continues to enforce distance by limiting the low-end model rather than enhancing its premium offering.
This is a regrettably common Apple tactic. The exact same issue applies to the iPad Air and iPad Pro, and the cheapest MacBook Pro is still sold with a puny 8GB of RAM – decisions that drive people towards more expensive options.
I’m far from an Apple hater – I’m a longtime iPad user and converted from Windows to Mac last year – but this kind of behavior is my pick for Apple’s worst bad habit. Apple has made its name by thinking differently, but when it comes to refresh rates, I’m afraid everyone else is right.
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5 Amazon Prime Video shows that are perfect to stream in the fall
With the fall season is in full swing and the weather beginning to turn, you might be thinking of cozy nights in versus busy days out. That’s especially with the holiday season on the horizon and all the hustle and bustle that comes along with that.
For those days or nights when you just want to relax in your loungewear and slippers while binge-watching a show, there are some great options. Digital Trends has selected these five Amazon Prime Video shows that are perfect to watch in the fall.
Need more recommendations? Then check out the best new shows to stream this week, as well as the best shows on Netflix, best shows on Hulu, best shows on Amazon Prime Video, the best shows on Max, and best shows on Disney+.
Upload (2020-)
A delightful sci-fi comedy drama that parodies our real-life obsession with technology and AI, Upload begins when Nathan Brown (Robbie Amell) is near-death after a tragic car accident. In a panic, his wealthy girlfriend, Ingrid (Allegra Edwards), uploads him to a lavish afterlife community, an option in this near-future world that allows those with the financial means to continue interacting with their loved ones, even after death. As Nathan tries to deal with his now perpetual existence and an ex he was planning to break up with holding his purse strings, he grows closer with his living woman handler, Nora (Andy Allo). But he also starts to uncover a plot that suggests his death was no accident.
As the story in Upload takes many twists and turns, the chemistry among the main cast and standout supporting characters like Luke (Kevin Bigley), a frat boy-like former army vet uploaded after death, and his persistently annoyed handler, Aleesha (Zainab Johnson), will have you both laughing and also terrified about a future ruled by technology. The show will return for a fourth and final season, so this fall is the perfect time to catch up on the first three.
Stream Upload on Amazon Prime Video.
Gen V (2023-)
With a second season confirmed, but no launch date yet (likely sometime in 2025), you have time to catch up on season one of Gen V if you haven’t seen it yet. A spinoff of The Boys, the satirical superhero series follows a group of students in a university where they are trained to become the next batch of superheroes. These aren’t admirable heroes, however. The real superheroes, who possess various unique powers, are managed by an evil corporation that uses them to further its interests.
Gen V is like a teen drama mixed with plenty of violence, gore, and scenes that will make you wince for more reasons than one. While the show stands on its own, it ties nicely with the storylines in The Boys. If you haven’t watched that show yet, start with seasons 1 through 3 of The Boys, then check out season 1 of Gen V before returning for season 4 of The Boys to get the full, thematic story. For those who aren’t easily grossed out, Gen V has clever themes that mirror real-life social and political situations beneath its bloody surface.
Stream Gen V on Amazon Prime Video.
Fallout (2024-)
If you’re loving Ella Purnell in her new series Sweetpea and enjoyed her in Yellowjackets, you’ll appreciate her performance in Fallout, a postapocalyptic drama based on the popular video game franchise. Even if you know nothing about the game or the story, Fallout beautifully weaves action and storylines in a desolate world with humor that anyone can enjoy.
The story follows Purnell’s character, Lucy, who emerges from an underground fallout bunker where most humans reside following an apocalyptic nuclear war above ground. She has never ventured out, but with her father kidnapped and possibly in trouble, she is desperate to rescue him.
She meets friends and foes along the way, notably a grotesque, disfigured bounty hunter known as The Ghoul (brilliantly portrayed by Walton Goggins). It’s action-packed through all eight episodes and will have you at the edge of your seat.
Stream Fallout on Amazon Prime Video.
Them (2021-)
The fall season and horror go hand in hand, largely thanks to Halloween. If you’re looking for a creepy show to dive into as you celebrate the holiday, Them is a good choice. The first season, called Them: Covenant, is set during the Second Great Migration in the mid-20th century. A Black family moves from North Carolina to East Compton in the Los Angeles area, where they are now living in an all-white neighborhood. But when evil forces attack, they must fight back. The second season, called Them: The Scare, fast-forwards to 1991 and follows a detective working the case of a gruesome murder.
While Them is especially graphic, the stories, talented cast, and intelligent background social commentary make it a must-watch. The second season was met with much better reviews than the first, earning an impressive perfect 100% Rotten Tomatoes critic score.
Stream Them on Amazon Prime Video.
Downton Abbey (2010-2015)
Honor the recent death of Maggie Smith by watching, or rewatching, Downton Abbey. The British historical drama is set in the early 20th century and focuses on the aristocratic Crawley family and their domestic servants. While fictional, the show integrates real-life happenings into the plot, including the sinking of the Titanic, the First World War, and the Spanish Influenza pandemic. But there are also stories involving torrid affairs, familial discord, and class disparities.
Earning numerous awards throughout its run, Downton Abbey spawned two film adaptations, with a third reportedly in the works as well. If you love and miss shows like Bridgerton and you’re looking for something to fill that void this fall, Downton Abbey is a good option.
Stream Downtown Abbey on Amazon Prime Video.
Technology
Snag this 2024 Moto G for under $170
Right now Best Buy has a pretty good deal on the 2024 Moto G, a phone that comes with a 50MP rear camera for some snazzy smartphone photos and a stylish faux leather backing that comes in a Sage Green color.
The Moto G has come a long way since its early days, and Motorola has come a long way in designing an entry-level phone that can look just as good as devices that cost hundreds and hundreds more. That’s part of what makes this such a good deal. Normally, you would have to pay $199.99 for this phone if you were paying the full retail price. However, if you grab it while Best Buy has it on sale, then you can get it for $169.99, which is just under $170.
This appears to be the cheapest it’s ever been, although it does seem to have dropped to this price back on October 8 and has stayed there.
Now aside from the 50MP camera, the Moto G is 5G-capable and that means you’ll get the fastest possible speeds for page loads, downloads, and streaming when connected to a reliable 5G network. While you won’t always be in a 5G area it’s nice to know that when you are your phone can connect to it. The Moto G also comes with a pretty large battery capacity. At 5,000mAh, you likely aren’t going to have to worry about draining the battery too quickly.
This phone is also going to be great for entertainment purposes. With a large 6.6-inch screen a 120Hz refresh rate and Dolby Atmos support, your content will come to life and feel more immersive. Not to mention the 120Hz refresh rate would be good for some casual gaming. If you need an inexpensive phone for any reason, then this is a must-have deal.
Technology
DJI challenges its ‘Chinese military company’ Pentagon designation in court
DJI has filed a lawsuit against the US Department of Defense over its addition to the Pentagon list that designates it as a “Chinese military company.” In its filing, shared by The Verge, the company said it’s challenging the designation because it’s “neither owned nor controlled by the Chinese military.” It described itself as the “largest privately owned seller of consumer and commercial drones,” mostly used by first responders, fire and police departments, businesses and hobbyists.
The company claimed that because the Pentagon has officially proclaimed it as a national security threat, it has suffered “ongoing financial and reputational harm.” It also said that it has lost business from both US and internal customers, which terminated contracts and refused to enter new ones, and it has been banned from signing contracts with multiple federal government agencies.
DJI explained that it tried to engage with the Department of Defense for over 16 months and submitted a “comprehensive delisting petition” on July 27, 2023 to get the agency to remove its designation. However, the agency allegedly refused to engage in a meaningful way and to explain its reasoning behind adding the company to the list. On January 31, 2024, the DoD redesignated the company without notice, DJI wrote in its complaint. DJI alleged that the DoD only shared its full rationale for its designation after it informed the agency that it was going to “seek judicial relief.”
The company claimed that the DoD’s reasoning wasn’t adequate to support its designation, that the agency confused people with common Chinese names and that it relied on “stale alleged facts and attenuated connections.” DJI is now asking the court to declare the DoD’s actions as unconstitutional, describing the Pentagon’s designation and failure to remove it from the “Chinese military company” list a violation of the law and of its due-process rights.
DJI has long been at the crosshairs of various US government agencies. The Department of Commerce added it to its entity list in 2020, which prevented US companies from supplying it with parts without a license. A year later, it was added to the Treasury department’s “Chinese military-industrial complex companies” list for its alleged involvement in the surveillance of Uyghur Muslim people in China. And just a few days ago, DJI confirmed that its latest consumer drones are being held at the border by US customs, which cited the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act. The drone-maker denied that it has manufacturing facilities in Xinjiang, the region associated with forced Uyghur labor.
Technology
How TiMi Studio revived Age of Empires Mobile for a new age of fans
Mobile gaming fans around the world are ready for battle as Age of Empires Mobile has launched worldwide on the Apple App Store and Google Play.
Co-developed by TiMi Studio Group (Call of Duty: Mobile, Pokémon Unite) and World’s Edge, an Xbox Games Studio, Age of Empires Mobile is a fresh and innovative experience for the beloved series, bringing familiar elements from the iconic Age of Empires games with brand-new and mobile-specific gameplay to mobile players. We’ll see how mobile players take to it. Reviews are mixed, but fans are going to get their chance to weigh in with their opinions in a big way now.
It’s been hard to translate PC and console games to mobile, but TiMi Studio Group in Shenzhen (and multiple other cities) has had enormous success in hardcore mobile games over the years. Started in 2008, the studio is a part of Tencent and its Level Infinite brand. TiMi’s hit games include Honor of Kings, Speed Drifters, and Arena of Valor. TiMi has also created Call of Duty: Mobile and the first strategic Pokémon team battle game Pokémon Unite.
In the game, you can take your own strategic approach through your civilizations, heroes and troops with hundreds of combinations to pick your most effective plan of attack. You can participate in massively multiplayer online player alliances and Siege, an alliance-versus-alliance game mode, where large-scale castle sieges unfold with authentic weapons and complex defenses, with hundreds of players controlling thousands of units in one on-screen battle.
Honestly, I don’t know how they pull of this tech on mobile, but it’s a sign that they’re now able to put what used to be supercomputers inside the brains of mobile devices. I got my first demo from Marta Hu, marketing lead for Age of Empires Mobile at TiMi Studio Group, and Emma Bridle, director of player engagement at World’s Edge, at Gamescom.
You can play multiple single-player modes built on the Age of Empires lineage and featuring iconic elements from the original series. You can build your empire in a vibrant medieval world, with big civilizations, imperial cities and legendary historical figures and test your mettle to becoming the strongest governor.
And the game promises you can experience original gameplay on immersive battlefields, adapt your strategy to dynamic, interactive terrain and changing weather conditions and manage multiple troops with real-time control.
“We wanted to bring fresh experiences to the Age of Empires franchise, giving newcomers a taste of what makes this series so important to its fan base,” Robin Xin, producer from TiMi Studio Group, said in a statement. “Age of Empires Mobile is delivering a lot of strategic depth to players, with a resonant, intricate art style that respects history and mythology.”
Expanding on the series’ lineage, Age of Empires Mobile offers players the opportunity to select from some of the world’s most legendary historic figures to lead their armies. Players choose from dozens of these leaders, such as Barbarossa, Darius the Great, Hammurabi, Joan of Arc and Leonidas I, each featuring unique individual talents and synergies with each other to unleash on their foes.
There are eight civilizations at launch – play as the British, Byzantines, Chinese, Egyptians, French, Japanese, Koreans or Romans.
“Age of Empires Mobile introduces a brand-new entry point to the franchise for mobile gamers, with its alliance gameplay and siege battles featuring hundreds of players at war,” Earnest Yuen, senior director of production from World’s Edge, in a statement. “And your empire feels so dynamic, you can hear the world come alive, with water lapping the shore and wind blowing in the trees as your empire grows.”
Back in August at Gamescom, I was briefed by TiMi on the work in progress, when there were 200,000 players testing the game on servers. They called it a 4X mobile strategy game and showed me the details of the title.
They were most proud of the massively multiplayer siege gameplay, because this requires dozens, if not hundreds or thousands of players. It enables teammates — an entire alliance — to go to war against another alliance in an attempt to take the enemy’s fortress.
This is where the strategy, the collaboration, really comes into play. For your alliances, everybody goes on the attack and tries to take out the city center in the end. Players have to coordinate, not only with troops but with ships coming in from a river or with massive siege weapons to take down walls.
The single-player modes include “battlefield survivor.” It’s a bullet heaven mode, fighting in a compact moment. You can do a military exercise where you can test your heroes and builds and tactics as you take a hill or something like it. You can also engage in “island tactics,” which is akin to an autochess experience, as well as “lost borderland.”
“If you press luck and go one step too far, you may lose everything,” TiMi devs said, in our briefing.
There are collections of heroes where you can play as famous figures from history who have influenced the ages. You can engage in fishing if you like, as a kind of mini game, as you go about gathering resources. You can also train your troops and level them up to get more power. A given land can have thousands of different lords, which each lord being a human player. Getting thousands of human players into one game, such as a Siege, is a pretty amazing achievement.
Each civilization and city will have distinct architecture. And every faction will have its own advantages and disadvantages in battle or resource production. You can see things like the wind blowing things around. It’s like triple-A graphics on mobile.
You can use trebuchets, which are giant rock throwers like catapults on steroids. An alliance can be huge numbers of players, or as small as 16. You can zoom in on the action and see some amazing details. It’s a new frontier for Age of Empires.
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Technology
Spider-Man 2 is latest PlayStation exclusive coming to PC
The PC port will include the base game and all of its subsequent DLC, like New Game Plus mode and extra spider suits, along with PC-specific features like “keyboard and mouse controls, ultra widescreen support, and numerous graphical options,” according to Mike Fitzgerald, Core Technology Director at developer Insomniac. That will include “enhanced ray-tracing options.”
As part of the announcement, Sony also revealed that “we have no additional story content planned for Marvel’s Spider-Man 2” on either platform.
Spider-Man 2 is just the latest in a big PC push from Sony, which also includes a PC overlay that launched in June alongside Ghost of Tsushima’s PC port. Spider-Man 2 is also the fastest a major PS5 game has been ported so far, with the PC version coming less than two years after its original launch.
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