About six months ago, I noted an interesting divide among the right-leaning or politics-adjacent podcasters and influencers who helped get Donald Trump reelected. They were either shutting up about politics, bending over backward to justify his policies, or citing a couple of issues — ICE and the Epstein files — as red lines causing them to turn on him.
Tech
Nothing shows off its next phone in fun new colors, just a day after a big leak
Nothing has officially teased the highly anticipated Phone 4a once again. After revealing the light pink variant last week, the full roster has now made a public appearance. But while we’re only getting tidbits from the brand, these pictures arrive just a day after a big leak revealed most of the important hardware details of the upcoming device.
Everything in the official teaser
Looking at the recent tweet, Nothing highlights the Phone 4a in bold color finishes. Sticking to the brand’s habit of making design a key talking point ahead of any specs being revealed, there’s no mention of the hardware details or pricing. Instead, we get to see the new budget phone in the basic White and Black options, along with the punchy Blue and Pink hues. From the looks of it, Nothing wants the Phone 4a to feel fun and expressive.
But what does the leak say?
While Nothing is maintaining the mystery behind the specs, a tipster has revealed plenty of details already. According to the fresh leak, the Nothing Phone 4a could start for Rs 31,999 (~$349) in the Indian market for the base 8GB + 128GB variant, with higher-tier options, like the 8GB + 256GB and the 12GB + 256GB configurations, also being available. This model will reportedly pack the Snapdragon 7s Gen 4 SoC and offer UFS 3.1 storage.
For photography, the rear will retain the triple camera setup like its predecessor, but bump up the optical zoom level on the telephoto lens to 3.5x. The main camera is another 50MP shooter, accompanied by an 8MP ultra-wide-angle lens and a 32MP selfie shooter. Lastly, we even get some early details of the Phone 4a Pro, which might start from around Rs 40,000 (~$437) and reportedly carry a “very polarizing design”. While this is still just a leak, the official announcement is for March 5.
Tech
How MAGA and the manosphere are being tested by Trump’s Iran war
What united them all was a loss of enthusiasm for him: not really championing him the way they did when they gave him a platform during the 2024 campaign season. That’s why I was especially curious to see how this MAGA-manosphere would process yet another breach of their trust, after the joint American-Israeli attacks on Iran that took out Iran’s senior leadership this weekend. This regional conflict has already cost us three American lives, let alone the billions of dollars funding the American military presence in the region.
As someone who has been following this universe of yappers and influencers for some time, I was expecting universal outrage — ending foreign entanglements and intervention abroad, in favor of investment and economic growth at home, were central to this media ecosystem’s support of Trump and distrust of Democrats. They fully bought into the idea of “Donald the Dove,” who spent years railing against neoconservatives, Middle East involvement, and the Democratic Party’s embrace of hawkish military action since the turn of the century.
Instead, what I’ve been seeing has surprised me: disparate reactions across the alternative media ecosystem that suggest, at least at the elite level, another splintering of the Trump coalition — though not one as straightforward as the pod bros and MAGA influencers simply turning on Trump.
What’s emerged is a collection of strange bedfellows: Some anti-war MAGA influencers have turned into foreign policy hawks, some MAGA influencers are speaking out about the action, and the pod bros seem to be reserving their commentary until they can see how this unfolds and get in front of microphones.
An unexpected MAGA influencer breakup is underway
Already, plenty of media reports suggest that Trump is facing “a furious MAGA backlash,” that his base is revolting, and that “MAGA stalwarts” are turning on him over the Iran attacks. The early polling, at least, indicates that these attacks are inspiring some caution among everyday Trump supporters. But at the elite and influencer level, the picture is a little more muddled.
Yes, Tucker Carlson and Marjorie Taylor Greene are condemning this military action and arguing that it’s another blatant betrayal of “America First” principles by the president. But that’s not new — they’ve been sounding that beat for the last four months at least, since both began to criticize not just the Trump administration, but Trump himself more forcefully around his foreign policy and his refusal to be transparent about the Epstein files.
Joining them this time around are an interesting collection of MAGA and manosphere figures: Andrew Tate, the misogynistic influencer who was accused of sex trafficking in Romania, also denounced the actions, tweeting, “NOBODY WANTS THIS WAR.” Popular pro-Trump Twitter accounts, like the Hodge Twins, are highlighting Israel’s role in getting America involved, saying, they “don’t care if we lose all our followers over this war we won’t stay quiet about Americans getting sent to die for Israel.”
More radical figures, such as Candace Owens and Nick Fuentes, are condemning the strikes as well. Charlie Kirk Show producer Blake Neff is calling this “extremely depressing” and a reason for “never voting in a national election again.”
And even Erik Prince, the mercenary army founder, was skeptical of the attacks while debriefing with Steve Bannon and Pizzagate conspiracist Jack Posobiec. Posobiec himself was urging caution over the weekend, telling Politico that “There is a MAGA generational divide on this. Older voters support it, younger voters do not… Gen Z MAGA wants arrests on Epstein, deportations, and economic relief, not more war.”
And there’s still the politics-adjacent comedians and podcasters to come, who are likely to weigh in more forcefully starting Monday when they publish their episodes — and who seem primed to rail against this. The comedian Tim Dillon, for example, spent the latter half of his last show before the weekend priming his audience for a war with Iran, sounding depressed and resigned.
“This whole thing is about remaking the Middle East,” he said. “America does not want this war. … We don’t need a war. Unless all those white-collar consultants join the military and go fight and die in Iran, we don’t need a fucking war in the Middle East. So we can either do something fake, which I’m for, a pretend show of force, but … it feels like we’re too far down the line. There’s a little bit of war fever in Washington, and that it’s gripped people, and that there’s an inertia that’s moving us forward towards this conflict, no matter what we do. And that once we’re on a path like this, it’s very hard to completely reverse course.”
Comedians like Andrew Schulz and Theo Von have not weighed in; they’re anti-interventionist for the most part and have railed against the last few Trump-led foreign strikes against Iran and in Venezuela. Podcasters Shawn Ryan, Lex Fridman, and Joe Rogan have not commented yet either, but given their past comments, their reactions will probably be lukewarm at best; Ryan has turned sharply on Trump and Republicans over their opposition to the release of the Epstein files, while Rogan has also soured on Trump’s immigration enforcement actions.
And their audiences, too, will probably be demanding analysis. Already, some of the comments on Fridman’s latest episode bemoan his silence on “current events” (the episode, which Fridman promoted on Saturday, was an interview with a musician).
But Trump still counts support among another part of this alternative media ecosystem: during an emergency show on Saturday, podcaster Patrick Bet-David, himself Iranian-born, tried to walk a careful line between feeling emotional and hopeful about a “free Iran,” and cautious about endorsing full-scale war.
“For Americans that are saying, ‘Pat, but we don’t want to go to war,’ I get that as well,” he said. “It’s not an easy thing. It’s going to be nasty. It’s going to be ugly. And god-willing, it’s not going to be something that’s prolonged. For all the people that are criticizing and saying, ‘What if this thing drags out?’ Fair criticism. I’m hopeful it goes a few weeks. God-willing, less, as soon as possible to get it done. … But we have to also be realistic and realize that this may not be a popular war that a lot of people want.”
This cautious line — “I don’t want to see another Afghanistan” — will likely be replicated by other influencers as time passes. But it will also be balanced with a different sentiment Bet-David shared: “I voted for this man to be in a negotiating room, having access to the information and make the decisions based on his instinct. And I give this man a lot of credit for having the courage to do what a lot of presidents couldn’t do.”
For now, there is a whole cohort of anti-war MAGA influencers who are pushing that line and staying loyal to Trump. One Democratic operative kindly assembled that list already.
But the next few days will be crucial to this limbo state in the manosphere: additional escalation, more American or civilian casualties, or domestic economic fallout will all help determine whether these divided voices close ranks as they have during previous moments of foreign entanglement in Trump 2.0, or turn more fully against Trump’s position, as they have during moments of domestic crises.
Tech
Iran Is Still Flying These American-Built Fighter Jets Decades Later
Ongoing fighting in Iran is giving the world a look at what the country’s current military hardware looks like. As one would expect, there is a fair amount of Russian and Soviet-era technology, including MiG and Sukhoi fighter jets like the MiG-29 and Sukhoi Su-30. Additionally, Iran constructs most of its own ballistic missiles and drones.
For the people who are just taking a look at what Iran is flying, it may seem odd that there are some American-made planes in Iran’s inventory, as Iran and the U.S. have been politically opposed for decades.
Aviation enthusiasts especially may notice that F-14 Tomcats, F-5 Tigers, and F-4 Phantom IIs have made an occasional appearance in both conversations online and in footage from the ongoing war. The F-4 Phantom II saw extensive service in the Vietnam War. The F-14, of “Top Gun” fame, of course went out of service with the United States in 2006 after having served continually since the closing years of the Vietnam War in 1973.
How are the jets still flying?
SlashGear has reported on how Iran got a hold of Tomcats and its extensive operational history during the Iran-Iraq War.
Now, several decades after the war and more than 50 years after the Tomcat first entered service, Iran still fields the plane. Concrete information about how the planes are maintained and whether or not most of them are even airworthy is hard to come by. As late as 2007, Iran was able to still buy surplus F-14 parts until American lawmakers banned the sale of technology they deemed sensitive. The United States even went through great effort to destroy remaining parts. Since then, it has relied on smuggling and the black market. Plus, given the high-profile nature of the plane itself, parked Tomcats and Phantoms have a high likelihood of being targeted or destroyed during Israeli and American sorties.
However, Global Security, a defense-related think tank, reported that Iran had as many as 43 Tomcats and 60 Phantom IIs in its inventory as of 2025. It is unknown how many have been destroyed since.
Tech
Daily Deal: Adobe Lightroom 1-Year Subscription
from the good-deals-on-cool-stuff dept
Adobe Lightroom is a cloud-based photo editing and organizing tool designed for photographers of all levels. With an intuitive interface and advanced features, it allows you to create stunning images, manage your photo library, and work seamlessly across desktop, mobile, and web. Lightroom Classic provides robust tools for handling large volumes of images, offering precise control over photo organization and editing. It includes powerful modules like Develop and Map, making it ideal for desktop users who need in-depth editing capabilities. Enhance your photos effortlessly with easy-to-use editing tools. Adjust exposure, contrast, and color balance, crop and straighten images, and apply presets and filters with one click to achieve professional-quality results. With 1TB of cloud storage and automatic synchronization, Lightroom ensures your entire photo library is backed up and accessible from any device. Edit on the go and never lose your work—your photos are always at your fingertips. This one year subscription is on sale for $119.88.
Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team.
Filed Under: daily deal
Tech
Starlink’s next-gen satellite network could provide 150 Mbps speeds by end of next year
Starlink is getting ready to launch its second generation of satellites, and it’s expected to match the speeds of a traditional terrestrial network. During a keynote at Mobile World Congress, Starlink execs detailed the roadmap for the company’s upgrade towards the next generation of satellites called V2.
“The goal of Starlink Mobile … is to provide a terrestrial-like connectivity when you’re connected to the satellite system,” Michael Nicolls, SpaceX’s senior vice president of Starlink engineering, said during the MWC keynote. “In the right conditions, it should look and feel like you’re connected to a high-performing 5G terrestrial network.”
Nicolls detailed that the V2 satellite constellation could offer download speeds up to 150 Mbps in ideal conditions, comparing it to a broadband experience. According to Starlink, next-gen satellites will offer 100 times the data density of its predecessors, which should help users with faster streaming and browsing as well as more reliable voice calls. Notably, Nicolls added that the V2 satellite constellation would offer better coverage to Earth’s polar regions, which are known to have unreliable coverage with traditional networks.
Nicolls said that SpaceX is planning to send out more than 50 V2 satellites on each SpaceX launch starting in mid-2027, with a goal of building out a full constellation in six months. Outside its MWC presser, Starlink also announced a partnership with German telecommunications company Deutsche Telekom. The partnership would help Deutsche Telekom address internet coverage gaps in Europe using Starlink’s constellation, starting in 2028.
Tech
Cynus Chess Robot: A Chess Board With A Robotic Arm

There are many chess robots, most of which require the human player to move the opposing pieces themselves, or have a built-in mechanism that can slide the opposing pieces around to their new location. Ideally, such a chess robot would move the pieces just like how a human would, of course. That’s pretty much the promise behind the Manya Cynus chess robot, which [Matt] over at the Techmoan YouTube channel bought from the Kickstarter campaign.
Advertising itself as a ‘Portable AI Chess Robot’, the Manya Cynus chess robot comes in the form of a case that unfolds into a chess board and also contains the robotic arm that contains the guts of the operation. Powered by the open source Stockfish chess engine, it can play games against a human opponent at a few difficulty levels without requiring any online connectivity or a companion app. It moves its own pieces by picking up the metal-cored chess pieces with its arm, while its front display tries to display basic emotions with animated eyes. A 3-MP downward-facing camera is located on the head section, along with a microphone.
As for how well it works, [Matt] isn’t the best chess player, but he had a fair bit of fun with the machine. His major complaints circle around how unfinished the firmware still feels, with e.g., invalid moves basically ignored with only a barely visible warning popping up on the screen. In general, he’d rather classify it as an interesting development kit for a chess robot, which is where the BLE 5.1-based interface and a purported Python-based development environment provided by Manya seem to come into focus.
From the site, it’s not clear where this documentation and software can be found, and the chess robot appears to be fully sold out on the Kickstarter page. In addition to this, a promised companion app seems to have gone AWOL, too.
With no clear support or even availability, it would seem that this is less of a crowdfunding scam and more of a confusing product which may or may not become available again, yet which could perhaps provide inspiration to some DIY projects, as the basic principle seems sound enough. Or, keep it simple and use a gantry.
Tech
MWC: All the News and New Gear at Mobile World Congress
There’s no bigger event for mobile tech enthusiasts than the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain. While CES in January has seen fewer major mobile announcements over the years, MWC remains the go-to event for major breakthroughs in the mobile industry.
In 2026, the show will take place from March 2 to March 5 at Fira Barcelona Gran Via, once again bringing the biggest names in mobile together for one of the year’s most important tech events.
Tech
US Military Shoots Down CBP Drone, Which Certainly Instills Confidence In Its Offshore Murder Program
from the goons-with-tech-are-still-goons dept
Wow. Imagine if you could just make this shit up.
The U.S. military used a laser Thursday to shoot down a “seemingly threatening” drone flying near the U.S.-Mexico border. It turned out the drone belonged to Customs and Border Protection, lawmakers said.
It is to LOL. Not only did the military friendly fire a CBP drone into the dirt, it also caused a bit of disruption. The military is required to notify the FAA when it engages in any anti-drone “action” in US airspace.
So it did, which is how this came out. It would be great if it were an isolated incident, but apparently this is just the sort of thing we’re doing regularly in the El Paso area.
It was the second time in two weeks that a laser was fired in the area. The last time it was CBP that used the weapon and nothing was hit. That incident occurred near Fort Bliss and prompted the FAA to shut down air traffic at El Paso airport and the surrounding area. This time, the closure was smaller and commercial flights were not affected.
The Associated Press is being far too coy in this paragraph. First off, CBP did not coordinate with the FAA before firing the anti-drone laser, which resulted in a scramble to secure the airspace after the fact, leading to a shutdown that grounded flights and raised alarm.
The link in the paragraph doesn’t lead to the full story. Here’s what happened the last time the laser was fired at something that shouldn’t have been fired at:
The sudden closure of El Paso’s airspace Wednesday came sometime after U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials used an anti-drone laser that was provided by the military to shoot down objects that were later identified as party balloons, four people familiar with the matter said.
I can only hope the Defense Department’s downing of a CBP drone was the result of determining the CBP itself couldn’t be trusted with the tech. If this isn’t the case, there’s a non-zero chance the CBP will shoot down its own drone at some point in the near future. I mean, it really doesn’t look like anyone is learning anything from these experiences.
But here’s what we can learn: tech is fallible. And given this chain of events, one has every right to demand more answers on the US military’s drone strike program targeting alleged drug traffickers in international waters. Even if you choose to ignore the legal issues, the logistics issues should be enough to keep you up at night. I mean, we’re only seeing what the administration chooses to share with us. What’s happening out there that we’re not seeing on DoD X timelines?
If drone-detecting lasers are being used to (1) shoot down friendly drones and (2) FAIL to shoot down party balloons, why should we believe the drones themselves are a better option when it comes to neutralizing threats? In both cases, humans are making mistakes, but their mistakes trigger tech that’s capable of killing people. Fuck around enough and there’s a chance someone with a federal paycheck is going to down an airliner.
It’s not really a matter of “if.” It’s a matter of when. This administration cranked up the proverbial heat, encouraging a shoot-first, sort-through-the-wreckage-later approach to pretty much everything. For the love of all that is unholy, it has rebranded the Defense Department as the Department of War. It’s all hair triggers and under-trained personnel. A national tragedy awaits, willed into being by an administration that considers collateral damage little more than viral content.
Filed Under: cbp, defense department, drone strikes, dumbfuckery, el paso, national security
Tech
Hands-on with the Xiaomi 17 Ultra: three upgrades I love and two things I wish it had

The Xiaomi 17 Ultra boasts a refined design, an impressive camera with a 1-inch sensor and a variable telephoto zoom, plus a huge battery.
Tech
macOS Tahoe 26.4 absent from third round of developer betas
Apple’s developer beta program has reached the third round, with fresh builds of iOS 26.4, iPadOS 26.4, watchOS 26.4, tvOS 26.4, and visionOS 26.4 testable, but not macOS Tahoe 26.4.

Apple’s hardware that works with the 26-generation operating systems – Image Credit: Apple
The third developer betas for iOS 26.4, iPadOS 26.4, watchOS 26.4, tvOS 26.4, and visionOS 26.4 arrive after the second, which appeared on February 23. The first round landed on February 16.
However, it’s not a clean sweep of builds, as there’s not a third developer beta for macOS Tahoe 26.4. It could still be introduced at a later point in the coming week.
Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Tech
Bytedance’s Upcoming Project Swan VR Headset Wants to Be the Computer Meta’s Isn’t Yet
In the last few months, Meta has seemingly taken its foot off the gas when it comes to developing next-generation VR hardware and experiences. The Beijing-based Chinese competitor, ByteDance, the creator of TikTok, is going the other way — and it appears focused on expanding its work beyond just gaming.
The Pico Project Swan, announced at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona this week, is a lot of head hardware. Coming “later this year,” according to ByteDance, it doesn’t sound cheap. An onboard micro OLED display will have 40 pixels per degree of resolution density, which should be in line with what the Apple Vision Pro and Samsung Galaxy XR offer. The headset will have similar capabilities to create mixed-reality overlays of graphics in real-world settings using passthrough cameras.
The headset is also powered by its own dual-chip custom processors that ByteDance claims are twice as powerful as Qualcomm’s Snapdragon XR2 Gen 2 chip that’s on Meta’s Quest 3 and 3S headsets, and in a stepped-up version on Samsung Galaxy XR. While that may still lag behind Apple’s M5 chip on the Vision Pro, it’s a lot for a mixed reality headset.
As for the price of Project Swan and what software it’ll run, that’s still a mystery. Pico headsets already run Android apps and can connect to Windows PCs, but the landscape of VR/AR is changing rapidly.
Apple and Samsung’s headsets feel like prototypes for future computers that still don’t have enough unique software yet. Meta’s emphasis on smaller AR glasses to come mirrors planned moves by Google and Samsung, and Apple could be following suit.
Meanwhile, Valve’s gaming-focused Steam Frame headset, coming later this year, shows another interesting wrinkle in the mix. Valve is running Steam on smaller ARM chips, which could mean Steam OS running on other XR hardware after that. Running more types of software on smaller chipsets is exactly what VR headsets needed more of in the first place.
I’m curious about Project Swan, though. At the least, it shows that other companies are keeping the ball rolling on high-end headsets, even if Meta currently seems not to be.
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