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10 Technologies Everyone Thought Would Be Dead By Now

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There was a time when every major technological breakthrough felt like a permanent addition to our lives. The typewriter took the better part of a century before it started to look replaceable. Incredibly, the telegraph didn’t fully disappear until 2006 after 150 years of faithful service. These days, obsolescence moves a lot faster. The 3D TV was marketed as the next best thing in the 2010s, and its rapid rise and fall is the perfect example. Nowadays, even a single software update on your smartphone can be enough to make last year’s flagship feel outdated. 

But there are plenty of examples of technologies that were presumed dead and buried years, or even decades, ago that are still running quietly in the background, and some are even making a dramatic comeback. Most of these technologies have survived because they continue to work in situations where newer alternatives fail. Others have stuck around because they’re more affordable, while some have been resurrected after picking up new users who weren’t even born the first time they had their run. Somewhere between today and the headlines that announced their passing, each of the following has found legitimate reasons to stick around. Here’s a closer look at 10 technologies that have simply refused to die.

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Landlines

The old landline network has gotten much pricier to run as it’s aged. So once smartphones became cheap enough for most people to own, you would have been forgiven if you thought that was the end of the landline network. But plenty of people still haven’t ditched their old house phones. A survey by the CDC National Center for Health Statistics found that close to one in five adults still had a landline at home by the end of 2024. Across the pond in the U.K., it’s even more. In fact, landline ownership there only just dipped below 50% for the first time that same year. Most people over the age of 65 in the UK continue to hold onto their reliable landline telephone. And reliability is actually a very real reason why it remains in use.

A survey by telecommunications company NumberBarn found that people cited not having to constantly charge the phone as a top reason for keeping it. Respondents also reported that it was handy to have one as insurance against a lost or stolen smartphone, while others felt confident it was more dependable in a crisis — and for the latter, they aren’t wrong. Landlines get their power directly from telephone company networks. This means they stay on during a blackout. A digital line draws power from the grid and needs an active internet connection, and once the battery dies on a smartphone when the power is out, it’s effectively useless. A landline will also keep working when cell towers go down, and it has proven to be so reliable that hospitals and medical practices continue to rely on it. Although this is also because their fax machines run through the same line.

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Fax machines

The clunky fax machine may seem like a relic from the pre-digital dawn and an obvious casualty of email and modern file-sharing, but it’s still around. In fact, certain industries never moved away from it. Insurance agencies, real estate agents, and banks still treat it as a standard part of business, and the technology also endures across the healthcare and legal industries. Worldwide usage is still at 17%. In the U.S., a significant 70% of healthcare companies still rely on this 160-year-old technology to some degree. 

The reasons the fax machine has endured may surprise you. They essentially boil down to regulation, security, and good old-fashioned practicality. Healthcare providers, for example, can legally exchange patient information by fax under federal medical privacy laws — a status email doesn’t share. From a legal standpoint, faxed paperwork also holds up much better as legal documentation, another area in which email falls short. Given that faxes travel across telephone lines rather than the internet, they’re also harder for hackers to intercept than email, while newer fax platforms add further protection through modern encryption technology.

There are around 43 million fax machines still sending documents around the world, and a set of shared technical standards adopted in 1968 still governs how they communicate. This means machines built generations apart can still exchange documents without issue. There’s no sign of a slowdown in sales, either. The sector was valued at $3.3 billion in 2024, with substantial growth expected later in the decade.

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Pagers

Mobile phones may have taken over as the dominant way people communicate, and pager use might have dropped significantly since its peak in the 1990s, but they are still around. It’s another reliable technology used in hospitals. In fact, there are a number of modern-day industries that still use pagers. They remain standard equipment mostly for one simple, yet familiar, reason: reliability. A survey commissioned by TigerConnect, ironically, a company that sells smartphone-based alternatives to pagers, found that 90% of the surveyed hospitals still had some level of pager usage. On top of their reliability, low cost and the ability to reach clinicians remotely were also cited as top reasons for their continued use.

“They’re like the cockroaches of the healthcare system,” Dr. Brittany Bankhead, a trauma surgeon in Lubbock, Texas, told the Wall Street Journal. “They won’t go away.” She prefers to use a pager because it picks up signals her phone can’t, and she can leave the device in her car the moment she’s off duty, which keeps her job from following her home. Another advantage is that a single page can trigger a siren with a follow-up voice message that can reach an entire care team at the same moment. There’s no truly effective equivalent built into a smartphone. Pagers also hold up well physically, running on batteries that outlast a smartphone’s by a wide margin, which adds even more points to their reliability.

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Dot matrix printers

The place you’ll most commonly see a dot matrix printer is at the airport. Airlines still use them to print boarding passes. It punches letters onto the card with small metal pins like a fast, tiny typewriter, and mechanically, there’s nothing else on the market that can do what it does. That’s one reason it’s still around, despite the development of modern-day laser and inkjet printers. But dot matrix printers are also rugged machines. Heat, dust, and temperature swings that would knock out an inkjet barely register on a dot matrix printer. Running them at high volume also costs less, and without a complicated set of moving parts or ink cartridges constantly drying out, there’s much less maintenance involved.

It isn’t just airports where you’ll find them. Government offices and, once again, hospitals still use them. But they use them in a different way. Carbon copy printing is the process of using several stacked sheets so they’re all marked with one strike. Each layer becomes an identical copy, but usually on different-colored sheets. This creates an instant paper trail for record-keeping. One copy goes into the file; the others go to those who need them. Hospitals and clinics rely on this for billing and patient files, which suits the strict record-keeping rules in healthcare.

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AM radio

Every generation seems to find a new way to consign AM radio to the history books. But it has survived television, FM radio, and now it’s contending with podcasts and streaming. Even electric cars are being forced to abandon AM radio, despite the fact that the U.S. government is fighting to keep it. At home, plenty of Americans still tune into the radio every week, and while the share of listeners choosing AM has shrunk and skews toward an older generation, industry figures suggest it still holds an audience approaching 50 million. A lot of that loyalty comes down to the content that’s on the dial. Conservative talk shows are still popular on the frequency, while independent stations have held on longer on AM than almost anywhere else. Quality non-English broadcasts are often easier to find on AM than they are on FM, too.

That said, one of AM’s biggest advantages is its reach. The signal can travel through buildings and over mountains to places where phones and the internet can be unreliable. This is why AM radio has a bigger following in rural areas than in urban centers. It’s also why the frequency remains central to emergency alerts, which is reason enough for government officials to back that bill requiring AM radio in new vehicles. Even Ford has retuned its AM radio decision after a massive backlash, and the fight to keep it in EVs rather than allowing automakers to drop it over interference concerns continues.

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DVDs/Blu-rays

The way streaming took off, you might have expected DVDs and Blu-rays to have been wiped out years ago. The turning point arrived in 2011, when Netflix had the vision to switch its business model from mailing discs to streaming. From that point, owning a physical copy of a movie was no longer necessary. Yet, the format hasn’t disappeared. 

The market might currently be running at around 14% of its prior sales, but there seems to be something of a turnaround taking place. Despite SlashGear previously describing the future of Blu-ray as bleak, the BBC states that British entertainment retail giant HMV has reported an increase in disc sales, with “4K and Blu-ray doing particularly well.” Additionally, Wired reports that Technicolor Home Entertainment Services distributed around 750 million discs worldwide in 2021. That’s still quite a bit of demand. Rental kiosks and dedicated new-release sales sections haven’t entirely disappeared from stores, either, which would be an odd thing to maintain if there weren’t demand.

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People who still buy or rent discs tend to be in their late 20s and 30s, with some of them treating the current market as an opportunity. They consider now to be a good buying window because they can pick up discs cheaply before the format follows the vinyl record path toward scarcity and rising prices. However, good old-fashioned ownership also keeps the format alive. A physical disc cannot be pulled without notice from a streaming library, and this is especially important if you’re a fan of older or niche titles. Plus, there are extras like bonus footage and director’s commentary that give certain discs lasting value that streaming doesn’t provide.

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Vinyl records

You might think it would be old hippies or ’70s funksters nostalgically buying up all the vinyl records today. Not so. Data shows that millennials and Gen Z account for a significant share of vinyl buyers, and the global market was valued at an astonishing $1.6 billion in 2025. That’s quite the market for a format that was supposed to be long dead following the launch of CDs and, in more recent years, digital streaming. Even DJs started moving toward digital formats in 2001, with Pioneer’s introduction of the CDJ player. However, despite carrying a single CD case to gigs being markedly more convenient than hauling boxes of vinyl, turntable DJing never fully disappeared. Many who started out on the wheels of steel when vinyl was the preferred format stubbornly persisted with that heavy box hauling. 

There are plenty of other reasons why more people are listening to vinyl records again. For one, there’s the financial aspect for artists. Money spent on a record funnels more easily to them than the fractional payouts that come from streaming. This matters a lot to many music fans. But the big question is, does vinyl actually sound better than CDs? Well, there’s the sonic quality adored by audiophiles. Vinyl’s “warmth” is an obvious texture that listeners immediately associate with the format, and it’s genuinely hard to replicate digitally. But some of what people love about records has little to do with the sound. It’s the ritual of it all. The admiration of the artwork, the reading of the liner notes, the placing of the needle on the record, and, of course, the comforting crackles that come just before the music kicks in. These are steps you simply don’t get with music streaming.

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Wired headphones

When Apple introduced the iPhone 7, the glaring omission of the headphone jack was highly controversial, and it looked like curtains for wired headphones. Sales steadily decreased for about five years. But with a premium pair of wireless headphones running into hundreds of dollars, cost was one factor that helped drive the comeback of wired headphones. Leading market research company Circana reports a sharp jump in wired headphone purchases in 2025, with that momentum carrying unabated into the new year. Revenue grew an astonishing 20% in the first couple of months of 2026 alone. But it’s not just affordability that has fueled that growth.

Celebrity culture has made wired headphones fashionable again. Ariana Grande and actress Zoë Kravitz have both been spotted wearing cabled earbuds, as have Lily-Rose Depp and other A-listers. A devoted following has sprung up online, centering around the aesthetics of wearing wired headphones or earbuds. Even Apple’s very own chief executive told the BBC, “People still buy them.” But do wired headphones really sound better than Bluetooth? 

Audio quality was the simple reason they were always the preference of audiophiles. The editor at large for audio publication SoundGuys told the BBC in the same article that wired models tend to deliver better sound for the price than their Bluetooth equivalents, and you can also sidestep the pairing glitches that affect wireless listening. But for some users, the shift is just a quiet rebellion against the rapid advancement of technology, while not having one more battery to top up is another obvious advantage wired headphones hold.

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USB-A

USB 1.0 launched way back in 1996 and gradually evolved through faster versions over the next two decades until it was replaced by the slimmer, smaller, and faster USB-C. Or so we thought. Manufacturers haven’t fully completed that shift, and USB-A, as the older standard is now referred to, is still very much in use. Many wireless devices still pair with a dongle built for the old connector, while some manufacturers continue to build products with that same port. 

Budget laptops usually retain a mix of both A and C types. But many premium brands (looking at you, Apple) have trimmed their port selection down in a way some might consider brutal. Critics have pointed out that ditching the USB-A port was simply a cost-cutting move and didn’t benefit consumers in any way, but that didn’t stop companies from doing it.

The reason that some other brands keep the older standard is that most everyday accessories run fine on it. There’s no need for the extra bandwidth that newer connections offer, so there’s little reason to swap them out. For many common peripherals, the lower bandwidth works just fine, and USB-A’s widespread adoption remains one of its biggest strengths. And because just about every cable supports it, mismatched gear rarely causes an issue. So, if you do have that fancy MacBook Pro but still have some older accessories, you’ll probably want a highly rated USB-A to USB-C adapter to keep things running smoothly.

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Film cameras

There are many reasons why old film cameras are making a comeback. But the most surprising aspect of it all is that most people pushing the revival weren’t even around when film was the norm. The majority of buyers are young, and store owners will tell you that secondhand film cameras do not sit on their shelves very long. While many of them are being snapped up as fashion statements, other buyers are treating film photography as a pushback against smartphone photography.

You can take hundreds or even thousands of shots on a phone camera. But will you remember them all? Unlikely. In fact, shooting this way can dull your memory, which is just one way smartphones have changed how we travel. With a film camera, knowing that every shot costs money naturally stops you from firing off dozens of near-identical shots. You stop and think about composition, the light, and the angle. It’s about intentionality, not instant gratification.

There’s the visual signature, too. The color tones, the light halos, and the distinct grain are characteristics you only get in film photography. They combine into something that seems more authentic than the over-sharpened, over-saturated, over-the-top aesthetics we see on social media today. If you’re interested, there are plenty of classic SLR cameras still worth buying. If you just want to give it a go to see how you like it, there are also some excellent cheap film cameras that are great for beginners.

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Methodology

These 10 technologies were chosen because each was widely expected to disappear at some point, yet all remain in active use for specific reasons. Few people are likely to seek out a dot matrix printer or a pager for personal use, but the reasons behind their continued survival are clear and well documented. Others, like vinyl records and film cameras, are sticking around for reasons that have nothing to do with practicality and everything to do with people just missing how things used to feel.

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Google ordered to pay Klarna nearly $2bn in abuse-of-power row

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Judge Linda Kullberg stated that the ruling is ‘without a doubt the largest claim that has been ordered in a Swedish competition case’.

In a legal dispute regarding an abuse of power in the market for comparison shopping services, search-engine giant Google has been ordered by a Swedish court to pay almost $2bn in damages to PriceRunner, the price comparison business owned by payment platform Klarna.

On Wednesday (1 July), the Patent and Market Court in Stockholm, through judge Linda Kullberg, awarded compensation for lost revenue caused by Google’s perceived preferential treatment of its own comparison shopping service over competing services. 

Kullberg did, however, dismiss further claims wherein PriceRunner asked for an additional $8.2bn. Despite this, Kullberg said the decision still represents “without a doubt the largest claim that has been ordered in a Swedish competition case”. 

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Google is in a position to appeal the ruling and stated that it is not in agreement with the court’s findings. 

A spokesperson for the organisation said, “We are reviewing and will consider our legal options. The changes we made to shopping ads back in 2017 are working successfully, generating growth and jobs for hundreds of comparison shopping services who operate more than 1,500 websites across Europe.” 

This is in reference to a decision that was reached in 2017 by the European Commission, in which Google was ordered to pay a €2.4bn penalty for abusing its dominance online as a means of giving its own service an advantage, a result which at the time Google also expressed dismay at and appealed. 

Commenting on the outcome of the latest case, Dan Greaves, Klarna’s head of communications and policy, said, “When markets work well, everyone benefits. Consumers get higher quality at lower cost, companies stay focused on serving customers rather than defending position, and society is better off for it.”

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Separately, Google has also lost a long-running dispute over a €4.1bn anti-trust fine imposed by the European Union for a case in which it was determined that Google unfairly leveraged a dominant position in the context of its Android operating system. The decision is legally binding and is a major win for the Brussels-based regulator, as the argument has been in full flow since the case was first ruled upon in 2018. 

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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Yesterday’s Technology, Re-engineered Today | Hackaday

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Watching [sprite_tm]’s build of a handheld 486-based gaming computer, we got to thinking about retro computers and the eternal questions of how much of the computer needs to be actually “old” for it it be retro. Where is the soul of a retro computer? The CPU? The old yellowing plastic case? Maybe it depends on what you’re trying to get out of the hobby.

There is of course a spectrum of people playing around with old computers. For some people, let’s call them “vintage computer enthusiasts”, half of the fun is in keeping the actual old hardware running. This group tends to know what teletype lubricant smells like, and how to tell which capacitors need replacing.

For others, “team retro”, the joy is in using the machine itself, whether that be teaching the old dogs new tricks, or simply loading up nostalgic video games. Team retro is more content with emulations or emulations that are wrapped up neatly in hardware workalikes. They know which registers need POKEing, and whether or not Commander Keen is running at the right framerate.

I think [sprite_tm]’s project falls in with yet another camp, the retro-reengineers. Here, the idea is to step through the engineering lessons of the past by re-designing something from a bygone era. So when [sprite_tm] went with a period 486 CPU backed up by a modern FPGA, perhaps ironically borrowing code from the modern MiSTer project, it makes sense for his goals. Retro-reengineers know the bus architecture and the memory timings, and they are reinventing the wheel as a learning experience. Or in the case of [Voja Antonic]’s imaginary four-bit machine, it’s a teaching experience.

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How you work often reflects what you’d like to get out of the project, and at Hackaday, of course, we love all of the above! We’ve identified at least three broad schools of fooling around with old computers. Are we missing any?

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US Life Expectancy On Track To Reach Record High

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The US age-adjusted death rate fell to a record low in 2025, likely pushing life expectancy to a record high as overdose deaths declined and mortality improved across all age groups. CNN reports: There were about 689 deaths for every 100,000 people in the US in 2025, according to a new report from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — the lowest rate recorded in more than a century of tracking. The age-adjusted rate has fallen 22% since 2021, landing about 4% lower than it was just before the pandemic in 2019. […] The top causes of death in the US in 2025 followed longstanding patterns: Heart disease led with nearly 695,000 deaths, followed by cancer with nearly 623,000 deaths.

Unintentional injuries, which includes drug overdoses, were the third leading cause of death. Overdose deaths are still high — about 70,000 people died from an overdose in 2025, preliminary CDC data shows — but experts say that sharp declines probably played a large role in bringing the age-adjusted death rate down in the US.

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Security Roundup: Apple’s Hide My Email Service Fails to Hide Your Email

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A politician on the European Parliament’s PEGA Committee—created to investigate spyware abuses, including of the notorious Pegasus malware—was targeted with Pegasus himself, according to new research findings released this week. Meanwhile, top Google security staff warned this week that the pro-competition rule proposals in the EU could make Google Search and Android systems vulnerable to hacking and other abuse.

A WIRED investigation revealed this week that Meta contractors posed as kids and teens to see how chatbots like Gemini and ChatGPT responded to prompts about high-risk subjects, including suicide, sex and drugs.

And a researcher realized that he could use Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.7 to break into the website of Front Gate and issue tickets to almost any United States music festival, including Lollapalooza and Bonnaroo.

But wait, there’s more! Each week, we round up the security and privacy news we didn’t cover in depth ourselves. Click the headlines to read the full stories. And stay safe out there.

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Back in 2021, Apple launched its Hide My Email tool, which as the name suggests, allows people to sign-up for online services using an email address that isn’t linked directly to them. The privacy feature generates “unique, random email addresses” that will forward incoming messages to a user’s personal email address—reducing the amount of information you need to hand over to companies.

Reporting from 404 Media this week revealed that a vulnerability in the system has made it possible, for at least a year, for people’s real email addresses to be uncovered when they are using Apple’s privacy service. “Apple Hide My Email is leaking email addresses that are supposed to be hidden,” security researcher Tyler Murphy, who discovered the flaw in June 2025, told the publication. “In our limited tests with volunteers, 100% of Hide My Email addresses were exploitable,” he said.

The exact details of the vulnerability and how it works have not been revealed as the problem hasn’t been fixed. In tests conducted by 404 Media and Murphy, it was possible for a newly created Hide My Email address, which uses the @icloud.com domain, to be linked back to the real email address of its creator. Murphy said he originally reported the problem to Apple last summer and was told it had been “addressed” by March this year. However, when the researcher continued testing the issue, it remained exploitable, with Apple telling Murphy a couple of months ago that it was still investigating the issue. Apple did not respond to requests for comment from the publication.

A nineteen-year-old has been arrested and extradited to the United States to face charges over their alleged involvement in the notorious Scattered Spider hacking group, the Department of Justice (DoJ) announced this week. Peter Stokes, an Estonian-US dual citizen, was arrested in Finland in April and has been charged with computer intrusion, conspiracy and fraud, linked to the criminal gang.

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It is alleged that Stokes, along with other members of the loose hacking collective, hacked into an unnamed “luxury jewelry retailer” and demanded a $8 million cryptocurrency ransom in May 2025. The company did not pay but still spent $2 million on the incident, according to a DoJ press release. In recent years, the Scattered Spider group, which is largely believed to be composed of young, English-speaking teenagers, has caused havoc around the world by hacking into and disrupting dozens of businesses. The arrest of Stokes follows two British Scattered Spider members, Thalha Jubair and Owen Flowers, recently pleading guilty to hacking Transport for London in 2024 and causing millions in damages.

Following a move by encrypted messaging app Signal last year, WhatsApp has announced it will soon roll out usernames to billions of people. The option means it is possible for people to connect and message each other without having to share phone numbers, increasing privacy protections. However, officials in India, one of WhatsApp’s biggest markets, who have previously tried to unfurl encryption protections on the Meta-owned app, have opposed the introduction of usernames. A letter from the Indian government, seen by Reuters, asked WhatsApp to pause the rollout of usernames in the country. The letter claimed the move could increase fraud and cybercrime, citing concerns around allowing online anonymity. The letter was followed by separate messages to Signal and Telegram about their use of usernames.

Thousands of automatic license plate reader cameras, known as ALPRs, have appeared across the United States over the last few years. The cameras, which can be deployed by cops, cities, and businesses, photograph passing cars and record details about their movements. As well as license plate numbers, the systems can log the time and location of the photos, make and model of a vehicle, as well as bumper stickers. Billions of images and details of car movements have been captured in vast ALPR databases.

However, an increasing body of evidence shows that when the camera systems make mistakes, innocent people can be detained by law enforcement officials and accused of crimes. A review of court records and media reports, which are likely the tip of the iceberg, by the nonprofit the Institute for Justice this week found at least 24 cases of misidentification over the last eight years. These reportedly include a couple with a baby in their car being detained at gunpoint; a camera misreading an “O” as a “0”, leading to grandparents being detained; and someone being pulled over after their license plate was not removed from a wanted list. The findings add to a growing list of errors from the AI-enabled cameras.

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A New Twist On The To Do List

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Humans are odd creatures, and no two are exactly alike, which is likely why so many different methods exist for tracking the progress of tasks that must be accomplished. [Simone Giertz] has graced us with her own spin on task tracking that adds an element of chance.

[Giertz] tells us that she started with written lists that she tackled in dice-determined order to keep her from overthinking or cherry-picking tasks. While this worked fine, she longed for a more elegant solution. Approaching the UI first, unlike any Open Source project ever, she determined that a marker that could randomly point to a task on a vertical list would be most pleasant.

The bulk of the project was evaluating different mechanisms to make the marker pick tasks at random while not selecting a task that had already been completed. A set of magnetic toggles that could repel the marker proved ineffective, but a simpler solution involving moving the completed tasks past a divider won the day. The finished product has a satisfying selection mechanism that makes interacting with the chore chart a joy, which probably helps make it more likely things get done.

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We’ve seen many productivity hacks over the years, including Arya’s Hacking the Self, this rotary time tracker, or this e-ink macropad.

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New health sensor rumored for Apple Watch Series 12’s band

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A leaker with a reasonable track record, except regarding the Apple Watch, claims that the Apple Watch Series 12 will feature a new health sensor, but only in its fluoroelastomer band.

Apple Watch already tracks a huge number of different health metrics, but Apple has regularly been rumored to add even more sensors via a watch band. According to leaker Kosutami, the company is finally going to do it, although with one significant catch.

The leaker says nothing about what the band’s sensor could measure, but says it will solely be in the silicone band. That is presumably the basic fluoroelastomer band that Apple provides if a customer does not also order a specific band.

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If correct, this could mean that the Apple Watch’s latest health sensor could only be available on the lowest-cost band. It’s more likely, though, that Apple will sell this version of the fluoroelastomer band separately.

As for what it could measure, Apple has previously been reported to be working on multiple options for external sensors. They include a hydration sensor, or one based around muscle movement sensing.

Apple is known to be working on non-invasive blood sugar monitoring as well. To date, there has been no suggestion that this will be on a band-mounted sensor, and instead integrated into the optical array underneath the watch body. It’s not clear when this feature will ship.

Kosutami has had a fair track record with Apple leaks, and most recently claimed that the company has suspended work on its project to add cameras to AirPods. But they have been significantly wrong before, such as with a 2023 claim that Apple was going to change how bands connect to the Apple Watch.

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Separately, that persistent rumor has recently resurfaced. If it’s accurate this time, perhaps it’s because a new sensor band requires a different connector.

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Valve Open-Sources Steam Machine’s E-Ink Display

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Valve has open-sourced the design for a customizable e-ink front panel for the Steam Machine, dubbed the “Inkterface.” “All of it is available on their GitLab under the MIT license, which goes over everything you need to make your own and stick it on the front of your fancy new Steam Machine,” reports GamingOnLinux. From the report:

They’re now calling it the “Inkterface” and there’s a good few things you’ll need to make it including:
1 x Adafruit ESP32 Feather with 2MB PSRAM.
1 x Adafruit eInk Breakout Friend.
1 x Adafruit 5.83″ Monochrome eInk Panel.
13 x M2.5 x 5mm Pan Head Machine Screws.
4 x 1/4″ x 1/4″ x 3/16″ Stepped Magnet SB443-OUT.

Valve even provided a video on the GitLab showing it being put together […].

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Video Game History Foundation Says Piracy Remains the Only Viable Preservation Method

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechSpot: Video Game History Foundation founder Frank Cifaldi recently supported claims that piracy is the only effective way to preserve video games. The comments lay the blame squarely on game companies’ refusal to keep legacy content available or allow archivists to build legal repositories. Sony’s announcement that all PlayStation games will be digital-only from 2028 onward has sparked concern that titles will become harder to preserve and more easily vanish, since the company’s servers will become the sole point of distribution. In an official statement, Cifaldi noted that the end of physical PlayStation games has surprisingly little impact on the Foundation’s efforts because the majority of games from the last two decades are already digital-only.

According to the Foundation, most games nowadays are not released for consoles, let alone on physical discs. Furthermore, many discs for major titles require downloading updates before they are playable, although the DoesItPlay database reveals that, even today, most are playable offline out of the box. Cifaldi claimed that the true reason piracy remains the best option for preservation is that the Entertainment Software Association, which lobbies for game publishers, has closed off other routes. For example, in 2018, the Association opposed efforts to grant copyright exemptions for museums, libraries, and archives to retain copies of abandoned online games for research.

This is the same organization that recently helped defeat a proposed California bill to preserve premium-priced online-only games by falsely claiming that community servers are illegal. The Foundation accused the ESA of repeatedly blocking attempts by cultural heritage institutions to reform DRM legislation. Cifaldi also described the Library of Congress’ outdated software preservation process, which currently only requires tiny snippets of source code. For example, Capcom once asked the Foundation to provide the LoC with “the first and last ten pages of code” for a Mega Man game. Unable to discern where digital records began and ended, the group simply chose random segments. Platform holders’ habit of closing online storefronts and removing media from users’ accounts is also unhelpful. “What continues to baffle us is what the industry expects institutions like ours to do about it,” the Video Game History Foundation said. “If platform owners are deciding to eliminate physical media and older digital storefronts, then we’d also like to see trade groups like the Entertainment Software Association offer meaningful solutions for archives and museums to legally preserve digital-only content and make it accessible for research.

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Where NASA Posts Its Best Space Photos, and How to Find Them

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The recent mission to the moon by Artemis II astronauts was memorable, inspiring, and scientifically important for so many reasons. It also brought us a treasure trove of new images and videos ready to be added to NASA’s vast library of content.

Consider this photo of Earth from more than 250,000 miles away, for example, taken from the other side of the moon. Or these widely shared pictures of our home planet from inside the Orion capsule, which were taken using iPhone 17 Pro Max phones. Truly out of this world snaps, but taken using a device many of us have in our pockets.

These images have popped up all across social media, but what you might not know is that NASA makes its huge library of images and videos available for anyone to dig through, marvel at, and reshare. Because NASA is funded by the US government, most of its published media is released into the public domain.

That’s the good news. The bad news is that it’s not immediately obvious where this library is and how you can access it.

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If you’re ready to browse through decades’ worth of incredible photos and videoclips from NASA—from giant star constellations to spacesuit designs—here’s how to get started. A word of warning though: It’s easy to get lost for hours inside these collections.

The NASA Image and Video Library

The comprehensive NASA library portal.

The comprehensive NASA library portal.

Courtesy of David Nield

Let’s start with the biggest resource: The NASA Image and Video Library. This is where you’ll find just about every image, video, and audioclip that NASA wants to share, from astronaut photos and space conferences to planet shots and satellite imagery. By default, you get to see the newest uploads first, but you can also click Trending & Popular to see frequently viewed content from across the years.

Click on an image or video here to get a wealth of information about it, including what it shows and when it was captured. Some of the captions here are mini-essays, and a lot of the content on this portal comes with EXIF data included, which will be of interest to photographers (or anyone who wants to know which pictures were snapped with an iPhone 17 Pro Max).

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As wonderful as this resource is, it’s also difficult to sift through, unless you specifically know what you’re looking for. You’re basically relying on the search box at the top, and common keywords can return dozens and dozens of pages of results. Try being as specific as you can with search terms. Also, use the keywords on each photo and video listing to find related content.

NASA Images

The front page of NASA Images.

The front page of NASA Images.

Courtesy of David Nield

In addition to the NASA Image and Video Library page, there’s also NASA Images—which includes a link to the Image and Video Library. (Those of you at the back, try to keep up). NASA Images isn’t as comprehensive as the Image and Video Library, but it is better organized, and it’s easier to find recent content here.

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Five Solar Air Heating Methods Tested

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For as good as solar panels are at converting sunlight directly into usable electricity, especially for how cheap they’re becoming, they can still only gather around 20-30% of the energy that hits them. That’s fine if you have a large roof or a huge tract of land, but if you have limited space and need to do something like heat a home, there are better options available to capture more of that energy. [Greenhill Forge] has built five solar air heating panels to test this concept, and do it much more inexpensively than commercial options.

These solar heaters use sunlight to heat a fluid, in this case air, and move that heated fluid to another space. Each panel is about two square meters, insulated on all sides except the top, and configured in a way that air can flow past something that the sun has heated. The first panel, a control, does not use a glazing to help trap this heat, but the rest all have a polycarbonate window to increase the greenhouse effect of the panels. The four remaining all experiment with the way air flows around a black corrugated steel sheet to gather more of the heat, with the fifth panel using a set of black screen instead.

With the panels all set out in the sun, [Greenhill Forge] is using a set of thermocouples from a previous project to measure the efficiency of each panel. Surprisingly, he found that the panel using the layers of screen was the best at gathering energy, although he notes several times that these types of panels are extremely sensitive to changes in physical configuration, so this is not the most definitive test possible. However, at only around $100 per panel it’s quite a deal if the goal is a usable space heater that doesn’t use any fuel or grid electricity.

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