Saros Consulting’s research found that ‘scope creep’ is a significant cause of stress for IT and technical teams.
IT consultancy Saros Consulting has published the results of a new study that explores the issues of stress and mental health among IT employees, as well as the factors that drive them.
In partnership with Censuswide, Saros Consulting collected data from 200 IT decision-makers working out of large, Ireland-based organisations. What was discovered is that three out of every five participating organisations have noticed “stress or mental health issues among IT workers due to intensifying delivery pressures”.
Saros’s research suggests that as more organisations continue to embrace AI, the pressure to roll out new products and systems is creating a fraught working environment for IT and technical teams. Only 58pc of IT leaders admitted that their leadership team has realistic expectations of how AI can benefit them.
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Great expectations
Legacy systems were found to be slowing down progress for IT workers, with 59pc of contributors noting that they are running too many, while 57pc explained legacy systems are holding back innovation in their company.
‘Scope creep’ – that is, the continuous or uncontrolled expansion of a person’s work – was also identified as a major issue. Six in 10 participating large organisations reported scope creep as a contributing factor to stress among IT and technical teams, while 61pc also admitted that these teams are working long hours because of talent shortages.
Saros’s research did find, however, that there may be a financial benefit to workers around talent shortages, in that almost 60pc of organisations taking part in the study said they gave an IT or technical team member a 50pc pay increase to discourage them from leaving. According to the report, this underlines the lengths large organisations are willing to go to if it means retaining skilled IT talent.
Fill the gap
A recent report published by the Employment and Recruitment Federation, and supported by Icon Accounting, found that temporary and contract roles are having an impact on the wider working landscape.
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Their research found that while Ireland’s jobs market is holding steady, “employer confidence is becoming more measured, with temporary and contract roles now overtaking permanent recruitment in a clear sign of growing caution across the market”.
This change in workplace needs and expectations was also evident in Saros’s data, which found that in order to ease the burden, the outsourcing of IT work is being utilised. Almost one-quarter of IT decision-makers in large organisations said outsourced project management helps reduce stress among technical team members.
Commenting on the findings, Ray Armstrong, the co-founder and co-CEO of Saros Consulting, said, “Our research shows that organisations in Ireland are struggling to address the issue of mental health among IT teams and the leadership team themselves could even be compounding the issue.
“The source of the issue lies in organisations not having a proper IT strategy in place. This means not only coming up with a strategy that is doable, but also one that works in tandem with the business and its goals. Putting a proper plan in place can help to alleviate pressure, provide clarity and lead to happier, more fulfilled workers.”
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Justin van der Spuy, also a co-founder and co-CEO of Saros, added, “The sharp rise in cyber threats, coupled with the AI boom and severe staff shortages, have meant that IT teams are under a lot of pressure, to a point where it is becoming too much.
“IT has become the backbone of every organisation; if it ceases to function healthily, then so does the rest of the organisation. IT leaders must look holistically at how they can support their teams. Pay rises alone can’t cure sleep deprivation.”
AI – and ensuring that organisations are fully prepared to embrace future skills and security needs – is an important topic for most organisations in 2026.
In response, the Irish Government recently launched AIReady.ie, a new national AI skilling platform designed to provide people across Ireland with the means to learn essential AI skills.
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Developed by Solas, in partnership with the National Skills Council, the programme will aim to teach the fundamentals of AI, with a curriculum designed to support people as they work to develop the in‑demand skills needed for work, study and everyday life.
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Your Chromebook has an expiration date known as Auto Update Expiry Date (AUE). Essentially, this is the best-by date for Google’s official support, and after that point, your laptop will no longer receive automatic security and software updates. With luck, you may be able to keep using your Chromebook even after that cut-off date, but the lack of updates might become a problem over time. Some apps may no longer work smoothly, and the device may become more vulnerable to security threats.
Once your Chromebook approaches that end-of-life stage, you’ll probably put it in storage and upgrade to one of the best laptops you can buy right now. However, before you put it away or take it to a recycling facility, keep in mind that even an aging Chromebook is not necessarily useless.
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You can keep your Chromebook useful by turning it into a digital photo frame, a security camera, and much more. This way, you’ll give your old Chromebook a new lease on life, save money, and even cut back on e-waste.
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Use your old Chromebook as a home security camera
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There are many ways to make your home more secure, and one of the best is investing in a video surveillance system. The downside is that some of the best smart security cameras for your home and garage can be expensive to install, especially if you want to cover every inch of your house.
Luckily, if you have an old Chromebook, you can just build your own home security camera. Key features of most smart security systems include a camera, a storage system (often with backups being sent to the cloud), a companion app, and a wireless connection. These are capabilities you’ll likely find in your Chromebook. You’ll just need to buy a standalone webcam if your Chromebook’s built-in camera is of low quality.
Your best bet is to look into using a web-based security service that works in Google Chrome, as that’s the most universal and stable way to set this up on a Chromebook. Certain Android apps, such as Camy, may also work. Keep in mind that this can’t replace a full-blown home security system, but it can still be useful if you want to see what’s going on at home when you’re away. Smart cameras come with motion sensors, superior video quality, and night vision.
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Turn your old Chromebook into a digital photo frame
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You probably have hundreds, if not thousands, of photos that you rarely look at because they often get buried in albums and folders. One way to display them is to put them in a digital photo frame, but unfortunately, high-quality digital photo frames are not cheap. Larger, premium frames like the Skylight Frame can run anywhere between $134 and $300.
If you don’t want to spend that much, you can always go the DIY route, as old Chromebooks can serve the same purpose, too. If you have saved your videos and images on Google Photos, all you need to do is create specific albums and run them as a slideshow in full-screen mode.
To make the experience as smooth as it can be, you’ll want to make your Chromebook run faster. This includes uninstalling unnecessary apps or simply closing the ones you don’t need to run in the background, and then rebooting your laptop. If the photos are in cloud storage, remember that you’ll need consistent internet access to display them.
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Replace ChromeOS with Linux
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Even after your Chromebook officially hits its AUE date, the hardware should remain functional, but your software options change. Since your browser will no longer receive security patches, it may eventually struggle to load modern websites and web apps. If you notice the system is underperforming, you can reboot the machine, clear the storage, remove unused extensions, or initiate a Powerwash, which is essentially a factory reset that deletes all of your user data except operational or diagnostic information.
You can also consider switching from ChromeOS to a different operating system, such as a lightweight Linux distribution like Lubuntu. This way, you’ll squeeze more life out of your old Chromebook and get access to a decent operating system and new updates. This process often isn’t easy, and we don’t recommend doing it if you’re not comfortable with every step. However, doing this can give you access to a potentially more secure, up-to-date operating system than a post-AUE Chromebook.
Cole Tomas Allen of Torrance, California, appeared Monday in the US District Court for the District of Columbia to face federal charges stemming from Saturday night’s armed assault on a security checkpoint at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner.
Magistrate Judge Matthew Sharbaugh ordered Allen held pending a detention hearing Thursday. The suspect, who appeared on a criminal complaint rather than an indictment, was not asked to enter a plea. He faces three federal counts: attempting to assassinate the president, transportation of a firearm in interstate commerce, and discharge of a firearm during a crime of violence.
Allen, 31, is a Caltech-trained mechanical engineer with a recent master’s degree in computer science from California State University, Dominguez Hills who tutored part-time at a Torrance test-prep company and built indie video games on the side, according to a WIRED review of public databases, which revealed a minimal online presence.
The Metropolitan Police Department claims that the suspect approached a Secret Service checkpoint at the Hilton on Saturday night armed with a shotgun, a handgun, and multiple knives. Agents intercepted the suspect before he could reach the ballroom, where President Donald Trump was preparing to speak.
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Witnesses reported hearing several shots outside the room, and agents quickly moved Trump and Vice President JD Vance off the stage. One agent was hit but was protected by his bulletproof vest. Trump later told reporters the agent was unharmed.
MPD interim chief Jeffery Carroll characterized the suspect as a “lone actor” and said he was taken to a hospital for evaluation following his arrest.
Roughly 10 minutes before the shooting, the suspect allegedly emailed his family a “manifesto,” according to the New York Post, which cited two US officials and a copy of the document. In it, the author states they are “no longer willing to permit a pedophile, rapist, and traitor to coat my hands with his crimes”—language the Post read as a reference to Trump.
The writer reportedly said he planned to use buckshot rather than slugs to “minimize casualties” but would “go through most everyone here to get to the targets if it were absolutely necessary,” reasoning that guests who chose to attend were “complicit.” The document also mocks the Hilton hotel’s security: “I walk in with multiple weapons and not a single person there considers the possibility that I could be a threat.”
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Within hours of the attack, Trump and a chorus of administration officials, GOP lawmakers, and right-wing influencers seized on the shooting to demand construction proceed unimpeded on a $400-million, 90,000-square-foot White House ballroom Trump is building on the demolished East Wing—a project mired in litigation from the National Trust for Historic Preservation, which argues he sidestepped Congress.
“This event would never have happened with the Militarily Top Secret Ballroom currently under construction at the White House,” Trump posted to Truth Social Sunday morning.
The White House Correspondents’ Association, which hosts the dinner, is not a White House organization—it is an independent nonprofit of journalists who cover the administration—and there’s no indication it would agree to hold the event, which is billed as a celebration of press freedom, inside the executive mansion.
Americans lost $2.1 billion to social media scams in 2025, an eightfold increase since 2020, according to a report released Monday by the Federal Trade Commission.
Nearly 30% of Americans who reported being a victim of a scam last year said the scam originated on social media, with Facebook most frequently being identified as the social media platform where the scam originated, according to the report. Fellow Meta-owned platforms WhatsApp and Instagram were ranked a distant second and third, the FTC said.
“In 2025, people reported losing far more money to scams on Facebook alone than they reported losing to text or email scams,” the commission said.
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Scams originating on Facebook cost users $794 million in 2025, while WhatsApp and Instagram combined for $659 million in losses.
Representatives for Meta didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
The FTC said social media scams largely fall into three categories: investment, shopping and romance. The greatest amount of money — $1.1 billion — was lost to investment scams often rooted in ads or posts offering a program to teach investment techniques.
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Shopping scams were the most reported social media scam in 2025, with more than 40% of social media scam victims reporting they got ripped off by ordering something they saw in a social media ad — “everything from clothes and makeup to car parts and even puppies,” the agency said.
Romance scams are also popular on social media. Nearly 60% of people who were victimized by a romance scam in 2025 said it originated on a social media platform. “Scammers often tailored their pitch based on people’s profiles, later inventing a crisis requiring money or casually offering investment advice to draw them onto a fake investment platform,” the FTC said.
All age groups, except those 80 or older, reported losing more money to scams that began on social media than to any other method of contact.
To avoid being a victim of social media scams, the FTC advises consumers to limit who can see their posts and contacts on social media. Also, never let someone you have met only on social media make your investment decisions.
Don’t mistake the Steam Controller for a PC controller. Even though its main function is to play PC games, Valve’s new gamepad communicates with Steam, and only Steam. This is not a general controller for your PC, Android or iOS devices, and it’s certainly not compatible with any console on the market today, unless you count the handheld Steam Deck. In order to play a game with the Steam Controller, you have to boot it up through Steam. (More on this later).
Valve’s end goal for the Steam Controller is compatibility with the Steam Machine, a console that doesn’t yet have a public release date or price point. The Steam Machine will support 4K gaming at 60 fps with FSR, it’ll come with 512GB or 2TB of SSD storage, and it’ll work with the Steam Frame VR headset, as will the Controller. The new Steam Machine was supposed to drop early this year, fulfilling a long-promised dream of PC gaming by moving your entire Steam library to the couch in a compact but powerful box. Due to the memory shortages plaguing the tech industry, the Machine and Frame aren’t here yet, so the Steam Controller is the first step in Valve’s hardware takeover of living room territory. It’s due to come out on May 4, priced at $99.
The Steam Controller represents roughly 13 years of R&D, from its first iteration announced in 2013 to the debut of the Steam Deck in 2022, and the refinement period clearly paid off.
Valve
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The Steam Controller is a sturdy and sleek gamepad that stands up to the competition. It’s for Valve diehards, trackpad fanatics and anyone whose main gaming hub is Steam.
Pros
Well-balanced and solidly built
Precise TMR thumbsticks
Trackpads and Gyros add flexibility
Long battery life
Cons
It’s built for Steam, for better or worse
Some features won’t be useful until the Steam Frame is out
The Steam Controller is a tidy chonker of a gamepad with a broad, Duke-like face holding two square trackpads beneath the standard analog sticks and face buttons. Despite its extra girth, the Steam Controller feels light, slim and balanced, even in my smaller-than-average hands. The grips are slender and have four circular rear buttons, two per side, that are super satisfying to click even when they don’t do anything in-game. The bumpers, triggers, D-pad and face buttons are shiny black plastic, and all of the controller’s edges are rounded, allowing for a smooth glide between the bumpers and triggers especially. The trackpads don’t get in the way when you don’t need them, but in-use, they’re incredibly sensitive and kind of mesmerizing. They look and feel just like the trackpads on the Steam Deck, following the trails of your thumbs with miniature popping bubbles.
The Steam Controller uses tunnel magnetoresistance (TMR) joysticks, which are a leveled-up version of Hall effect sticks, offering ultimate precision and long-term stability with no chance of drift. After a few days of use across a range of game genres, including competitive first-person shooters, they’ve proven to be reliable and accurate. In terms of stick precision and feel, I find the Steam Controller is comparable to the Razer Wolverine V3 Pro, my PC gamepad of choice. I otherwise much prefer the swappability, rubberized microswitches and crisp clickiness of Razer’s gamepad — but the Wolverine also costs about $100 more and doesn’t come with trackpad capabilities, so we’ll call it a wash.
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Sam Rutherford for Engadget
One of the neatest aspects of the Steam Controller is its charging and connection puck, which plugs into your PC or Steam Deck through a USB cable and enables stable wireless play. The puck snaps onto the belly of the controller for charging, and when you hover the gamepad’s connection point over it, it jumps up and latches on like a cute little sucker fish. I don’t know if this behavior is an intentional selling point, but it certainly is for me. The Steam Controller also connects to devices via Bluetooth or with a cable, and in all configurations it’s performed without issue for me. Of course, Bluetooth mode has the highest latency, so that’s mainly for phones and Steam Link play. The puck can support two Steam Controllers at once. Swapping between Puck and Bluetooth mode is a simple matter of holding the right bumper and A or B, respectively, when you turn the controller on.
Pressing the power button with the Steam logo wakes up the gamepad, and pressing it twice when you’re connected to a PC launches Steam in Big Picture mode. The Steam Controller feels like a natural extension of Valve’s storefront, and with its matte black finish and bubbled edges, it’ll be familiar to anyone who’s fallen in love with a Steam Deck these past few years.
I tested out the controller on my PC with Steam games and non-Steam games (added to my Steam library first, of course — seriously, more on that later), and in my living room with my Steam Deck acting as a makeshift, low-powered Steam Machine. On PC I played The Seance of Blake Manor, Creature Kitchen and Overwatch, and on Steam Deck I played Blake Manor, Demonschool and Balatro. Whether connected with Bluetooth, the puck or USB, the Steam Controller provided seamless play and no noticeable latency. The distance from my couch to the puck nestled behind my Steam Deck is about eight feet, and I didn’t feel a frame drop while cosplaying as a Steam Machine owner. I also never ran into battery issues, but that’s not shocking considering Valve’s claim that the gamepad has more than 35 hours on a single charge. In my testing, the battery barely registered a drop after multiple hours of playtime, and I was happy to snap on the charging puck whenever I wanted to set the controller down.
Sam Rutherford for Engadget
Valve notes the battery life may be lower if playing with the Steam Frame. The Steam Controller has infrared LEDs for tracking, which will obviously drain the battery a little faster. Some VR games may have you waving your controller, as there are gyroscopic sensors in there as well. As the Steam Frame isn’t out, I wasn’t able to test some of the controller’s more interesting features.
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Even against players using a keyboard and mouse in competitive Overwatch matches, I won games and earned awards, passing my personal ultimate test of a controller’s capabilities. When it comes to Overwatch, I’m mostly comparing the Steam Controller to Sony’s DualSense, and it feels surprisingly similar. I enjoy the Steam Controller’s smooth slide between the bumpers and triggers, though its haptic feedback is more subtle than the DualSense’s, lacking in the analog sticks particularly. Much like with the Steam Deck, I haven’t found a consistent use case for the trackpads on the Steam Controller, but I appreciate their inclusion, the accessibility factor, and the fact that they aren’t otherwise intrusive. Now, just add a Playdate crank and I’m really sold.
The Steam Controller is a clear and unmistakable signal that Valve is joining the console wars, and perhaps by patient and diligent design, it’s appearing at a vulnerable time. Xbox is fumbling the current generation and attempting to redefine its place in the console market amid a significant leadership shakeup, while Sony and Nintendo are carrying on with standard hardware upgrade cycles in a landscape that’s based less on platform exclusivity every day. Right now there’s room for a robust PC-based storefront to stake its claim on couch gaming, and voila, here’s Valve with the Steam Machine and Steam Controller.
Sam Rutherford for Engadget
Similarly to the way Valve used Half-Life 2 to get people to download Steam in 2004, the Steam Controller pushes players to fully consolidate their PC libraries in its own ecosystem. You’ll have to add games with their own launchers like Overwatch, Valorant, Minecraft and Fortnite to your Steam library before you can play them using Valve’s controller. This is a small inconvenience, since it takes just a few clicks to add a non-Steam game to your profile.
(Welcome to later). However, I don’t enjoy doing it. As I was browsing through files to add Overwatch to my Steam library, I couldn’t help thinking that it would have been pretty easy for Valve to add a switch that would let the Steam Controller communicate with any PC game. Maybe it’s a touch of oppositional defiant disorder, but I despise being coerced into behaviors that are designed to serve a corporation’s market control over my own workflow, especially in my personal spaces.
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Now more than ever, I value my ability to choose — which businesses I work with, where I store my software, how I play — and the Steam launcher requirement is another small expansion of Valve’s incredible power in the PC games industry. It’s too easy to say, most of my games are already on Steam, no big deal, and use the Controller as an excuse to consolidate them all on Valve’s launcher. Suddenly, Steam is where you begin and end every gaming session, rather than just most. Obviously and especially with the coming rollout of the Steam Machine, this is the reality that Valve wants: a rich industry utterly reliant on its platform of DRM, shitty revenue splits and random opaque censorship. It’s the situation that Microsoft, Apple or Epic also want for themselves, but the main difference is that this future is actually in reach for Valve, and the Steam Controller is a tiny part of the plan. If willing and unforced support of a monopoly makes you bristle as well, feel free to stick with 8BitDo.
Sam Rutherford for Engadget
Truly though, I get it. The Steam Controller doesn’t come with a PC switch because it’s not a PC controller. It’s for controlling Steam, a service that’s become synonymous with PC and handheld gaming, and is now creeping onto the living-room scene. The Steam Controller is designed to follow you everywhere Steam is, for all your gaming needs across every screen forever and always — and there is something soothing about that idea in a Brave New World Soma kind of way. A PC controller? That’s far too limited, from Valve’s perspective.
Encroaching corporate dystopia aside, the Steam Controller is a sturdy and sleek gamepad that stands up to the competition. It’s for Valve diehards, trackpad fanatics and anyone whose main gaming hub is Steam. Which, to be clear, is a massive market that’s only poised to grow.
Valve’s Steam Controller will hit the market on Monday, May 4, for a going price of $99 in the United States. The Steam Controller does precisely what it says: It communicates with anything running Steam or the Steam Link app, so this includes PCs, Macs, mobile devices and the Steam Deck.
Eventually, the Steam Controller will connect to the new Steam Machine console and Steam Frame VR headset, but neither of these products have solid release dates just yet. They were originally slated to come out in early 2026 alongside the Steam Controller, but we’re nearly five months into the year and only a third of that promise is poised to be fulfilled. Valve in March said it hopes to ship in 2026, dropping the “early” bit.
As noted in our review, the Steam Controller is a solid gamepad, especially for the price. It feels and looks a lot like a Steam Deck, complete with two trackpads beneath a pair of TMR thumbsticks and a standard face array. It’s reactive, ergonomic, and comes with a cute little charging and connection puck that snaps onto the bottom of the gamepad. Just note that the Steam Controller is not a PC controller: It works with Steam, and only Steam. You’ll have to add games with their own launchers like Overwatch, Valorant, Minecraft or Fortnite to your Steam library before playing them with Valve’s proprietary controller. How convenient — for Valve, at least.
Valve
Worldwide, Steam Controller prices are as follows:
Tin Can co-founder and CEO Chet Kittleson. (Tin Can Photo)
Jimmy Kimmel was riffing on presidential social media habits last week when he offered a suggestion that doubled as an unscripted product endorsement.
“I wonder if they’ve considered getting him one of those Tin Can phones like the kids have that are not on the internet,” the late-night host said of President Trump during his monologue.
For Seattle startup Tin Can, it was a sign that the company’s screenless, Wi-Fi-enabled landline phone for kids has crossed over from niche parenting product to cultural reference point
“Jimmy Kimmel organically dropping Tin Can in his monologue like it’s a product that everybody is obviously familiar with,” founder and CEO Chet Kittleson wrote on LinkedIn. “What a week!”
It was the second big recent media moment for the startup, coming on the heels of a positive review from the New York Times’ Wirecutter that praised Tin Can as the leader in a growing pack of modern landlines aimed at giving kids independence without a smartphone.
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We’ve been covering Tin Can since before it was a trend, so we took the opportunity to check in for an update. The company has grown to 30 employees and sold hundreds of thousands of phones since launching its flagship product in 2025. Tin Can is now on its sixth production batch, with orders shipping in June, according to the company.
Kittleson co-founded Tin Can in 2024 with Max Blumen and Graeme Davies, all veterans of Seattle real estate startup Far Homes. He dreamed up the idea in his daughter’s school pickup line, tired of playing go-between to arrange playdates.
GeekWire recognized Kittleson as one of our 2025 Uncommon Thinkers, and Tin Can’s momentum has only accelerated since then, fueled by a broader backlash against screen time.
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The $100 Tin Can phone connects to home Wi-Fi to let kids make and receive calls from contacts approved by parents through a companion app. Calling between Tin Can devices is free, and an optional $9.99/month plan lets kids call regular phone numbers.
The phone comes in four colors with names like “Landline Lemon” and “Later Alligator Lilac.” There are no screens, and no apps, but enough cultural cachet to land in a late-night monologue.
Oprah Winfrey’s video podcast will be available across Amazon platforms. (Wondery Photo)
Amazon has landed talk show queen Oprah Winfrey and her video podcasts for its suite of streaming services.
“Long before the term ‘creator’ existed, Oprah was building a direct and deeply personal connection with audiences across generations — and that bond continues to grow. Creators are reshaping entertainment, and Oprah continues to pave the way. We couldn’t be more excited to partner with her on what’s ahead,” said Matt Sandler, general manager of Amazon Creator Services, in a statement.
The multi-year deal gives the tech giant distribution and advertising rights to “The Oprah Podcast” on audio and video. As part of the arrangement, Winfrey will expand her production to two new episodes per week starting this summer. The partnership also includes rights to the 25-year library of her former talk show and her “Oprah’s Book Club” and “Oprah’s Favorite Things” franchises.
The New York Times first reported the deal on Monday. The deal underscores how Amazon is betting on established names to anchor its creator strategy.
“This is the ultimate validation of where the world is going,” Steve Boom, an Amazon vice president, told the Times. “You have the most influential talk show host in history, by orders of magnitude, leaning heavily into this new world.”
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Amazon purchased Wondery, a Los Angeles-based podcast studio known for producing several hit shows, in late 2020, aiming to strengthen its original audio offerings against competitors like Spotify. Last August, the company cut around 110 positions at Wondery as part of an effort to fold some of its operations into Audible and roll out its new Creator Services division.
“The podcast landscape has evolved significantly in the past few years, particularly with the rise of video-forward, creator-led content,” an Amazon spokesperson said in an August statement.
“By making these changes, we can better support creators in monetizing their content across multiple channels, help them expand their brand IP, and simplify the process for advertisers while making content more accessible to audiences wherever they prefer to consume it,” the company added.
The Winfrey deal is one of several high-profile moves in that effort. Another is the Kelce Clubhouse — a dedicated Amazon hub featuring brothers Jason and Travis Kelce, the football stars whose profiles soared after Travis’s engagement to Taylor Swift. The site brings together their video podcast, merchandise, a documentary about the duo, and promoted Audible content.
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While Winfrey’s content will be available across Prime Video, Amazon Music, Fire TV Channels and Audible, her shows will also stream on YouTube and other podcast platforms.
“Expanding our reach globally is an opportunity I embrace, as we continue to connect through stories that invite new ways of seeing, and hopefully deepen, understanding,” Winfrey said in a statement.
A jury was selected on Monday during the first day of trial for Musk v. Altman in a federal court in Oakland, California. Some of the jurors that were ultimately selected voiced concerns over Musk himself, as well as the AI technology at the core of the case, but assured the court they would put these concerns aside for the trial. The kick off also catalyzed an array of shenanigans outside the courtroom.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and president Greg Brockman were spotted in the security line inside the courthouse this morning, but Elon Musk was nowhere to be found. A few dozen journalists crammed into an overflow room to listen to an audio stream of the proceedings.
The goal today was to select nine jurors who could be fair and impartial in this case—an especially difficult challenge considering the main characters are some of the most high-profile tech executives in the world. Several potential jurors said they had negative opinions about Musk when questioned by Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers and attorneys. But that didn’t necessarily disqualify them; only one juror was ultimately excused on the basis of their strong negative opinions regarding Musk.
“The reality is that many people don’t like him,” Gonzalez Rogers told the courtroom. She added that she believed Americans with negative feelings about Musk could still have integrity for the judicial process and decide the case fairly. The jury will help establish the core facts regarding whether Sam Altman and other defendants improperly steered OpenAI’s nonprofit venture away from its original mission, potentially violating the law in the process. But their verdict will be advisory—Gonzalez Rogers will have the final call.
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The nine jurors that were ultimately selected represent quite a diverse group, including a painter, a former Lockheed Martin employee, and a psychiatrist. Some of them said they had negative opinions about artificial intelligence technology more broadly. In the end, however, all of the people selected assured the court that their outside opinions about Musk and AI shouldn’t interfere with their ability to determine the facts of the case.
OpenAI’s attorney William Savitt said at a press briefing afterward that he was satisfied with the jury the court settled on.
“Mr. Altman, Mr. Brockman, and OpenAI are looking forward to presenting their case to that jury. They’re confident in their position and are looking forward to the facts being known,” Savitt told reporters. “The hurdle we think we need to get over is just to present the truth here. We’ve got a story about what happened that is consistent with the facts, it’s consistent with the documents, and we just want the jury to see that.”
Musk is already trying to win his case in the court of public opinion. On Monday morning, the billionaire used his social media platform X to boost a recent New Yorker investigation into Altman’s alleged deceptive business conduct. The story is weeks old, and the fact that Musk promoted it on the first day of the trial is no coincidence. Earlier this morning, OpenAI’s official newsroom account published a post on X calling Musk’s lawsuit an “attempt to undermine our work to ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity.” Meanwhile, demonstrators were outside the court protesting the AI race altogether and calling for a pause on further development.
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On Tuesday, lawyers for OpenAI and Elon Musk will deliver opening statements, and the first witness in the case will be called to the stand.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds via Paramount Plus on July 23. The ten episodes air weekly until September 24. This is actually the second-to-last batch of episodes, as the show was recently .
The streamer has dropped a trailer for season four and it looks promising. The tone looks slightly darker when compared to season three, which was maligned for . The trailer is narrated by Anson Mount’s Captain Christopher Pike, who discusses the “terror” of space as a planet explodes.
This is still Strange New Worlds, so it won’t be all doom and gloom. The trailer shows us a screeching alien dinosaur, which is pretty fun. There have also been reports that season four with involvement from Jim Henson’s Creature Shop.
This new batch of episodes will lean even heavier into connections to the original Star Trek show from the 1960s. Paul Wesley’s version of Captain Kirk features prominently in several scenes, with one looking like a direct callback to Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. A younger Scotty also makes an appearance.
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For the uninitiated, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds is a prequel to the first show and starts several years before Kirk takes over as captain of the Enterprise. It’s been said that the series will end with Kirk taking the big chair. It’s also primarily an episodic series, with no real serialized season-long arcs. !
It’s also ending in the near future. Season five will presumably premiere next year and will include just six episodes. As a matter of fact, it looks like the modern incarnation of Star Trek is ending in totality. Sets are being taken down and there are currently for the first time in a decade.
This is a bummer, some of the newer content. The upcoming second season of Starfleet Academy will be its last, which is exceptionally sad because it was really . It was 12 years between the final episode of Star Trek: Enterprise and the first episode of Star Trek: Discovery, which kicked off the modern era. Who knows how long we’ll have to wait this time.
May is hosting one of the most interesting lunar events of the 2026 calendar year: two full moons. Its first full moon is on May 1, leaving just enough time for a second full moon on the last day of the month, May 31. The second full moon in a single month is known as a blue moon, which inspired the “once in a blue moon” saying for something rare.
According to The Old Farmer’s Almanac, the first full moon in May reaches its peak brightness at 1:23 p.m. ET, or right in the middle of the day. The best time to see the full moon is the evenings of April 30 and May 1. You won’t need any help; it’ll be the brightest thing in the night sky. This moon is commonly called the Flower Moon, named in honor of the spring flowers blooming right now.
The second full moon reaches its peak brightness at 4:45 a.m. ET on May 31. Since it’s the second full moon of the month, it is called a blue moon.
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Supermoons appear up to 14% larger and 30% brighter than micromoons.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Both moons are also micromoons, which means they are smaller and less bright than a regular full moon. This happens because the moon is in apogee, the point in its elliptical orbit when it is farthest from Earth. The moon stays in apogee for three to four months every year, and both of May’s full moons take place during this time. When the opposite occurs, it’s called perigee, and that’s when Earth gets a supermoon.
It takes a whole month for a blue moon to occur, but there are some other things you can look out for in the meantime. The week before and the week after May’s new moon is prime viewing time for Earthshine, a phenomenon where you can see the dim part of the moon. That gives May four lunar events to enjoy for your viewing pleasure.
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Two kinds of blue moons
The last blue moon of this type occurred in August 2023. But if you think you remember the term being tossed around more recently, you’re right. There’s also a seasonal blue moon, which refers to the third full moon in an astronomical season of four, and that happened in 2024.
One season typically spans three months and therefore usually gets only three full moons. But because the seasons don’t begin and end on the first and last of particular months, it’s possible to get a fourth full moon in a single season. That fourth full moon in the season is known as a seasonal blue moon. The next seasonal blue moon is expected to hit in May 2027.
When the above happens with new moons instead of full moons, it’s known as a black moon, which most recently occurred in August.
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Monthly blue moons occur when one calendar month gets two full moons instead of the usual one. The moon orbits Earth every 27.3 days, and goes from one new moon to the next new moon in about 29.5 days. Since all but one month are 30 days or longer, that means there’s the opportunity for two full moons to occur in a single month in any given month not named February.
Since the moon cycle is 29.5 days, that means each successive full moon happens earlier and earlier as the months go by. This continues until the full moon happens on the first day of a month that is long enough, therefore giving the moon enough time to circle the Earth and become full again before the month ends. Blue moons are mostly quirks of the calendar system, so the moon isn’t doing anything terribly special. The timing is pretty cool, though.
This cycle takes approximately 29 months to repeat. The next monthly blue moon is slated for December 2028, followed by September 2031. So, if you’re ever asked how often something occurs if it happens “once in a blue moon,” you now know the answer.
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