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Anthropic’s Stainless steal tightens grip on AI dev tooling

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AI + ML

Claude maker nabs SDK and MCP tooling biz, plans to sunset platform

Anthropic is acquiring Stainless, a maker of software development tools that counts rivals OpenAI and Google as clients.

The deal, reportedly for more than $300 million, demonstrates Anthropic’s continued interest in exercising greater control over the AI technical stack and suggests that speculation about the commodification of models is on the mark. Frontier models will not be so strong that they serve as a moat or barrier to competition, but the tooling and workflow around those models should provide some cover.

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Anthropic has made several recent acquisitions that give it more say in the software that orchestrates model input, output, and tool calls. In December, it snarfed Bun, a JavaScript runtime, package manager, and test runner. Two months later, it bought Vercept, a company focused on AI-mediated computer usage. In April, it admitted healthcare AI startup Coefficient Bio into the fold. Enter Stainless.

“Hundreds of companies rely on Stainless to generate SDKs, CLIs, and MCP servers – the libraries, command-line tools, and connectors that let developers and agents use an API,” Anthropic said in its announcement. “Stainless turns an API spec into SDKs across TypeScript, Python, Go, Java, Kotlin, and more.”

SDKs are sticky. Whoever ships the cleanest one wins the long tail of developer mindshare

One of those hundreds of companies is OpenAI – its Python, Node, Java, Go, and Ruby clients are based on SDKs generated by Stainless. With Stainless now planning to shutter its platform on September 1, 2026, OpenAI and other industry customers will have to shoulder the burden of maintaining existing SDKs and find equivalent tools elsewhere.

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It should be noted that OpenAI in March agreed to acquire Python tool maker Astral, one of six such deals this year. So far, the Astral acquisition hasn’t affected the ability of Anthropic or developers to use Astral’s tooling.

Jan Schmitz, who runs AI analytics biz BrightBean, described the Stainless acquisition as both offensive and defensive.

“By acquiring the SDK infrastructure used across the industry, Anthropic gets visibility into how competitors evolve their APIs, even if only through generator usage patterns, and it gains the ability to set the pace on integration tooling,” he said in a blog post.

“The defensive read: If OpenAI or Google had bought Stainless first, the damage to Anthropic’s developer ecosystem would have been worse. SDKs are sticky. Whoever ships the cleanest one wins the long tail of developer mindshare.”

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Schmitz also argues that Anthropic sees value in controlling the MCP standard that it proposed and promoted.

“The pattern looks like this: Control the standard by giving it away, then control the implementation by owning the toolchain,” he said, noting that Google followed that playbook with Kubernetes and then making GKE the leading managed version. ®

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Focal Bathys MG Review – Trusted Reviews

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Verdict

Focal’s second wireless ANC headphones continue the luxury feel, with a more comfortable design, long battery life, more refined sound and very good call quality. ANC isn’t quite to the same level however, and those in need of a more emphatic bass performance should probably look elsewhere.

  • Refined, insightful sound over Bathys

  • Strong wireless performance

  • Long battery life

  • Very good call quality

  • Comfortable to wear

  • Bathys offer better ANC

  • Not quite as big an upgrade as price would suggest

  • Vegans won’t dig the use of real leather

  • A little lacklustre at default volumes

Key Features

  • Trusted Reviews IconTrusted Reviews Icon

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    Review Price:
    £999

  • M-Shaped dome driver

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    Magnesium drivers for a “natural, highly accurate sound reproduction”

  • Battery life

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    30 hours over a wireless connection

  • Bluetooth

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    aptX Adaptive support with Android devices

Introduction

Focal’s Bathys are a stellar pair of wireless headphones. Unique looks, effective noise-cancellation, great sound. Where do you go next? For Focal, the direction of travel is up, not down.

The Bathys MG carry a bigger price tag, luxury materials, as well as improvements to the sound with the introduction of Focal’s M-shaped domes – its Magnesium speaker drivers – to push forward in its pursuit of higher fidelity sound.

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The £999 / $1299 price clearly indicates that this is in the realm of the luxury headphone market, even more so than the AirPods Max 2. Does the Focal Bathys not only warrant a high price tag, but deliver on expectations? Let’s delve in.

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Design

  • One finish available
  • Real leather
  • Physical controls

The Focal Bathys MG looks similar enough to the Bathys that you might assume it to be a redo of the less expensive model. The shape and size are basically the same, the weight (350g) carries over, and the button design features are the same. The obvious change is the colour, the Bathys MG trading the black, silver and ‘dune’ finishes for a warm chestnut look.

The bathysphere circular indentations make for a unique look (inspired by Focal’s Clear MG headphones), and the flame logo can light up which has, on occasion, brought some glances (and curious smiles) as I wore the headphones in public. The Bathys MG is a pair of headphones intent on being seen.

Focal Bathys MG side viewFocal Bathys MG side view
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Like with the original Bathys, the headphones can’t be collapsed or folded; so if you want to keep them safe and free from blemishes, there’s a hard carry case for added security, and accessories include a USB-C and 3.5mm cables for wired listening, the former supports audio up to 24-bit/192kHz.

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Comfort-wise, the Bathys MG are more comfortable to wear, though vegans can probably check out of this review now as the headphones use genuine leather for the headband. The earpads offer a nice plush feel when they meet the head while the Bathys’ earcups feel more stiffer. The clamping force initially feels tighter but keeps the headphones feeling secure on the head. That they weigh 350g and don’t feel onerous on the head is a good sign.

Focal Bathys MG standFocal Bathys MG stand
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The earpads are replaceable – simply snap them out and press them back in again. The buttons are the same, which is a little disappointing. For a premium pair of headphones, the controls don’t feel too premium, and often I’m having to search for the playback button in between the volume buttons to pause and play.

Another slight annoyance is the USB-C cable, which, when plugging into my Lenovo laptop, requires a hard shove to snap into place, something I’ve not had to do with other USB-C cables.

Focal Bathys MG carry caseFocal Bathys MG carry case
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Features

  • aptX Bluetooth
  • MFi certification
  • Focal & Naim app support

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There’s Bluetooth 5.2 connectivity, and honestly, I can’t recall any issues with connection drops in big cities. It’s performed as expected.

Bluetooth can stream SBC, AAC, aptX, and aptX Adaptive, or, with the built-in DAC, you can play audio via a USB-C connection. There’s Google Fast Pair for quickly connecting to an Android device, and there’s Bluetooth multipoint for connecting to two devices at once.

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There’s no room this time for Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant (or Gemini), but the headphones can count on ‘Made for iPhone’ certification, so there’s the likelihood of Siri support.

Focal Bathys MG appFocal Bathys MG app
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The Focal / Naim app is a simple affair without many features. You can customise the sound with the choice of three presets (Home, Dynamic, Loudness) or the five-band EQ. With Mimi’s Hearing ID you can tailor a sound that’s fit for your hearing range once you’ve gone through its test.

There are three noise-cancelling modes to choose from in Silent, Soft and Transparent. You can change the intensity of the backlight from Off, Dim or Bright, and you can monitor battery life and which audio stream the headphones are playing in. Hidden away in the settings is Sidetone so you can hear more of your voice for calls.

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Focal Bathys MG app settingsFocal Bathys MG app settings
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Battery Life

  • 30 hours of battery life
  • Fast charging support

Focal quotes 30 hours for the Bathys MG, and like the Bathys, they are headphones that have more battery life than the Energiser bunny.

Focal Bathys MG linkageFocal Bathys MG linkage
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Five hours into a battery drain and they were still at 100%, at which point I decided I didn’t need to continue on and on. They’ll last for a while before they need a top-up, at least with that aptX Adaptive connection present.

And if the battery life does fall precipitously – well, there’s fast charging to the rescue, with 15 minutes offering another five hours (no different than before).

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Noise Cancelling

  • Adaptive ANC
  • Three modes to choose from

You might think that more expensive headphones should offer a better noise-cancelling experience. After all, shouldn’t there be better tech than you would get even than, say, the Sony WH-1000XM6? Not quite.

If anything, the more expensive a headphone is, the more focus is paid to the tuning of the sound, and the presence of noise cancellation can affect the fidelity. More expensive headphones don’t always have better ANC.

Focal Bathys MG earcupFocal Bathys MG earcup
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

And the same is true of the Focal Bathys MG, which puts in a respective effort, but not one that’s going to leave you in a bubble of silence. It puts a shift in and gets rid of sounds on planes, public transport and walking around cities. I can play music without having to resort to raising the volume level to hear it.

It’s not as good as the original Bathys, perhaps because the noise-isolating earpads do a better job, but the level of suppression is slightly weaker. The Soft mode is less suppressive and acts as a go-between Silent and Transparent, but it’s still a mode where I’m not sure what function it’s meant to fulfil.

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Focal Bathys MG sideFocal Bathys MG side
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The Transparency mode has a tendency to amplify sounds. What’s around me is often raised to volumes louder than they are than what I’m hearing with the headphones off. If you want to catch an announcement or hear what someone is saying, then it’ll work, no problem.

Call quality is very good, better than the Bowers & Wilkins Px8 S2. The microphones are doing something to my voice but it still comes through clearly to the other end of the line. No noise was heard throughout the call, so it seems to be latching onto my voice and rejecting noise well.

Sound Quality

  • Clear, detailed, and insightful
  • Focal’s M-dome driver
  • Built-in DAC

I went into the Bathys MG thinking that it’d be clear leaps and bounds over the Bathys. That isn’t quite the case, with the Bathys MG offering a more refined sound and a greater sense of control, but there are some differences in the makeup of the sound.

I’ll get to those differences a little later, but what the Focal Bathys MG does offer is a big, wide soundstage that’s both spacious and gentle sounding – it has an airiness to its presentation that’s engaging – but the volume needs to be pushed up a few levels because at default volume the soundstage can sound reined in and a little distant compared to the Bathys.

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It’s not the biggest bass performance with GoGo Penguin’s Ascent, but balance and control seem to be the watchwords for the Bathys MG in the same way as they were with the Bathys.

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Focal Bathys MG paddingFocal Bathys MG padding
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

If thump and obvious low-end prowess are what you’re after from a pair of headphones, the Bathys MG aren’t necessarily complicit in offering that type of sound. There’s weight to the lows, but not quite as much punch, power and extension to the bass that some may crave, in a similar way as the Sennheiser HDB 630 (at half the price).

It’s not the most energetic of sounds, but like many premium wireless headphones, there’s refined elegance and comfort to the sound that means you can keep listening for some time. The highs are bright and detailed, varied in tone, and the Bathys MG relays them with precision and clarity. There’s a slight warmth that makes the audio performance of these headphones go down like some hot cocoa (not my preference).

The headphones don’t raise background noise to obvious levels like the Px8 S2 can; the midrange is smooth, clear, and natural in tone. The Bathys MG is very good with vocals – whether it’s Natalia Imbruglia’s in Torn, Sufjan Stevens’ Chicago, Phoebe Bridgers’ Garden Song or Chris Cornell’s voice in Black Hole Sun. It strikes a pleasing and insightful tone with their inflexions that sounds ‘true’.

Focal Bathys MG controlsFocal Bathys MG controls
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

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These headphones aren’t an energy monster compared to the Bowers & Wilkins Px8 S2. Dynamic swings sound smaller rather than larger; the headphones aren’t as aggressive at revealing every bit of detail in a track – they are more laid-back and lush in performance. Music is filtered through Focal’s tastes, rather than the headphones adapting to the music you’re playing.

Compared to the Bathys, the original pair are more energetic, especially at default volumes, which makes the Bathys MG sound quieter and more subdued. With Illit’s Magnetic, there’s more energy and thrust to the presentation on the older pair, but there are areas where the Bathys MG tightens and refines its performance.

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Bass performance feels the same in terms of weight and extension but there’s an argument that a little clarity and separation from the mids is extracted from the Bathys MG. There’s a clarity across the frequency range, a couple of levels more insight and detail retrieved from tracks that makes the older model sound a little coarse in the midrange.

Focal Bathys MG earpadFocal Bathys MG earpad
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The biggest change is in the highs, which are brighter, clearer, more detailed, and more natural-sounding, thanks to the introduction of Focal’s M-shaped dome drivers. There’s more sparkle to the highs that makes the Bathys a little more dulled.

But where the Bathys MG put in their best performance is over a wired USB-C connection. Switch to its DAC mode, and what I felt was slightly lacking in the wireless performance is more than made up for over USB-C.

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The warmth I heard over wireless connection is replaced by a more neutral tone that’s clearer, more detailed and packs a much stronger bass performance than listening over Bluetooth seems to muster.

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Focal Bathys MG accessoriesFocal Bathys MG accessories
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The sub-bass that was lacking in Warren G’s Regulate is found here, with a better sense of bass depth and extension while maintaining the clarity and naturalism of the vocals. There’s more dynamism and inflexion with Phoebe Bridgers’ vocals in Garden Song; the sound is more upfront, bringing the detail in tracks closer to my ears.

There’s a brighter sense of brightness and clarity at the top end of the frequency range with GoGo Penguin’s Ascent, but no sense of any loss of control. Bass is weighty, and there’s more dynamism – this is the sound I was hoping for from the wireless performance from the off.

Compared to the 3.5mm option, the USB-C mode offers more energy and spice – the 3.5mm input is analogue and doesn’t use the built-in DAC. The USB mode presents music with more energy, a better sense of scale and is ‘louder’. This mode is the best way to hear what the Bathys MG has to offer.

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Should you buy it?

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Luxury looks and high fidelity sound

The promise of the original Bathys is extended with the Bathys MG, with a design that’s more comfortable and a little more opulent, married with a more revealing, insightful sound (once the volume is given a nudge).

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There are better options for ANC for much less

The Focal Bathys offer better noise-cancellation, but if ANC is the main reason for your purchase, then the likes of the Sony WH-1000XM6 and Bose QuietComfort Ultra Headphones Gen 2 are better options.

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Final Thoughts

At £999 / $1299, you’re perhaps assuming a performance that meets the price expectations. The Bathys MG doesn’t quite deliver on those expectations, but that’s not to say they’re not a very fine pair of wireless headphones.
 
Compared to original, the Bathys MG sound better and are more comfortable to wear. The battery life is similar, and the call quality is very good. The spec sheet matches the Bathys, and perhaps I assumed the Bathys MG would further push the boundaries of wireless headphones. The noise cancellation is no better than the Bathys’, if not slightly worse.
 
An upgrade in some ways, the Focal Bathys MG are an improvement, though I can’t help wanting more. Nevertheless, these are high-fidelity, high-quality wireless headphones. If you want to listen in luxury, be sure to make an appointment with the Focal Bathys MG.

How We Test

The Focal Bathys MG were tested over the course of two months with real world testing, and compared to other noise-cancelling headphones.

A battery drain was carried to test battery life, calls made in outdoor spaces, and the headphones were tested in wireless and wired configurations.

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  • Tested for two months
  • Tested with real world use
  • Battery drain carried out

FAQs

How many colours does the Bathys MG come in?

There’s only one colour currently available for the Bathys MG, which Focal calls a Chestnut finish.

Full Specs

  Focal Bathys MG Review
UK RRP £999
USA RRP $1299
Manufacturer Focal
IP rating No
Battery Hours 30
Fast Charging Yes
Weight 350 G
Release Date 2025
Audio Resolution SBC, AAC, aptX, aptX HD, aptX Adaptive
Driver (s) 40mm Magnesium speaker drivers with ‘M’-shaped domes,
Noise Cancellation? Yes
Connectivity Bluetooth 5.2, Google Fast Pair
Colours Chestnut
Frequency Range 10 22000 – Hz
Headphone Type Over-ear

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Google accused of pushing ‘free for life’ G Suite users onto paid plans

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Users claim personal family domains are being falsely flagged for commercial use, leaving long-time G Suite Legacy customers facing a pay-up-or-lose-access ultimatum

Google is warning some long-time G Suite Legacy users that they must start paying for Workspace subscriptions or lose access to Gmail, Drive, Calendar, and other core services, after the company flagged their accounts as “commercial use.”

A reader alerted The Register to what appears to be a new crackdown on long-standing G Suite Legacy accounts, with similar complaints now piling up on Reddit from users accused of violating Google’s non-commercial use policy, despite insisting they use the accounts only for family email and personal domains.

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Reports have been stacking up on Reddit’s r/gsuitelegacymigration subreddit from users who say their long-running personal G Suite Legacy accounts are suddenly being classified as “commercial use” accounts and pushed toward paid Google Workspace plans by May 2026.

A lot of users have been through this before. Google spent part of 2022 trying to wind down free G Suite Legacy accounts, then changed course after users running family domains made enough noise.

Now some of those same users are being told they have fallen outside Google’s rules after all.

Emails seen by The Register warn users their accounts have been “identified as being used for commercial purposes” and say Google may start suspending Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Meet, and other Workspace services if they do not either win an appeal or begin paying for Workspace subscriptions.

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“Please upgrade to a paid Google Workspace subscription to continue using your services. Look out for a notification regarding the appeal process in Google Admin console or email,” the email reads. “If you don’t take action during your 45-day appeal period, Google will begin suspending your Google Workspace core services, including Gmail, Calendar, Drive, and Meet. As a result, you will lose access to these core services and data.”

In a statement to The Register, a Google Workspace spokesperson said: “G Suite legacy free edition is intended for personal non-commercial use. If users are identified as commercial users, we are enforcing our existing policy and helping them transition to a Google Workspace subscription. Anyone who believes their account has been identified as being used for commercial purposes in error can file an appeal.”

The trouble, according to users, is that the appeals system appears about as transparent as a brick.

One Reddit user said their appeal was initially denied despite “none” of the account activity being commercial. After filing a GDPR subject access request asking Google to provide evidence of business use, the user said the company abruptly reversed course the following day and restored the account.

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Others say they were not so lucky. One UK-based user whose appeal failed accused Google of relying on vague “signals” data and effectively trapping users into accidentally linking personal accounts to business activity. Another said their family-only custom domain, used solely for relatives’ email accounts and with no commercial activity, was permanently classified as business use despite an appeal.

Some users suspect the enforcement may be tied to custom domains that have at some point been associated with public business listings, websites, or Google Business profiles. Google has not explained what specifically triggers the bans.

The move also lands days after Google quietly began testing a 5 GB storage cap for some users who decline to add phone numbers to their accounts, suggesting the company’s definition of “free” continues to come with increasingly creative terms and conditions. ®

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Google Play is getting TikTok-style app previews and AI-powered search

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Google is expanding how users discover apps and games on Google Play, with a series of new features announced at I/O 2026 that lean heavily on AI and short-form video.

Discovery beyond the store

The biggest shift is Google Play’s integration with the Gemini app. In the coming weeks, Google will enable app discovery in the Gemini app on Android and the web, connecting apps and games to Gemini users.

Later this year, Gemini will also start surfacing over 450,000 movies and TV shows, as well as where to stream live sports, and deep-link users directly into app content. The move reflects how Google is positioning Gemini as a discovery layer for apps, games, and other content on Google Play.

New ways to browse on Play

Google is also introducing Play Shorts, a short-form video feed built into its app store. The full-screen, portrait video feed will give users a quick preview of the app’s look, feel, and functionality. Play Shorts is rolling out to US users and select developers, with broader market availability planned for later.

On the search side, Google is introducing Ask Play, a conversational AI overlay for finding apps. The company says Ask Play understands the full context of a user’s question and adapts to follow-ups to recommend the right app. A companion feature called Ask Play highlights will give users a high-level summary of complex searches directly on the search results page.

Google is also updating its Play Games Sidekick overlay with new social features, including the ability for players to see which friends are playing the same game and track their achievements, with a global rollout planned for this summer.

The Play updates are part of a broader push by Google to extend the store’s reach beyond its own surface, as AI assistants increasingly become where users start their searches for new apps, games, and content.

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Intel may be forcing PC makers to buy its newer 18A chips by cutting off the old ones

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According to supply chain sources cited by Nikkei Asia, the primary reason behind Intel’s move is supply constraints affecting its older 7nm-class processors, driven largely by surging AI demand.
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Even Cops Aren’t Willing To Back Up Colorado GOP Governor Hopeful’s Insane ‘Gang Infestation’ Lies

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from the more-bullshit-than-the-bullshit-artists-can-handle dept

As convenient as it is for cops to play along with hysterical claims made by politicians, sometimes a politician goes too far. That seems to be the case here. Scott Bottoms — currently a state rep in Colorado — tried to flex his self-proclaimed “far right” bona fides by making a truly absurd claim about the current state of the state.

Bottoms said Colorado is under siege from a “foreign criminal army” of 45,000 to 50,000 members of the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua (TdA) operating in Colorado.

When 9NEWS asked Bottoms for evidence of his claim, Bottoms said the information came “from direct conversations with ICE officials about this exact problem in our state.”

Bottoms is fully cooked, it would appear. He’s echoing, amplifying, and exaggerating claims about gang infestations in Colorado that were pushed by Donald Trump during his last election campaign. Those claims were also debunked by local law enforcement officials.

The story hit the national news last year when local media coverage of two robberies and an assault at the complex were amplified by President Trump, who twisted the facts to fuel his campaign for reelection. Trump joined local conservative politicians in spreading the lie of a “complete gang takeover” by Venezuelan immigrants at The Edge apartments – a lie that has been repeatedly debunked by residents and local law enforcement

Having debunked this once, law enforcement officials in the state are now in the irritating position of needing to debunk this anti-migrant hysteria yet again, thanks to Bottoms and his pathetic attempt to rile up the racism of the voting base he needs to secure if he hopes to become governor.

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First up in the debunking is none other than law enforcement officials working directly for Donald Trump:

A spokesperson for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in Denver said its leadership has not had contact with Bottoms.

“HSI Denver and ERO Denver leadership has not met with nor had conversations with Representative Bottoms,” said ICE spokesman Steve Kotecki.

Whoops! That’s got to be pretty awkward for Bottoms, who seemed to assume his willingness to follow Trump down any bigoted rabbit hole would immediately result in his administration supporting his racist assertions about foreign gang infestations.

Bottoms put another hole in his own foot by presuming local law enforcement would back him up if he just made a bunch of shit up and let it dribble out his mouth while standing in front of a live mic. Bottoms claimed — hilariously — that local sheriffs offices were seeking to deputize “special forces veterans” to combat the Tren de Aragua invasion.

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In response to Rep. Bottoms’ attempt to turn his Reddit draft folder rant into reality, a majority of the state’s law enforcement refused to endorse the hallucinations of man who thinks making claims that can immediately be debunked will secure him a majority of votes in the upcoming gubernatorial election.

40 sheriffs from across the political spectrum pushed back on Bottoms’ claims, saying they had not seen evidence of widespread Venezuelan gang activity in their county and directly rejecting the idea of deputizing special forces veterans for an anti-cartel action. 

The report says “across the political spectrum,” but two-thirds of the sheriffs quoted are registered as Republicans. It’s probably three-thirds, but the last sheriff quoted has decided to represent himself as “unaffiliated.”

On top of this immediate pushback from local law enforcement officials, there are the actual facts, which make it immediately clear it’s impossible for there to be 50,000 Tren de Aragua gang members residing in Colorado:

MEMBERS
Approximately 2,500 to 5,000

That would be the number of gang members worldwide, according to none other than the Director of National Intelligence. Yep, that’s the same DNI that serves the president who went viral with his claims of TdA takeovers in Aurora, Colorado while on his way to serving a second term. And if an agency pretty much obliged to convert Trump’s bullshit about TdA into facts to justify everything from mass deportations to extrajudicial killings in international waters can’t be bothered to cook the books to this extent, it’s downright embarrassing for a MAGA acolyte like Scott Bottoms to spew easily disproved claims in hopes of scoring a few more far-right votes for himself.

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It’s refreshing to see law enforcement provide immediate pushback against bullshit like this. But you can’t blame Bottoms for bottoming out. After all, the man he worships most delivers outrageous lies on a daily basis, yet somehow retains his position and the support of his party.

Filed Under: colorado, fear mongering, gang databases, gop, lolwut, mass deportation, tda, tren de aragua, trump administration, useful idiots

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NYT Strands hints and answers for Wednesday, May 20 (game #808)

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Looking for a different day?

A new NYT Strands puzzle appears at midnight each day for your time zone – which means that some people are always playing ‘today’s game’ while others are playing ‘yesterday’s’. If you’re looking for Tuesday’s puzzle instead then click here: NYT Strands hints and answers for Tuesday, May 19 (game #807).

Strands is the NYT’s latest word game after the likes of Wordle, Spelling Bee and Connections – and it’s great fun. It can be difficult, though, so read on for my Strands hints.

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The 8-bit Web Server | Hackaday

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Even [maurycyz] doesn’t think it is a good idea, but it is possible to use an AVR 8-bit CPU to serve web pages. Of course, it is a vastly simplified web server, but it does serve pages — OK, technically just one page — to the public Internet.

Working backward, it is fairly easy to get the microcontroller to note an HTTP request and then simply spit out a prerecorded HTTP response to provide the page. The hard part is connecting the little processor to the network. The server is dead simple, just a CPU and a scant number of components like filter caps and LEDs. The trick is to use SLIP, an ancient protocol used to connect dial-up modem terminals to the network.

Linux supports SLIP, so the MCU connects to a Linux computer via SLIP. Then the Linux computer uses WireGuard to network with the remote web server that serves [maurycyz’s] site. The SLIP implementation assumes that IP packets aren’t fragmented, which is normally true these days. TCP was a bit more complicated since you have to track the connection state and possibly re-transmit lost packets. Still, nothing the AVR with 8 K of RAM and 64 K of flash can’t handle.

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Practical? No. Cool? Sort of. Funny that a disposable vape has more CPU power. Of course, something like an ESP32 is an obvious choice.

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Expedia at 30, the inside story: Online travel giant navigates its third tech disruption

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From left: Expedia Group chairman Barry Diller, CEO Ariane Gorin, former CEO and current Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, and founder Rich Barton at Expedia’s Explore partner conference in Las Vegas this week. (Expedia Group Photo)

From her office overlooking the atrium at Expedia Group’s sunlit headquarters campus on the Seattle waterfront, CEO Ariane Gorin puts the online travel giant’s 30-year history into three chapters, each tied to a major inflection point in the evolution of technology.

Chapter 1 was the internet itself: the 1996 launch of Expedia inside Microsoft, when a small team bet that consumers could benefit from technology previously exclusive to travel agents.

Chapter 2 was mobile: as travelers migrated from desktop to smartphone, Expedia rebuilt itself for the small screen and assembled a collection of brands through a wave of acquisitions. 

Chapter 3, Gorin says, is artificial intelligence, and it’s only starting to unfold. Expedia is now positioning itself for a new reality in which different types of agents — machines, not humans — will play a role in booking travel, in some cases making the decisions entirely on their own.

“It’s exciting to get to write the future of AI and travel,” Gorin said.

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Expedia is marking its 30th year in business this week with the launch of the Expedia Trails Fund, a philanthropic initiative to restore outdoor trails across the U.S., backed by an initial $4.3 million in grants. 

The company is also bringing top executives from throughout its history — founder Rich Barton, chairman Barry Diller, and former CEO Dara Khosrowshahi — together with Gorin for its partner conference in Las Vegas. Collectively, they grew Expedia from internal division to corporate spinout to online travel giant. 

What happens next, under Gorin, will depend on Expedia’s ability to reinvent itself for a fundamentally new relationship between travelers and technology — attempting to continue a pattern that has repeated itself throughout the company’s history.

Chapter 1: ‘Power to the people’

Expedia started with a question: why shouldn’t everyone see what travel agents do? 

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In 1994, Rich Barton was a 27-year-old Microsoft employee, working on a CD-ROM travel guidebook — an Encarta for travel — when he learned about the airline reservation systems that travel agents used to book flights. The systems were accessible electronically, but only to industry insiders. He started to imagine regular people using them directly.

Rich Barton speaks at Seattle University’s Albers Executive Speaker Series in 2016. (GeekWire Photo / Kevin Lisota)

“The idea was simple and almost obvious once you said it out loud: give consumers the same information the professionals have, and get out of their way,” recalled Barton, now a well-known entrepreneur and investor, who shared new details of the Expedia story for this piece. 

His term for this approach would ultimately define his career: “Power to the People.”

Barton pitched the idea directly to Microsoft CEO Bill Gates and President Steve Ballmer, who gave him the green light.

Secretly building for the web

The team initially started building the product for Microsoft’s proprietary online service, MSN 1.0, a would-be competitor to AOL, which had a proprietary multimedia development environment called Blackbird. Then the web gained steam, with its open protocols and universal reach. 

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That’s when Greg Slyngstad, the original general manager of what was then called Microsoft Travel, made a pivotal call: develop the product for the open web instead of Microsoft’s walled garden. 

Slyngstad “knew the web would win,” Barton said. “Because of this, we secretly built for the web, which was brilliant. Expedia would not be what it is today if not for that decision.” 

An early version of Expedia from the Internet Archive.

Before it was called Expedia, the project had a very different interface. In the early days of Microsoft Travel, the hot trend in software was the social user interface, personified most memorably by the widely mocked Microsoft Bob. Barton’s team had its own version: a parrot that served as a travel planning guide.

“I can’t remember the name of the parrot now,” he said, “but I faked a travel planning scenario talking to a robot parrot in front of the whole Consumer Division — which was a hit!”

‘We had massive ambition’

A plaque still on the Microsoft campus in Redmond marks what came next: “Microsoft Expedia, Version 1.0, Shipped October 22, 1996.”

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A marker commemorating the Expedia launch in a courtyard at Microsoft. (GeekWire Photo / Todd Bishop)

Microsoft’s annual report for 1997 described Expedia as “a free travel service on the World Wide Web and MSN which enables users to find low fares, book flights, make hotel reservations, and rent cars.”

Barton and team had a much bigger vision. “We had massive ambition,” he said. Their BHAG — or “big, hairy, audacious goal,” the term popularized by author Jim Collins around the same time — was to become “the largest seller of travel in the world.”

Expedia’s revenue went from zero to $38.7 million by 1999. At the time, it was still about half the size of Travelocity, which had gotten to market first. 

‘Go do this on your own!’

But Barton was already seeing a future for Expedia outside the software giant. 

“One of my core arguments was that Expedia, in success, would become a travel company first and a tech company second,” he explained. “Therefore, we simply wouldn’t fit inside a giant tech company, and that by setting us free, it would dramatically improve our chances of fulfilling our giant global dreams.”

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So Barton made the case to Ballmer, his boss at the time, to let him and his team of “internet adventurers” spin out through an initial public offering, with Microsoft retaining a stake.

He pasted a printout of Ballmer’s headshot onto an IATA card, the credential issued by the International Air Transport Association to licensed travel agents. “Steve, do you want to be a travel agent?” Barton remembers asking. “Do you want to run the largest travel agency in the world?”

Ballmer recoiled at the idea and yelled, “No, you guys should go do this on your own!” Then he asked if he could keep the card.

And with that, the spinout was set in motion.

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The IPO prospectus in September 1999 described Expedia’s value proposition: “one-stop travel shopping and reservation services, providing reliable, real-time access to schedule, pricing and availability information.” Travel, it said, was uniquely suited to the internet: a global market with millions of buyers, and purchases “involving large amounts of information from multiple sources.”

‘Whoops and hollers’

Expedia went public on Nov. 10, 1999. The company had 138 employees. The stock, initially priced at $14 a share, soared more than 260% on its first day of trading. 

“We’re feelin’ pretty good,” said Suzi Levine, who led Expedia’s IPO communications, in a Seattle Post-Intelligencer story about the Nasdaq debut, admitting “there may have been one or two whoops and hollers” around the office. Levine went on to become the U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland under President Obama, among other high-profile government positions. 

Another newspaper clipping from that week shows Barton and his wife Sarah holding their newborn son William, born the same day as the IPO. The headline: “Initial public offspring.”

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Rich and Sarah Barton with newborn son William in November 1999, the week of Expedia’s IPO. (AP / Daytona Beach News-Journal)

Within two years, Expedia had surpassed Travelocity to become the largest online travel company. Barton left in 2003, eventually going on to co-found ventures including Zillow and Glassdoor, applying the same “power to the people” philosophy — giving consumers access to data that industries had previously kept behind walls — to real estate and the job market.

Before Barton left, controlling interest in Expedia had passed to a new owner. But the deal that made it happen nearly didn’t survive the worst moment in the history of modern travel.

Chapter 2: ‘If there’s life, there’s travel’

Barry Diller was a Hollywood legend who had built Fox Broadcasting and launched the Home Shopping Network when he turned his attention to the internet in the late 1990s. 

Through his company, USA Networks, he was assembling a portfolio of online brands, and he saw travel as the biggest opportunity. Travel, he wrote in his 2025 memoir, Who Knew, looked like “the perfect business to be colonized by the internet.” He had already acquired Hotels.com when he approached Microsoft about buying its controlling stake in Expedia. 

Expedia Group’s then-Vice Chairman Peter Kern, Chairman Barry Diller, and future Expedia Group CEO Ariane Gorin, then president of Expedia Business Services, on stage at a company Town Hall meeting in December 2019. (Expedia Photo)

Expedia was still losing money, and Ballmer had concluded that Microsoft shouldn’t be in internet verticals anyway, as Diller recalled in the book. With relatively little negotiation, Microsoft agreed to a deal worth about $1 billion in USA Networks stock.

They were set to close the deal in October 2001. Then, on September 11, the travel industry shut down in an instant. The deal included a material adverse change clause — a legal escape hatch that would have let Diller walk away. For weeks, his team debated whether to use it. 

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How could they pay $1 billion for a travel company when no one was traveling?

“Some people said, you shouldn’t do it, it’s too dicey, there’s no travel, the world is ending,” Diller told GeekWire in 2016, on the company’s 20th anniversary.

But then, someone in the room said, “If there’s life, there’s travel.”

“Yeah, that’s what we’ll do,” Diller recalled saying. “We’ll bet on life.”

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The next transition

The deal closed in February 2002. Diller folded Expedia into a division of his company called IAC Travel. When the head of that division resigned, a young executive named Dara Khosrowshahi raised his hand. Khosrowshahi had first crossed paths with Diller as a junior analyst at the investment bank Allen & Company, and had been in the room during the 9/11 deliberations. 

“Barry was desperate. He had no one else,” Khosrowshahi recalled on the Diary of a CEO podcast

In 2005, Diller spun IAC Travel back out as a standalone public company — Expedia, Inc. — with Khosrowshahi as CEO. He moved to what he later called “the Netherlands of Seattle.” He would hold the role for 12 years, longer than any leader in the company’s history.

It was under Khosrowshahi that Expedia navigated the shift from desktop to mobile. As travelers migrated to smartphones, the company rebuilt its products for the small screen.

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Khosrowshahi also led an acquisition spree that transformed Expedia from a single brand into a travel conglomerate, adding Orbitz, Travelocity, Trivago, and others along the way. 

Competition from all corners

Even as Expedia consolidated its position in online travel, a different kind of threat was emerging. Google was pushing into travel directly through Google Flights and Google Hotels, and its search algorithm had become the dominant gateway to travel shoppers — making the search giant Expedia’s biggest advertising channel and one of its largest competitors.

Google’s position is “a reality of e-commerce,” Khosrowshahi said in a 2016 interview with GeekWire, on the company’s 20th anniversary, in the conference room at its Bellevue, Wash., headquarters. “It’s reality of the Internet, and it’s certainly a reality of this category in general. That’s not going to stop.

Dara Khosrowshahi
Then-Expedia Group CEO Dara Khosrowshahi at the company’s Bellevue HQ in 2016. (GeekWire File Photo / Kevin Lisota)

The bigger direct threat, though, was emerging from across the Atlantic. The Priceline Group — later renamed Booking Holdings — had acquired Booking.com out of Amsterdam in 2005, building a business that would eventually surpass Expedia in gross bookings.

“Priceline is our toughest competitor,” Khosrowshahi said at the time, calling it a great company that had quickly expanded its international reach. “They’re more global than we are.”

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And then there was a competitive threat that nobody at Expedia had anticipated: the rise of vacation rentals as a category, led by Airbnb. Expedia’s response was its biggest deal yet: the 2015 acquisition of HomeAway, which would later be rebranded as Vrbo — a $3.9 billion bet on the category.

“I think the growth of Airbnb has been pretty extraordinary, and I think anyone who would say today, ‘Oh, we expected it,’ would be lying,” Khosrowshahi said in the interview. 

The one exception, he acknowledged, was Airbnb founder Brian Chesky, who was known for transforming the world of lodging just as Uber’s Travis Kalanick had upended transportation.

‘You’re f’ng crazy’ 

The next year, Uber came calling for Dara. 

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At the time, the ride-hailing company was in turmoil — embroiled in scandals, burning billions, and in need of a leader who could steady the ship. When Khosrowshahi told Diller he’d been offered the job as Uber’s CEO, the chairman’s first reaction was to hang up on him.

“He’s like, you’re f’ng crazy,” Khosrowshahi said on the Acquired podcast

But Diller called back the next day. “Speaking as the chairman of Expedia, it will be a real mistake,” Khosrowshahi recalled him saying. “But speaking as a friend, I understand why you’re interested. How can I help?” Diller then helped him prepare his presentation for the Uber board.

In a farewell email to Expedia staff, obtained by GeekWire at the time, Khosrowshahi called Diller “the toughest, smartest, most demanding, and most human boss I’ve ever had.” 

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Ketchup and mustard

One of the company’s rising executives at the time was Ariane Gorin. A Berkeley, Calif., native who grew up in a French-American family, she had moved to France in 2001 and lived in Europe for more than two decades, eventually becoming a dual French-American citizen. 

The future Expedia CEO had joined the company in 2013, and her first encounter with Expedia’s leadership set the tone: she met Khosrowshahi and CFO Mark Okerstrom on Halloween, when they were dressed as ketchup and mustard. “This is the best company,” she recalls thinking.

Expedia chairman Barry Diller, center, speaks with then Expedia CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, right, and CFO Mark Okerstrom at an event marking the company’s 20th anniversary in Bellevue in 2016. (GeekWire File Photo / Todd Bishop)

Okerstrom succeeded Khosrowshahi as CEO in August 2017. By comparison, his tenure was brief, most notable for Expedia’s move from downtown Bellevue to a picturesque former biotech campus on the Seattle waterfront, and an ambitious effort to unify its technology across its growing collection of brands.

After a strategy disagreement with the board over the pace and direction of the tech revamp, Okerstrom and CFO Alan Pickerill both resigned on the same day: Dec. 4, 2019. Diller, as chairman, asserted direct operational control alongside vice chairman Peter Kern, a longtime Expedia board member. 

‘I’m on the edge of revolt’

Eight days later, on December 12, 2019, Diller put his frustration with Google in writing. In an email to Google’s chief business officer, Philipp Schindler — which later surfaced in the U.S. government’s antitrust case against Google — the chairman wrote that “much of Expedia’s trouble is due to an increasingly aggressive Google.” 

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Diller cited Vrbo’s payments to Google, which had risen from $21 million in 2015 to nearly $300 million in 2019, even as the traffic Google sent to VRBO stayed roughly flat.

“Google has systematically moved every lever in its hegemony over search to disembowel our businesses,” Diller wrote, describing himself as “on the edge of revolt.”

It wouldn’t be the last time Expedia found itself subject to forces beyond its control.

‘Buy the thing’

In the meantime, Diller had been shaping the company’s new home. In the mid-2010s, he had pushed Expedia to acquire a 40-acre site on Elliott Bay, formerly occupied by Immunex, maker of the arthritis drug Enbrel. The site was vacated after Amgen bought the Seattle biotech.

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“Once I saw it, I just said, ‘buy the thing,’” Diller said at a 2023 company event. He wanted a campus that felt horizontal, not vertical, with what he called “a lot of ability to breathe.” 

Expedia Group’s Seattle waterfront campus. Barry Diller personally shaped details of the design. (GeekWire Photo / Todd Bishop)

Over five years of planning, Diller personally shaped details down to the geometric paving stones that radiate outward from the main building like airport runways. The campus included 1,000 trees, an on-site soccer pitch, and a meeting pavilion called “the Prow,” designed to rise out of the landscape like the bow of a ship. 

Beyond the property line, Expedia funded improvements to a portion of the Elliott Bay Trail running alongside the campus. That gave the company a sense for how it could invest in outdoor public spaces — an early version of the work it’s now expanding nationwide. 

The first of Expedia’s began moving into the campus in October 2019. By February 2020, the move was complete, at a final cost of more than $1.1 billion. 

‘Travel finds a way’

In April 2020, when Kern was formally named CEO, COVID-19 had brought the industry to a halt. He used the moment to complete the overhaul of Expedia’s technology platform, unifying the patchwork of systems that had accumulated through years of acquisitions. 

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“Travel finds a way,” Kern said in a virtual appearance at the 2020 GeekWire Summit, predicting that cities would come “roaring back,” and the industry would ultimately rebound. 

Peter Kern, then Expedia Group’s CEO, speaking at the company’s 2023 partner conference. (GeekWire File Photo / Todd Bishop)

In the meantime, Gorin had been building what would become one of Expedia Group’s most important business lines. In 2014, Khosrowshahi had asked if she was interested in running the company’s affiliate network, which licensed the company’s travel technology and inventory to outside partners, letting them offer Expedia-powered bookings under their own brands. 

It was less than 10% of the company’s business, and nobody else wanted the job.

“B2B was not seen as a sexy part of the company,” she recalled recently.

Gorin jumped in with passport in hand. She spent her initial months in the job talking to partners around the world, developing a strategy of going where Expedia’s own consumer brands couldn’t or didn’t go, including offline retail, corporate travel, emerging markets, and anywhere else there were untapped pools of travel demand. 

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Over the next decade, she grew the B2B division from a small afterthought into one of the company’s most important businesses. Today it accounts for roughly a third of Expedia’s overall business, powering travel programs for companies like Marriott, Hilton, United, Delta, and Capital One. 

It was, in retrospect, perfect preparation for what would come next. 

Chapter 3: ‘The agent that roams with you’ 

Long before ChatGPT became a household name, the head of OpenAI was already sitting on Expedia’s board. Sam Altman joined Expedia Group’s board of directors in 2019, recruited at a time when his AI research lab was still better known in Silicon Valley than in living rooms. 

In November 2022, weeks before ChatGPT was unveiled to the world, Altman appeared on stage with Diller at a private executive event for IAC, the parent media company in Diller’s portfolio. Altman demonstrated what was coming by typing a prompt asking ChatGPT about Diller’s relationship with his wife, the fashion designer Diane von Furstenberg.

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What the AI produced was “extremely creative” and “somewhat salacious,” Diller recalled at Expedia’s 2023 partner conference. “Because we do have a history.” 

More than that, it was a glimpse of the future. Diller said the preview gave Expedia an early jump on generative AI. The company was one of the first travel firms to integrate ChatGPT — both as a plugin on OpenAI’s platform and as a travel-planning assistant in its own app. 

It actually wasn’t a surprise to Diller. Speaking with GeekWire back in 2016, Mr. Diller (as we were advised to call him) had described AI as “another form of magic.” Asked whether it would influence travel, he said at the time: “Of course it will. It will influence everything.” 

Altman left the board in June 2023, as OpenAI consumed his full attention.

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From B2B to B2A 

When Kern stepped down in May 2024, Ariane Gorin — the executive who had been steadily expanding the company’s business-to-business reach — became Expedia Group’s CEO.

She soon had a phrase for what the AI era would require: B2A, for business to agent. But there’s a risk in this new world: a human traveler might choose Expedia out of loyalty, or brand recognition, but an AI agent making the same decision might not care about any of that.

Expedia Group CEO Ariane Gorin at the company’s Explore partner conference last year. (Expedia Group Photo)

In a recent interview at Expedia headquarters, Gorin said the company now has teams looking at what it means to market to machines: how to make sure an AI agent understands that an Expedia Gold member gets a VIP perk at a particular hotel, or that a traveler has One Key points to apply toward a trip.

Expedia has been building AI into its own products for years now. But more recently, it has been looking outward: embedding its service inside ChatGPT, Claude, and Amazon’s Alexa+, buying ads inside AI chatbots, and signing a deal to power Uber’s hotel bookings. (Khosrowshahi, who remains on the Expedia Group board, recused himself from the negotiations over that partnership.)

“I think that’s the future,” Gorin said. “It’s the agent that really roams with you.”

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A competitive moat

It’s still early. AI-native platforms like ChatGPT account for less than 1.5% of Expedia’s overall traffic, Gorin said. But the company said on its recent earnings call that getting its brands to show up in AI responses has become its fastest-growing marketing channel.

As demonstrated by Diller’s past frustrations with Google, these external dependencies can be a double-edged sword. But there are early signs that Expedia won’t be cut out of the picture. In March, OpenAI scaled back plans to let users book travel directly inside ChatGPT. 

Gorin said she wasn’t surprised, given the complexities of travel. “Trust me, it’s pretty complicated to be able to go from shopping to booking to servicing,” she said. Expedia handles 250 million customer service interactions a year, across more than 30 languages. 

“I see them as partners,” more than competitive threats, she said of the major AI platforms. “I see them as an opportunity for us to attract new travelers into our ecosystem.” 

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Illustrating the ongoing importance of industry partnerships, Expedia struck a deal this spring to power hotel bookings inside the Uber app, with Vrbo vacation rentals coming later this year. Khosrowshahi, who still sits on Expedia’s board, recused himself from the deal.

Growth and challenges

The company that began in 1996 as a small team inside Microsoft is now on a different scale entirely. When Expedia went public in November 1999, it had fewer than 150 employees, about $700 million in gross bookings, and a presence in four countries. 

Fast forward nearly 30 years, to the end of 2025, and Expedia had roughly 16,000 employees across nearly 50 countries, $119.6 billion in gross bookings, and a marketplace of 3.6 million lodging properties, including 2.4 million vacation rentals.

The company’s evolution has also brought challenges, including executive turnover and job cuts — with the latest round impacting 162 tech positions at the company’s headquarters earlier this year.

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‘More travel equals more memories’

Gorin, meanwhile, has been putting her own stamp on the company. 

To mark its 30th year, Expedia is launching the Expedia Trails Fund, a philanthropic initiative to restore outdoor trails and protect natural landscapes across the United States. 

The initial $4.3 million will go to 11 projects, spanning destinations from Yellowstone’s Paradise Valley to Hawaii’s Kealakekua Bay, covering areas that draw more than 1 million visits annually. Expedia is partnering with The Conservation Fund, The Nature Conservancy, and Trust for Public Land, and with AllTrails to match support for the hiking app’s stewards fund. 

The effort reflects growing demand among travelers for outdoor experiences, particularly among younger generations. Gorin said the company’s earlier trail work alongside its Seattle campus helped to show what could be possible at a larger scale.

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“If our trails fund really works the way we want it to, the impact we’re going to have on trails across the U.S. and elsewhere is going to be huge,” she said.

For Gorin, the initiative connects to something deeper. A few years after she joined Expedia, her sister was diagnosed with stage four lung cancer. Before she died, she offered Gorin a piece of advice: travel more, because more travel equals more memories.

“And then she said, ‘Oh, wait a minute. You work in travel. One day, you should use that story on stage,’” Gorin recalled. She told it at her first town hall as CEO.

“We are in the business of helping people make memories,” Gorin said. The common thread among all of Expedia’s CEOs over the years, she said, is a belief in the benefits of travel for people and the world, and in the potential of technology to achieve it.

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‘Original vision … fully realized’

But if Expedia’s founding vision was to remove the barriers to travel, isn’t there a risk of people losing control when AI puts a new intermediary into the process? Barton, the person who started it all, doesn’t buy that. He draws a direct line from the original idea to the present moment.

“Round one was radical transparency,” he said. “We blew the doors open and gave everyone access to information that used to live only in a computer on the desk of a professional.”

AI agents, Barton asserts, are “the next unlock.” Rather than replacing the human in the loop, he said, they give every traveler “the equivalent of a brilliant, tireless expert in their corner.” That makes AI an accelerant for the concept of “Power to the People,” not a replacement.

“I don’t see it as a threat. I see it as the original vision, finally fully realized,” he said. “We started by turning the screen around. Now we’re handing people the whole toolkit.”

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Schiit Finally Goes Portable With $99 Vestri Dongle DAC

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Schiit Audio has spent the better part of a decade owning the $99 conversation in hi-fi, but until now, it refused to follow the herd into the dongle DAC trenches. That changes with the surprise debut of the Schiit Vestri at CanJam Singapore 2026, a compact USB DAC and headphone amp that finally gives long suffering fans what they’ve been asking for since the first smartphone killed the headphone jack. Took them long enough. Thor waited less time for Ragnarök.

Priced at $99, Vestri is not just another “me too” stick. It is Schiit doing what it does best, dropping into a crowded category late, undercutting expectations, and daring everyone else to explain their pricing. No screen, no nonsense, just a stealth LED interface beneath the surface, simple controls, and both 3.5mm and 4.4mm outputs for those who have already gone balanced and are not going back.

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Schiit Vestri: $99 Dongle DAC, Balanced Output, No Screen, Maximum Attitude

Schiit Audio has officially entered the dongle DAC and portable headphone amp category with Vestri, a $99 USB powered DAC and headphone amplifier that debuted at CanJam Singapore. Pre-orders are open now, with shipments scheduled to begin May 28.

Vestri includes both 4.4mm balanced and 3.5mm single ended headphone outputs, capacitive touch controls, Schiit’s Unison USB receiver, and the company’s Mesh D/A conversion platform, which combines a time and frequency domain optimized digital filter with an ES9018 delta sigma DAC.

I joke when I say ‘Vestri is the only dongle that matters,” explained Jason Stoddard, Schiit’s Co-Founder. “Which is beyond cheeky, but in a field of 10,000 lookalike products all using the same off the shelf technology, it has a grain of truth.”

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The balanced output delivers up to 400mW RMS into 32 ohms, 320mW into 50 ohms, and 120mW into 300 ohms. The single ended output provides up to 200mW RMS into 32 ohms, 150mW into 50 ohms, and 40mW into 300 ohms. That should make Vestri suitable for a very wide range of headphones and IEMs, although the absolute hardest to drive models will still want something larger and less pocket friendly — so it’s clearly not the only dongle that matters.

The design is classic Schiit mischief with actual engineering behind it. Vestri uses a seamless milled aluminum chassis with a glass front panel, but skips the OLED screen found on many portable DACs.

No screens,” Stoddard said. “Screens burn in and are a wear item. We want to design for the next generation, not the next sale.”

Instead, Vestri uses individual LEDs embedded beneath the glass for its interface. Schiit says they are run conservatively for long life.

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It’s the eternal screen,” Stoddard joked. “If you don’t drop it in the sand or in your coffee, Vestri should last far past its warranty.” Duly noted. Not IPX7 rated apparently.

Controls include volume, Loudness, invert, and NOS modes, all accessible through capacitive touch buttons under the glass. Loudness contour is a useful feature at lower listening levels, while NOS mode gives users another playback option without turning the product into a settings circus.

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Vestri is also made in the USA on Schiit Audio’s own SMD assembly line in Corpus Christi, Texas.

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We’ve been making products in the USA since we started in a garage 16 years ago,” Stoddard said. “No need to change anything for Vestri.”

Schiit Vestri Key Specs:

  • USB receiver: Schiit Unison USB
  • D/A conversion: Schiit Mesh with ES9018 delta sigma DAC
  • Supported formats: 16-bit/44.1 kHz to 32-bit/192 kHz
  • Outputs: 4.4mm balanced and 3.5mm single ended
  • Power output: up to 400mW RMS balanced, 200mW RMS single ended into 32 ohms
  • Frequency response: 20Hz to 20kHz, ±0.05dB
  • THD: less than 0.0002%, 20Hz to 20kHz
  • SNR: greater than 118dB, A weighted
  • Output impedance: less than 0.5 ohms
  • Controls: volume, NOS, invert, Loudness
  • Display: no OLED screen, embedded LEDs under glass
  • Chassis: milled aluminum with glass front
  • Power: USB powered, 0.9W typical
  • Size: 2.4 x 1.4 x 0.44 inches
  • Weight: 4 oz
  • Made in: USA, Corpus Christi, Texas
  • Warranty: 2 years
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The Bottom Line

At $99, Vestri lands in one of the most crowded categories in portable audio, but the combination of balanced output, Unison USB, Mesh conversion, touch controls, no screen, two year warranty, and USA manufacturing gives Schiit a very real point of difference. Sneaky Schiit, indeed.

What makes Vestri stand out is not just the price, it is the refusal to follow the usual template. No off the shelf reference design, no fragile OLED screen, and no anonymous tuning. Instead, Schiit leans on its own USB implementation, its own digital filter approach, and a balanced output stage that actually delivers meaningful power for a dongle at this price. The Loudness control is also a smart inclusion that most competitors ignore, especially for real world listening on the move.

What is missing is just as important. There is no app, no Bluetooth, no wireless anything, and no high resolution streaming integration. Codec chasing is not part of the story here. If you want LDAC, aptX Lossless, or a feature heavy interface, you will have to look elsewhere. Some users will also question the lack of a screen, even if Schiit makes a valid long term durability argument.

Do you know what could make the Vestri even more interesting? Running the 3.5mm output with a 3.5mm to RCA cable into the new Schiit Buf Tube Buffer, and then into a pair of active loudspeakers. Use your smartphone as your network player and insert some “warmth” into the speakers if they need it.

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The competition is fierce and not exactly forgiving. Dongles from brands like FiiO, iFi Audio, Questyle, Shanling, and Hidizs dominate this space with feature rich designs, app support, and a wide range of DAC implementations. Many offer more bells and whistles, but few will match Vestri’s combination of balanced power, in house engineering, and made in USA production at this price.

This is for listeners who want a simple, durable, plug and play DAC and headphone amp that focuses on sound and power over features. If Schiit delivers on performance, Vestri is going to be a problem for a lot of very comfortable competitors.

Where to buy: $99 at Schiit.com (available May 28, 2026)

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Building A Pip Boy Themed Smartwatch

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One of the problems with good science fiction is that it introduces us to all kinds of cool devices that we can’t actually have in real life. [Huy Vector] has tried to fix that a little with this fantastic smartwatch build inspired by everybody’s favorite wrist computer from the Fallout series.

The build is based around a Xiao ESP32-S3 board, which hosts the capable microcontroller and has all that useful wireless connectivity built in. It’s hooked up to a MAX30102 heart rate sensor to collect the wearer’s vital signs, as well as a 1.54″ LCD screen for displaying the fantastic Pip Boy themed interface. Power is courtesy of a small lithium-ion cell tucked in behind the display. A little copper tubing and brass hardware helps tie everything together, with the latter serving as capacitive touch points for controlling the device. A simple leather watch strap completes the build.

It’s a bit of a diversion from the classic Pip Boy design, in that it’s a small smartwatch instead of a chunky device that takes up most of the wearer’s forearm. However, this isn’t so bad in reality—it’s far more practical while still rocking those classic green-on-black graphics that we all love so much.

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If you’re craving a more authentic Pip Boy recreation, we’ve featured a few of those, too.

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