Shooting high-quality 4K footage, the Arlo Ultra 3 4K is one of the best wireless security cameras you can get. This new version charges via USB-C and has a higher-density battery for longer life. Arlo remains one of the best security camera platforms, packed with intelligence. The downsides are that you have to subscribe to the highest tier to get 4K footage, and the improvement from Arlo’s 2K to 4K cameras isn’t as big a jump as you might hope for.
Excellent video
Highly customisable detection
Brilliant app
Expensive cloud subscription required for most features
Expensive to buy
Key Features
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Review Price:
£259.99
4K resolution
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Shoot high quality footage day and night
Battery powered
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Up to six months of battery life on a full charge
Requires a SmartHub
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Wireless signal from the camera must go to a SmartHub
Introduction
The Arlo Ultra was the first 4K security camera that I remember reviewing. Now we’re onto the 3rd generation of product with the Arlo Ultra 3. Offering better battery life than the previous generation, along with better range, this new version is more of a tweak than a revamped camera.
Launching in a world with more competition and where 2K footage is pretty standard, does the Arlo Ultra 3 4K do enough to stand out? Read on for my verdict.
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Design and Installation
USB charging
New high-density battery
Needs a SmartHub to work
Externally, the Arlo Ultra 3 looks very much like all of the other wireless cameras in Arlo’s line-up. In fact, the casing and mounting options are the same for this camera as the Arlo Pro 6. And, the mounting options go a few generations back.
That’s actually handy, as I could swap out an older Arlo camera for the new one without having to change the mount, as the same one is provided with the Ultra 3.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
This mount is a decent one, offering a good degree of movement, so it’s easy to line the camera up with the area that you want to watch.
One big change from the Arlo Ultra 3 and the previous version, the Arlo Ultra 2 is that this newer version is charged via USB-C, rather than the old proprietary magnetic connector.
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There’s a flap under the camera to access this slot, and any USB-C cable can be used, which makes charging easier, and means no hunting for that proprietary cable.
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Inside the camera is the new higher-density battery, which has 15% more power than with the previous model.
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As with all Ultra cameras I’ve reviewed, the Ultra 3 4K has to connect via the Smarthub VM5000. If you’ve got one already, you can just buy the camera only (£259.99); you have to buy the Ultra 3 in at least a two-pack with the Smarthub (from £529.99). That makes this system very expensive.
As well as providing the connection, the Smarthub has a microSD card slot underneath, which you can use for offline recording. Just be aware that doing this cuts out many of the more advanced features that you only get by subscribing to Arlo Secure.
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I think that this camera is best with a cloud subscription. If you don’t want to pay for cloud storage, then buy the EufyCam S4 instead.
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Features
Requires an expensive subscription for the main features
Excellent list of object detection
Custom AI detection
As with Arlo’s other cameras, the Ultra 3 is controlled via the excellent and flexible Arlo app. If you have storage inserted into the Smarthub, you can record video offline, but you miss out on all of the detection features.
For all practical purposes, you need to have an Arlo Secure plan. To get 4K recording you need Arlo Secure Plus, which costs £19.99 a month, and supports unlimited cameras with 14 days of storage and a host of AI features.
That is a very expensive subscription, particularly as the recording history is so short. Buy the 4K Ring Outdoor Cam Pro, and you can get cloud storage from £4.99 a month.
Expensive as it may be, the overall Arlo experience is one of the best. From the main screen I can choose which cameras I want to see by adding widgets. Widgets let me jump into a camera’s live feed, and see what’s going on, turning on two-way talk if needed. You do need to enable local 4K streaming if you want the best quality.
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This home page also gives quick access to the three modes: Arm Away, Arm Home, and Standby. Similar to the modes in an alarm system, I can configure what cameras do in each mode. I tend to have indoor cameras off for the Home and Standby modes, and on for Away; outdoor cameras are on unless the system is in Standby. Modes can be scheduled or automated via your location.
With the recommended Arlo Secure Plus subscription, the level of control over motion detection is incredible. I could set motion zones and then choose to record and get alerts about my choice of people, animals and vehicles.
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This high-level package also adds in-person recognition, which can be trained by uploading photos of people you know, and then refined in-app. And, there’s also vehicle recognition, which is similar but designed to spot cars that you know.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
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Oddly, the vehicle recognition is available on all cameras connected to your account, but the person recognition can only be implemented on a single camera.
Custom Detection is a brand new feature, with up to three custom detection events available per camera. Give the system a before and after screenshot, say showing a gate closed and open, and the system looks for the change.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
Notifications can then be given based when motion is detected, at a set time or when the mode changes. For example, I can tell the system to tell me if the back door is open when I change the mode to Arm Away.
It’s a very flexible system that makes Arlo more powerful than its competition, but it is an expensive choice. And, Custom Detection, in my experience, needs to look for a big enough change to work properly. Trying to get the system to recognise when my glass kitchen door was open, proved hard.
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Video is recorded to the cloud, and is available in the Feed section, which is organised by day. Events can be filtered by date, camera and event type, the latter of which has too many choices to list. What I can say is that it’s remarkably easy to find an event, although I would like the option of an AI search, as you get with the high-end Ring plan.
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Performance
Sharp video
Not a huge step up from 2K
Clean full-colour night vision
When the Arlo Ultra came out, it was a huge step up from the 1080p video cameras that were around. Today, a lot of cameras have a 2K resolution. While 4K has 66% more pixels than 2K, the Arlo Ultra 3 records at the same bitrate as the Arlo Pro 6 (55kbit/s), so there’s more compression going on with the 4K camera.
During the day, the Arlo Ultra 3 does look great. The image is very sharp, with detail right to the back of the frame. Is it that much better than the footage shot on the Arlo Pro 6? No. There’s a definite improvement with having 4K, but not by as much as you’d expect. The main difference is that the Arlo Ultra 3 has wider 180° field of view (the Arlo Pro 6 has a 160° field of view).
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
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With a spotlight, the Ultra 3 can shoot full colour nighttime footage. As the light turns on, it takes a second or so for the image to stabilise before it settles down and delivers the full-colour image.
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Moving images blur more than during the day, and the overall image is a touch softer, but I could always find a frame or two where faces were in detail. If anything, the gap between the Pro 6 and Ultra 3 is narrower here; the 4K camera is better, but only by a little.
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)
Arlo says that the Ultra 3 can last up to six months on a charge, although that does depend on how many times the camera is triggered per day. In my garden, I’d say that four months plus seems more realistic for me.
Should you buy it?
You want high-quality video
If you want sharp 4K footage and brilliant AI detection, this camera is for you.
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You want something better value
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Expensive to buy and expensive to run, there are far more wallet-friendly options to choose from.
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Final Thoughts
There’s no denying that the Arlo Ultra 3 is a great security camera: it shoots high-quality footage, and the Arlo app is great. The issue is that you have to pay much more for the camera than for the 2K Pro 6, but the footage isn’t that much better.
And, to get 4K footage, you have to subscribe to the highest tier of the cloud subscription package, so it’s a big price commitment. If you want the best, buy this camera; otherwise, go for the Arlo Pro 6 2K or another option in my guide to the best outdoor security cameras.
How we test
Unlike other sites, we test every security camera we review thoroughly over an extended period of time. We use industry standard tests to compare features properly. We’ll always tell you what we find. We never, ever, accept money to review a product.
Find out more about how we test in our ethics policy.
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Used as our main security camera for the review period
We test compatibility with the main smart systems (HomeKit, Alexa, Google Assistant, SmartThings, IFTTT and more) to see how easy each camera is to automate.
We take samples during the day and night to see how clear each camera’s video is.
FAQs
Does the Arlo Ultra 3 4K need a cloud subscription?
If you want the main detection options you need a cloud subscription and you need the most expensive tier to record 4K footage.
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Test Data
Full Specs
Arlo Ultra 3 4K Review
Manufacturer
–
Size (Dimensions)
52 x 78 x 89 MM
Release Date
2026
First Reviewed Date
17/03/2026
Model Number
Arlo Ultra 3 4K
Resolution
3840 x 2160
Battery Length
6 months
Smart assistants
Yes
App Control
Yes
Camera Type
Indoor/outdoor wireless
Mounting option
Wall
View Field
180 degrees
Recording option
Cloud (subscription required), local (via SmartHub)
As a gamer, I’m enjoying the current renaissance of video game adaptations. Whether it’s the new 3D-animated Super Mario Galaxy Movie or Sonic movies or award-winning TV series like The Last of Us, Fallout and Cyberpunk: Edgerunners, Hollywood is now filled with creators who are actually fans of the games they’re adapting, a shift from the 1990s when licenses were often purchased just to cash in on younger audiences.
On Monday, A24 revealed the cast of the live-action adaptation of the Elden Ring movie, which will be directed by Alex Garland (Civil War, Annihilation) and released on March 3, 2028. While this looks promising on paper, it’s hard to ignore the scale of the challenge to adapt a game known for its personality-less protagonist, cryptic lore and multiple endings. Still, there is reason to believe this could become one of the most successful video game adaptations.
To start, A24, the studio behind the production, is known for acclaimed films such as The Brutalist, Moonlight and Everything Everywhere All at Once — all very different films following unique, humanistic visions. While the studio typically produces smaller films with budgets under $50 million, the Elden Ring movie is reportedly set to exceed a $100 million budget.
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Filming is already underway, and leaked set photos show what appears to be an almost perfect recreation of locations and scenes from the game. On Wednesday, a video uploaded to YouTube showed a crowd cheering during the hanging of a character known as the Dung Eater, closely mirroring a moment from the game’s opening intro cinematic.
Watching that short clip of a character who isn’t central to the story, yet is depicted with such accuracy, is astonishing. My biggest concern, though, is Elden Ring’s story. Unlike some other adaptations in development, such as Death Stranding, The Legend of Zelda and Resident Evil, Elden Ring is just one game with one DLC (Shadow of the Erdtree) and one multiplayer spinoff (Nightreign). That’s it.
Even so, developer FromSoftware packs an immense amount of lore into the game, though not in the traditional sense through dialogue or readable documents. Instead, as in its other titles, the studio distributes background details about characters and the world through descriptions of items, weapons, armor and spells.
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This approach to world-building, which FromSoftware first used in 2009’s Demon’s Souls, is like a jigsaw puzzle. But instead of assembling pieces to form a picture, it’s about taking two or three sentences and building an entire book. Literally, fans who create YouTube videos about the game’s lore are now publishing a 400-page book.
Not only is there a vast amount of lore to dig into, the Elden Ring’s sheer scope is immense. The game’s main story follows the player character’s journey to become an Elden Lord in the Lands Between, a god over mysterious undying lands. That quest is shaped by wars and betrayals that occurred long before the events of the game. It unfolds like a season of Game of Thrones, which is fitting given that George R. R. Martin helped develop Elden Ring’s story.
— 🧸 JustGavinBennett 🧸 (@JustGavNBennett) April 22, 2026
Fortunately, there’s hope that director Alex Garland understands the assignment when it comes to adapting Elden Ring. Unlike earlier video game adaptations, where screenwriters were often tasked with making sense of stories from games they hadn’t played and forcing them into a 90-minute structure, this production is being led by a fan of the game.
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A New Yorker article about A24 last year recounted an anecdote involving Garland and Noah Sacco, the studio’s head of film. Sacco visited Garland, who had been enthusiastic about the game, and proposed a film adaptation. Sacco approved the idea, and Garland went on to write a 200-page script that includes 40 pages of visuals. The two later traveled to Japan to seek approval from the game’s director, Hidetaka Miyazaki. Miyazaki was reportedly impressed with Garland’s knowledge of the game, which came from completing it at least seven times — a sizable feat considering it takes 60 hours or more to beat.
We still don’t know which time period the Elden Ring movie will explore. One assumption is that it could serve as a prequel, focusing on the Shattering, the in-game historical event that set the stage for the game’s present-day story. Extensive lore surrounds those events, and because FromSoftware leaves many details open to interpretation, there’s room for Garland to develop a compelling narrative while staying true to the source material.
Looking at all the elements of this production, the pieces are in place for a successful film. An award-winning studio is making one of its largest investments in a video game adaptation, led by a director who is a devoted fan. He has the approval of the game’s creator, who was not quick to grant licensing rights, and Martin is also involved as a producer. The Elden Ring movie has the potential to be not just a worthy adaptation, but one of the best video game adaptations ever made.
It appears that all of life is becoming one big subscription fest. There’s Netflix, Spotify, Xbox Game Pass, PlayStation Plus, food order subscriptions, Duolingo, Amazon, and YouTube. Can you believe there’s even a subscription for buying socks? Look, the list could go on, but I don’t want to bore you or myself.
Subscription services are here to stay, and there’s nothing you or I can do about it. As much as we hate them draining our money every month, if we want the goods, we must accept that, in return, we have to part with our hard-earned cash.
Even though we can’t avoid subscriptions, there is an easy way to manage them, and it’s called Orbit. Yes, the irony is not lost on me. In an attempt to get a grip on our subscriptions, I’m recommending subscribing to another app. It’s just the way it is, I’m afraid.
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Homescreen heroes
This is part of a regular series of articles exploring the apps that we couldn’t live without. Read them all here.
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Orbit is a beautifully designed subscription tracker app that is designed to solve the growing problem of subscription creep. It acts as a financial watchdog that uncovers every bill draining your account and centralizes them into one elegant interface. This all but eliminates the stress of surprise charges and helps you reclaim control over your wallet.
(Image credit: Future / Paul Hatton)
Adding subscriptions was easier than I thought
I was expecting to have to add each individual subscription manually, and even though this functionality is present in the app, there’s actually a much smarter way to load all your subscriptions into Orbit.
It’s called Magic Import, and it simplifies the tedious task of manual entry by capturing financial information directly from screenshots, bank statements, CSV files, or PDFs.
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This is made possible through a mix of very clever AI and OCR (Optical Character Recognition), and I have to say it’s very good indeed. I uploaded a number of different files and found Orbit reliably picked up what I needed it to.
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On the very odd occasion that Orbit interprets specific details of subscriptions incorrectly, it’s easy enough to dive into that particular subscription and adjust any number of data fields, including its billing cycle, which list you want it in, and whether it’s a free trial or not. These changes can be made when you import a subscription or further down the line if you spot a mistake.
(Image credit: Future / Paul Hatton)
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Tracking subscriptions like a pro
The main homescreen lets you see your subscriptions in a list format, but the calendar view shows you when the money is actually going to leave your pocket. This helps you spot heavy payment days or times of the month where multiple subscriptions are bunched together. Armed with this type of information, you can plan ahead to make sure you’ve got the money set aside in your bank account.
The calendar view also includes readouts for the total cost of subscriptions throughout the month as well as a live countdown of how much money you still need to account for before the month ends. I process information visually and have found the calendar invaluable for tracking my own personal subscriptions.
There are also notifications that act as a proactive defense and are designed to bridge the gap between knowing you have a subscription and acting before you are charged. This is maybe most critical when you add a service marked as trial. Orbit will calculate the expiration date and send you a notification, usually 24–48 hours, before the trial period ends.
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It’ll also send you renewal reminders for recurring bills. This is incredibly useful for cash flow management, especially for services that cost a lot of money. No one likes being surprised by a sudden large financial deduction, and notification reminders minimize the chances of it happening.
(Image credit: Future / Paul Hatton)
Go premium for the full experience
So, if you’ve ever subscribed to a service only to realize that a number of months down the line, you’re no longer using the service but you’re still paying for it, Orbit is designed just for you. It’s for those people who have anxiety around the build-up of bills and want a simple one-app solution for managing it all.
The free version is extremely limited, so I’d recommend paying the lifetime fee of $24.99 / £24.99 to gain access to the full range of premium features. These include unlimited tracking, magic import, iCloud backup, custom lists, and support for multiple currencies.
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Orbit has a number of soon-to-be-released features that include family sharing, a dedicated Mac app, and advanced spending insights. With these new additions, Orbit will go from strength to strength and become increasingly helpful to users who want complete control over their spending.
As it vies to catch up with rivals like OpenAI and Anthropic, SpaceX has done a deal to enable purchase of the fast-growing AI coding start-up Cursor.
In a post on X, SpaceX said the companies were “now working closely together to create the world’s best coding and knowledge work AI” and that “Cursor has also given SpaceX the right to acquire Cursor later this year for $60bn or pay $10bn for our work together”.
In its own statement, Cursor confirmed it was partnering with SpaceX “to accelerate our model training efforts”, which it said had been stymied by lack of compute.
“With this partnership, our team will leverage xAI’s Colossus infrastructure to dramatically scale up the intelligence of our models,” it said.
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Cursor had been widely reported to be raising a $2bn round at a $50bn valuation in recent days, as it sought investment to increase compute, but that raise will now be halted as the SpaceX deal will offer it all the capacity it needs to expand, according to Bloomberg sources.
It is likely that the reason SpaceX has bought the rights to purchase Cursor, rather than acquiring it immediately, is that the space tech and AI giant is keen to win the race to IPO, and any acquisition of such a size would require it to refile for IPO.
Reports have suggested a SpaceX IPO between April and June, which means it would precede speculated listings by rival AI giants OpenAI and Anthropic in the near future.
Elon Musk has consolidated various businesses over the past year to arrive at a mooted $1.75trn valuation. In February, SpaceX acquired xAI, which in March 2025 had acquired X.
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Revenue growth from SpaceX’s Starlink satellite broadband service is widely and largely credited for the foundation of the valuation. Starlink currently dominates the global satellite internet service industry, with more than 9,000 satellites in orbit and roughly 9m customers.
The February merger deal valued xAI at around $250bn, but preceded the departure of all 11 of Musk’s co-founders from that company. Now Musk looks set to buy in the talent he believes he needs to compete with his major rivals.
Cursor is one of the fastest-growing AI start-ups right now, and well-regarded, boasting some very high-profile investors, including Nvidia, Andreessen Horowitz, Google – and indeed, OpenAI’s venture fund. It remains to be seen whether the expensive acquisition goes ahead, or whether both companies could take up the agreed alternative within the deal to pay $10bn for their collaborative work.
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This holder works for Kindles and tablets alike, and even my Nintendo Switch. The clamp base lets you attach it to tables and furniture, and it’s easy to position in front of or even above you if you wanted to lie down and read.
Lamicall
Tablet Pillow Stand Holder
If you want something that’s freestanding, this pillow tablet stand holder works great for a Kindle. I use it on the couch, and I can sit up or lounge back and adjust the stand arm to suit my position. There are also two built-in cup and snack holders. Lamicall says they’re food safe, but I just use it to hold my tea mug and phone.
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A Freestanding Charger
Looking to keep your Kindle charged without adding another cord to the floor of your desk or bedside table? Same. Here’s a more stylish solution if you have one of the Signature editions.
Anker
Wireless Charging Dock for Kindle
This wireless charging dock is made by Anker for Kindles, specifically for Kindle Paperwhite and Colorsoft’s seven-inch Signature editions. Those versions have wireless charging capabilities, and this stand takes advantage of that with charging coils that line up with the back of the Kindle, where the wireless charging is. You’ll want to take off any MagSafe cases; leaving mine on made the little light on the charging dock flash until I took it off.
A Kindle Page Turner
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The hottest new item to get as a Kindle lover is a page turner. They’re especially handy for holders like the ones above, where your hands aren’t already on the device, and can make for a great accessibility accessory for readers with different needs.
My biggest irritation with these devices so far is that you have to charge them both individually, and if one runs out of battery, the whole thing is useless. I also don’t love that the turner does tend to block at least one letter while I read, and you can’t place it on the lower or upper margins since it’ll activate the menus instead of turning the page. Still, it makes reading ultra comfortable, especially for my strained wrists.
Here’s my favorite one so far, that’s been solid at holding a charge, and next I’m testing this remote ($15) with a wearable ring clicker instead of a remote.
Baby Yoda famously snitched (and later barfed up) some blue cookies in a scene from the hit Disney Plus show The Mandalorian. The folks at Burger King are about to release some Mandalorian and Grogu fast-food menu items and kids’ meals, and they’d probably rather you not think about the barfing part.
The show’s spin-off feature film, Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu, opens in theaters on May 22. Burger King is releasing its Mando-themed kids’ meals on April 28 and the adult meals on Star Wars Day, May 4.
Other than themed packaging, the kids’ meals are pretty standard, except for the real treasure, a Mandalorian-themed toy. The meal itself consists of a hamburger or four chicken nuggets, applesauce, kids’-size fries and your choice of milk or apple juice.
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The toys include two versions of Grogu, two of The Mandalorian himself, a Stormtrooper, an AT-RT driver, the Mandalorian’s ship the Razor Crest and the Lasat rebel Zeb Orrelios.
The kids’ meals come with Mandalorian-themed toys.
Burger King
The menu items that arrive on May 4 aren’t in meals, so they don’t come with toys, which seems like a missed opportunity. However, you can nab one of four collectible cups by ordering one of three combos. The cups come in maroon, black, green and navy.
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There’s a BBQ Bounty Whopper (burger with Swiss cheese, bacon, lettuce, tomato and barbecue sauce), Grogu’s Garlic Chicken Fries with garlic dipping sauce, and Imperial Cheddar Ranch Tots.
But the item I’m most excited for is Grogu’s Blue Cookie Shake, which blends soft-serve with blue sugar cookie syrup and tops it off with blue cookies. Maybe don’t suck one down and then go for a bumpy, breakneck ride in the Razor Crest.
The platform will offer ‘bite-sized online courses’ that are 30 minutes or less and can be accessed using a tablet or laptop.
Irish Minister for Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Skills James Lawless, TD has today (23 April), launched AIReady.ie, a new Governmental, national AI skilling platform, designed to provide people across Ireland with the means to learn essential AI skills.
Developed by Solas, in partnership with the National Skills Council, the initiative is free and suited to learners of all abilities. It teaches the fundamentals of AI and can be engaged with at the user’s own convenience via flexible “bite-sized online courses” that are 30 minutes or less and can be accessed using a tablet or laptop.
The curriculum is designed to support people as they work to develop the in‑demand skills needed for work, study and everyday life, regardless of their prior experience or technical background, with the current content focused on building foundational AI literacy and practical digital capability.
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To start, the programme will offer four short courses tailored to older people, small businesses such as sole traders and farmers, and those returning to the workforce. The initiative aims to upskill 1m people in AI, which the platform said is “one of the Government’s most ambitious responses to the rapid emergence and impact of artificial intelligence to date”.
Commenting on the launch, Lawless said: “Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping how we work, learn and live and ensuring people are ready for that change is one of the most important challenges we face. I strongly believe that everyone should have the opportunity to understand AI and to use it with confidence.
“We are now at a point where AI readiness is no longer optional, it is essential. Being ‘AI‑ready’ is about more than technology, it is about giving people the skills, confidence and understanding they need to participate fully in an AI‑enabled society. AI skills are for everyone, not just experts or specialists.”
Dr Kevin Marshall, the chair of the National Skills Council, added: “I welcome the launch of AIReady.ie, which will support the development of AI skills. We know the biggest risk today isn’t AI, it’s being unprepared to use it.
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“We want people to feel like AI is accessible to them, regardless of their background or stage in life and this new platform delivers exactly that, a simple entry point for anyone looking to start their journey with AI. With the launch of AIReady.ie today, we are laying the foundations to build the AI skills our economy and society needs for the future.”
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Apple is at a transformational point in its product history. The company is making a record amount of money with a rich product portfolio, fumbled its AI strategy, and just had a leadership change.
Tim Cook is out as the CEO, and engineering veteran John Ternus is taking over the chief role. Interestingly, it seems Apple is also making the biggest shift in its product development history, with no less than ten categories of devices planned for the coming years.
Apple
What’s next from Apple?
It seems Apple planned the leadership change at a crucial point in its product development phase, with the focus being on Ternus delivering some knockout products early in his leadership tenure. According to Bloomberg, the first of these buzzy product reveals is going to be the iPhone Fold (or the iPhone Ultra), the first foldable smartphone by the company.
Apple is years late to the race, but the excitement around the upcoming “pocketable but not pocket-friendly” phone is pretty high. “Ternus is poised for an even bigger flood of products. Including the foldable iPhone, Apple will enter roughly 10 new product categories within the next few years. That means Ternus could quickly eclipse his predecessor by this measure,” says the report.
The launch of ten product categories is pretty ambitious, as Cook’s tenure only witnessed the launch of three new segments, two being mass-market wearables (AirPods and Apple Watch) and one XR hardware in the misfiring Vision Pro.
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iPhone Fold CAD-based renderAI Visualization
A truly transformational roadmap
Apple has played it relatively safe with its wearables, but it seems the company is going all-in across the board. Starting with the AirPods, the company is reportedly planning to launch a camera-equipped version, dramatically boosting their health potential as well as understanding of the world around them using multi-modal AI. Think of Visual Intelligence, but instead of pointing your iPhone’s camera, the earbuds in your ears do the job.
It’s an immensely promising idea that will also be pretty hard to execute. Yet, if products like the Meta-Ray Ban AI glasses are anything to go by, Apple can execute it. And it’s not an outlandish idea, either. Experts at the University of Washington recently showcased the VueBuds, packing cameras on off-the-shelf earbuds that are capable of world-understanding and assisting with translation, among other AI-powered tricks. And let’s not forget Apple’s partnership with Google, which essentially puts Gemini at the foundations of Apple’s AI revival plans.
AI-generation concept of Apple smart-glasses with a holographic display.Gemini AI
Aside from the earbuds, the following is the list of other product categories that are reportedly in development at the company, many of which have been delayed due to Apple’s hobbled AI efforts:
While the iPhone Fold is nearing launch, the future of the often-rumored folding iPad is still in question, as it may never actually make it to consumer hands.
What a large folding iPad could look like – Image Credit: AppleInsider
The rumor mill has been infatuated by the idea of the folding iPhone, which is widely believed to be on the way later in 2026. However, Apple has also been working on another foldable device with less chance of becoming a reality. Writing in Sunday’s “Power On” newsletter for Bloomberg, the foldable iPad is a real thing being developed behind closed doors. Described as a tablet with a super-sized 20-inch display, it has been a priority of incoming CEO John Ternus while in his hardware chief role. Rumor Score: 🤔 Possible Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
It seems to be becoming a bit of a theme that consumer electronics are dying not due to some critical fault, but due to Cooked Capacitor Syndrome (CCS). Case in point, Dyson handheld vacuums and the capacitors on its driver board. After having his $800 Dyson V15 handheld vacuum die after two and a half years of regular use, [LeftyMaker] found himself elbows-deep in the dusty innards of the vacuum just to replace some capacitors.
After initially trying a new battery and other common troubleshooting steps, he found that lots of people were having the same flaky behavior with their Dyson vacuums, all with the same underlying cause. On the driver board for the DC brushless motor, there are a couple of capacitors that seem to cause issues across models, with the standard response by Dyson being to ‘buy a new body’.
While it’s definitely possible to tear down the vacuum to get to the driver board, you’ll be doing effectively a full disassembly, all to see the capacitors located right next to the hot motor in a very confined space. [LeftyMaker] confirmed a very high ESR on the old capacitors before replacing them with 125℃ rated Rubycon 35PZF270MT810X9 polymer capacitors for $1 a pop.
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Unsurprisingly, the vacuum worked fine after that fix, but it shows a trend where CCS has become so commonplace that it’s no wonder that the phrase ‘planned obsolescence’ is being uttered alongside it. For this particular series of Dyson vacuums, the issue is apparently so bad that [Hasan] created a custom driver board that might be superior in multiple ways. Maybe we need an OSHW vacuum cleaner, just to avoid such shenanigans.
Both left and right-wing accounts claimed, without evidence, that the attack was staged.
President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance, and dozens of other high-profile administration officials and journalists were attending the dinner at the Hilton hotel in Washington, DC, when a suspect, later identified by media reports as Cole Tomas Allen from California, allegedly ran past security towards the event. He was detained by law enforcement while the president and vice president were evacuated. Police said that they believe Cole acted alone, but did not expand on who his intended target was or what his motive may have been. “We believe the suspect was targeting administration officials,” acting attorney general Todd Blanche told NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday morning.
On Bluesky, which has a predominantly left-leaning user base, many people simply wrote the word “STAGED” over and over again, echoing the response to the Trump assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania in 2024.
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On X, many claimedthe shooting was staged as a way to bolster support for Trump’s plan to build a new ballroom in the White House. The president referenced the ballroom in a press conference after the incident and a Truth Social post on Sunday morning. Many prominent online Trump boosters echoed the need for the ballroom, including far-right podcaster Jack Posobiec, Libs of TikTok creator Chaya Raichik, and Tom Fitton, the right-wing activist who runs Judicial Watch.
Their quick response, conspiracy theorists claimed, was evidence of a coordinated campaign following the shooting. “Is this another staged event,” one X user asked in a post that has been viewed more than 5 million times.
Other social media users who claimed the incident was staged pointed to a Fox News clip that featured the station’s White House correspondent Aishah Hasnie speaking from the Hilton hotel. Hasnie told viewers that prior to the shooting, press secretary Karoline Leavitt’s husband allegedly told her “you need to be very safe,” before the call was cut off.
“Fox News just cut one of their reporters off as they seemed to indicate the shooting was a pre-planned false flag,” one X user wrote in a post that has been viewed more than 2 million times. Hasnie later clarified in an X post that her cell service had cut out in a location with notoriously bad service, adding: “He was telling me to be careful with my own safety because the world is crazy. He was expressing his concern for my safety.”
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“I don’t want to be fomenting conspiracies,” wrote Angelo Carusone, the chair and president of Media Matters, on Bluesky about the Fox News interview. “But I mean…this was super weird. Super weird.”
Leavitt herself was also the focus of conspiracy theories after she said “shots will be fired” in an interview ahead of the dinner, referring to the jokes Trump was scheduled to deliver. Following the attack, X users claimed the comment was “strange,” “sus,” or a “curious choice of words,” while sharing memes that suggested the shooting was staged. At least one mainstream outlet appeared to amplify the conspiracy theory as well, describing Leavitt’s comment as “eerie” and “bizarre.”
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