Apple’s AirTag is designed to run quietly in the background, helping you keep track of everyday items like keys, bags and luggage. Unlike many small trackers, an AirTag doesn’t need to be charged. Instead, it uses a standard replaceable coin cell battery that typically lasts around a year, depending on usage.
When the battery runs low, your iPhone will alert you. Replacing it is a simple process that takes just a few minutes and doesn’t require any tools. This guide explains how to tell when your AirTag battery needs replacing, which battery to use and how to swap it safely.
How to replace the battery in your AirTag
Replacing the battery only takes a few steps.
Hold the AirTag with the polished stainless steel side facing up.
Press down firmly on the metal battery cover and rotate it counterclockwise. Continue turning until the cover stops moving.
Lift off the cover and remove the old battery.
Insert a new CR2032 battery with the positive (+) side facing up. Once the battery is seated correctly, the AirTag will emit a brief chime, confirming that power has been restored.
Place the battery cover back onto the AirTag. Align the three small tabs on the cover with the matching slots on the AirTag body.
Press down gently and rotate the cover clockwise until it stops. The cover should sit flush with the AirTag and feel secure once locked into place.
No pairing or setup steps are required after replacing the battery. Your AirTag will automatically reconnect to your Apple ID.
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When to replace your AirTag battery
Your iPhone will automatically notify you when an AirTag battery is running low. The alert appears as a notification and doesn’t interrupt tracking, but it’s a good idea to replace the battery quickly to avoid losing location updates.
If you’re unsure whether your AirTag battery needs replacing, open the Find My app, tap the Items tab and select your AirTag. If a message appears under the AirTag name stating “Low Battery”, you’ll know it needs replacing. If no message appears, it’s safe to assume the battery level is fine for now. AirTags don’t have a screen or any other battery indicator, but Apple does show a battery percentage for AirTags in the FindMy app. The low battery warning is the only signal Apple provides before replacement becomes necessary.
What to do if your AirTag doesn’t make a sound
If you don’t hear a sound after inserting the new battery, remove it and check that it’s oriented correctly with the positive side facing up. You should also secure the back cover onto the AirTag as well, to see if the chime sounds after that.
If the battery is oriented properly and still doesn’t trigger a sound, try a different CR2032 battery. AirTag uses a CR2032 lithium 3V coin battery, a common type available at most electronics stores, supermarkets and pharmacies. Some batteries, particularly those with thick coatings, may not make consistent contact. Apple suggests looking for packaging that states “Compatible with AirTag.” Once a working battery is installed, the AirTag should resume normal operation immediately.
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How often should you replace your AirTag battery
Most AirTag batteries last about a year under typical use. Frequent use of Precision Finding, sound playback or location updates may reduce battery life. iOS will notify you before the battery is fully depleted, so there’s no need to replace it preemptively unless you’re preparing for long-term travel or storage.
Used coin batteries should not be thrown in household trash. Many retailers and recycling centers accept lithium batteries for proper disposal. Check local recycling guidelines for battery drop-off locations. Storing used batteries in a secure container until they can be recycled helps reduce the risk of accidental contact or ingestion.
Replacing an AirTag battery is one of the simplest maintenance tasks Apple devices require. With a readily available battery and no tools involved, most users can complete the process in under a minute. As long as you pay attention to low battery notifications and follow basic safety precautions, your AirTag should continue tracking your belongings reliably with minimal effort.
San Francisco police arrested an individual early on Friday morning for allegedly attacking the home of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and making threats outside of the company’s headquarters, a spokesperson confirmed to WIRED. OpenAI’s corporate security team sent a note to employees about the incident on Friday.
“At approximately 3:45am PT, an unidentified individual approached Sam’s residence and threw an incendiary device toward the property. The device landed nearby and extinguished. There were no injuries and only minimal damage was reported,” the message to staff reads.
“Shortly afterward, an individual matching the suspect’s description was contacted by security outside MB1,” the message continues, referring to OpenAI’s headquarters in San Francisco’s Mission Bay neighborhood. “This person made threatening statements about the building.”
OpenAI’s corporate security team told staff that it is cooperating with law enforcement to assist with an investigation, and that employees may notice an increased police and security presence around the office on Friday. The security team said that the company’s offices remain open, but employees were advised to “not let anyone tailgate into the building.
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“Early this morning, someone threw a Molotov cocktail at Sam Altman’s home and also made threats at our San Francisco headquarters. Thankfully, no one was hurt,” said OpenAI spokesperson Kayla Wood in an email to WIRED. “We deeply appreciate how quickly SFPD responded and the support from the city in helping keep our employees safe. The individual is in custody, and we’re assisting law enforcement with their investigation.”
The San Francisco Police Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.
LG’s 2026 OLED lineup is headlined by the G6, but the C6 is likely the model most people will end up considering. On paper, both TVs share a lot, including LG’s new Alpha 11 AI processor Gen 3, along with similar gaming features and AI-driven tools.
After seeing both models up close during LG’s recent reviewer workshop at its U.S. headquarters in New Jersey, the overlap becomes even more apparent, but so do the areas where they start to separate.
The differences aren’t always obvious at first glance. If you’ve been trying to figure out what actually separates the G6 from the C6, and which one makes more sense for your setup, here’s what you need to know.
The G6 is where LG is pushing OLED the hardest
Image used with permission by copyright holder
The G6 is positioned as LG’s flagship, and the focus this year is clearly on brightness.
It combines a new panel with Hyper Radiant technology and LG’s Brightness Booster Ultra system, with claims of up to 3.9 times the brightness of a standard OLED. In real use, that shows up most clearly in HDR highlights and brighter scenes, where the G6 has more punch and better visibility.
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At the same time, LG is maintaining core OLED strengths. The G6 is certified for both “perfect black” and “perfect color,” so contrast and accuracy remain intact alongside the brightness gains.
The C6 carries more of that experience than you’d expect
While the G6 leads on paper, the C6 doesn’t feel like a major step down.
Image used with permission by copyright holder
It runs on the same Alpha 11 AI processor Gen 3 and includes many of the same core features, including Dolby Vision, Dolby Atmos, and LG’s updated AI-driven picture and sound tools.
Brightness is improved over previous generations, even if it doesn’t reach the same peak levels as the G6. For most viewing scenarios, the gap is present but not always dramatic unless you are specifically comparing HDR-heavy content side by side.
Gaming performance is essentially identical
This is where the distinction between the two models almost disappears.
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Both the G6 and C6 support 4K at 165Hz, along with VRR, Nvidia G-Sync, and AMD FreeSync Premium. That level of support puts them closer to high-end gaming monitors than traditional TVs.
LG is also focusing on low input lag and smoother motion handling, which makes both models equally capable for fast-paced gaming. If gaming is your priority, there’s little reason to choose one over the other.
AI features are shared, not exclusive
Both models use the same processing platform, and that shows in how similar their feature sets are.
AI Picture Pro handles real-time image optimization, while AI Sound Pro can simulate virtual 11.1.2 surround sound. There’s also a personalization layer that adapts picture and audio settings based on your preferences over time.
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Filmmaker Mode with ambient light compensation adds another layer by adjusting the image based on room lighting without sacrificing accuracy.
Where the gap really starts to show
Image used with permission by copyright holder
The biggest differences come down to performance ceiling and positioning.
The G6 is built to push OLED further, especially in brightness and overall visual impact. It is also the model that scales up to larger, premium sizes, going as high as 97 inches.
The C6 is designed to be more flexible. It starts smaller, at 42 inches, and is priced to fit a wider range of setups, from bedrooms to living rooms.
So which one actually makes more sense?
For most people, the C6 is the more balanced option. It delivers the key improvements LG is focusing on this year, including better brightness, updated processing, and strong gaming performance, without pushing into flagship pricing.
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The G6 still has the edge in peak performance, especially if brightness is a priority or you’re building a high-end home theater. But the gap between the two isn’t as wide as you might expect in everyday use.
This week, our hosts discuss why OpenAI and Elon Musk’s legal feud is heating up once again—and happening alongside SpaceX’s IPO filing. They also dive into how a Department of Justice lawyer misled a judge about how they’re handling voter data, and why the Artemis II’s launch captured all of our imaginations.
You can always listen to this week’s podcast through the audio player on this page, but if you want to subscribe for free to get every episode, here’s how:
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If you’re on an iPhone or iPad, open the app called Podcasts, or just tap this link. You can also download an app like Overcast or Pocket Casts and search for “uncanny valley.” We’re on Spotify too.
Transcript
Note: This is an automated transcript, which may contain errors.
Brian Barrett: Hey, it’s Brian. Zoë, Leah and I have really enjoyed being your new hosts these past few weeks, and we want to hear from you. If you like the show and have a minute, please leave us a review in the podcast or app of your choice. It really helps us reach more people. And for any questions and comments, you can always reach us at [email protected]. Thank you for listening. On to the show. Welcome to WIRED’s Uncanny Valley. I am Brian Barrett, executive editor.
Leah Feiger: And I’m Leah Feiger, senior politics editor.
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Brian Barrett: This week, we’re discussing why OpenAI and Elon Musk’s feud in the courts is starting to heat up again. And speaking of Musk, we’re going to go over some key takeaways from SpaceX’s recent confidential IPO filing. Then we’ll dive into the rising concerns around how some agencies in the current administration are handling voter data. And finally, let’s get away from it all and go to outer space and talk about why the Artemis II launch was such a big deal for everyone watching.
Leah Feiger: Before we dig into our lineup this week, we do briefly have to talk about what happened between the U.S. and Iran in recent days.
[Archival audio]:President Trump is threatening Iran again, writing online this morning Trump said, quote, “A whole civilization will die tonight never to be brought back again.”
[Archival audio]:Moments ago, President Trump once again reiterated his threat to devastate Iran if a deal is not reached before the deadline he set of 8:00 PM Eastern time tonight.
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[Archival audio]:Breaking news out of the White House, the U.S. President has agreed to a two-week ceasefire.
Leah Feiger: The entire situation was very odd. I guess this is how global politics happens these days. I’m so curious for your thoughts.
Brian Barrett: Well, yeah, talk about what happened or more specifically what didn’t happen this week, which was potential World War III. We were on the brink of it feels like, and I don’t think that’s… It’s interesting, there were good odds that Trump was bluffing, right? Because he has done this time and again, he says, “Here’s this deadline,” and then he pushes it back. But what he’s bluffing about has gotten really alarming and it’s only a bluff until it’s not. You know what I mean? I think threatening to annihilate an entire civilization, terrifying stuff, even if it’s bluster. Terrifying bluster.
YouTube Premium has silently raised its tier prices
Google started emailing users about the change before announcing it
For a lot of subscribers, this could be the last straw
YouTube Premium is the latest subscription service to hike its prices in the US, but the timing couldn’t be more awkward — especially since it follows the controversy of its 90-second unskippable ads for free users.
As spotted by eagle-eyed users on Reddit, YouTube has already increased its monthly fees across all of its plans, including its budget Premium Lite tier which was launched only last year. With the new changes in place, subscription prices have gone up by as much as $4.
The standard YouTube Premium individual plan has now increased to $15.99 a month from $13.99, while the new Family plan fee is now $26.99 a month instead of $22.99. YouTube Premium Lite will now cost $8.99, increasing by $1, and Music Premium is $11.99/month, up from $10.99.
Article continues below
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Unlike Netflix where customers are no stranger to a frequent price increase, fee hikes don’t come as often to YouTube Premium members. The last time Google raised its subscription prices was back in 2023 when individual plans went from $11.99 to $13.99, with the Family plan increasing to $22.99 the year before. It’s safe to say that existing members are quite frustrated with this move, but it’s the vagueness on Google’s behalf that seems to be bothering them the most.
For starters, it took Google a while to speak on the change (the company gave a statement to Variety), leaving subscribers to find out for themselves via email. However, not everyone was informed, and those who’ve received emails are still scratching their heads — why is Google hiking these prices?
One user shared a screenshot of their email which detailed the following: “To continue delivering great service and features, we’re increasing your price to $20.99 a month. We don’t make these decisions lightly, but this update will allow us to continue to improve Premium and support the creators and artists you watch on YouTube”.
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The thing is, users aren’t falling for it.
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The biggest difference between YouTube Premium and a platform such as Netflix is that the latter has a continuous output of original content, therefore it has somewhere valuable to invest money generated from subscription fees. Another user pointed this out, claiming that YouTube doesn’t have original content on Netflix’s scale to invest in, as all of its hosted content is made by creators with YouTube channels, leading users to question where their money is really going.
With this in mind, YouTube has also come under fire recently for its 90-second unskippable ads on its TV app. But despite the company’s comment against claims that it is conducting secret tests, the price hikes give us a good enough reason to believe that Google is trying to lure even more free users over to the dark side — but will it cost them the loyalty of long-time subscribers in the process?
And of course, you can also follow TechRadar on YouTube and TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too
In short:Meow Technologies has launched what it describes as the world’s first agentic banking platform, enabling AI agents to open business bank accounts, issue cards, send payments, and manage day-to-day account activity on behalf of users, with no human required to initiate any action.
The platform supports Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, Gemini, and other leading AI tools, and is built on a permissioned architecture that prevents agents from moving money unilaterally by default. The announcement marks a significant step in the race among fintech firms to become the default financial infrastructure layer of the emerging agent economy.
The agentic stack reaches financial services
By the spring of 2026, AI agents had gained the ability to write and publish blog posts, manage customer service queues, redesign marketing workflows, and co-ordinate tasks across enterprise software. Banking was the conspicuous exception: every other layer of business operations was being handed to autonomous agents, but financial accounts still required a human to log in, click through dashboards, and authorise transactions.
Meow Technologies, a San Francisco-based fintech founded in 2021, announced on April 8, 2026, that it intends to close that gap. The company launched what it is calling the first agentic banking platform, allowing users to instruct an AI agent in natural language to open a business checking account on their behalf, with the agent then capable of issuing virtual and physical corporate cards, checking balances, sending and receiving payments, and managing invoicing, all without returning to a human for each step.
A user connecting a supported AI tool to Meow’s platform can issue a single natural language prompt, such as “open a business account for my new project”, and have the agent complete the account-opening process, configure settings, and prepare it for use. The platform is integrated with Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and Gemini, and exposes an MCP endpoint at meow.com/mcp that allows any Model Context Protocol-compatible agent to connect to the banking infrastructure directly. Once an account is open, the agent can issue corporate cards in virtual or physical form, execute transfers to vendors or team members, pull balance and transaction data for audit or reporting purposes, and handle invoicing without requiring the account holder to log into a dashboard. Brandon Arvanaghi, Meow’s chief executive, described the ambition as a fundamental shift in how business banking is consumed.
“Autonomous finance has arrived,” he said. “With Meow, AI agents can handle everything from opening accounts to managing day-to-day activity.” The MCP integration is significant context.The Model Context Protocol had grown to more than 6,400 registered servers by February 2026, establishing itself as the dominant standard for connecting AI agents to external systems and services. By building its own MCP server, Meow positions its banking infrastructure as a native citizen of that ecosystem rather than a bolt-on integration, meaning any agent or development environment that already speaks MCP can reach Meow’s accounts without custom code. The supported tools, Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and Gemini, collectively cover most of the agent frameworks in active business use, suggesting that Meow’s addressable market is effectively the full population of businesses already running agentic workflows.
Guardrails and the trust architecture
The central anxiety around agentic finance is obvious: AI agents that can autonomously move money create a novel attack surface, whether through prompt injection, misaligned instructions, or simple error.
Meow has built its permissioning architecture around the principle that agents should operate within the same rule set that governs human employees, and in some respects a stricter one. By default, agents cannot move money unilaterally: every transfer requires the same initiator-and-approver workflow that would govern a human employee in a finance team, and the platform enforces transfer limits, two-factor authentication requirements, and role-based permissions at the infrastructure level rather than relying on the agent to self-police.
Meow’s response to those governance questions is a configurable controls layer that businesses can adapt to their own risk tolerance: an e-commerce company running a high-volume payments workflow can configure higher transfer thresholds and fewer approval steps, while a professional services firm with more conservative treasury policies can require human sign-off above any meaningful sum. Arvanaghi framed the direction of travel as irreversible rather than optional. “We believe banking will rapidly shift away from apps and dashboards toward a seamless, automated experience through AI agents,” he said.
The race for agentic financial rails
Meow is not the only company that has identified AI agents as the next major customer segment for financial infrastructure. Stripe announced a machine payments preview integrating stablecoin settlement for agent-to-agent transactions in early 2026; Mastercard launched its Agent Pay programme in April 2025; PayPal and Google announced a joint Agent Payments Protocol; and Visa is developing tokenisation infrastructure designed specifically for autonomous purchasing. What distinguishes Meow’s announcement is its scope: the platform does not merely allow agents to complete a payment, it allows an agent to create and fully administer a business bank account from scratch.
That is a materially broader set of permissions than any of the card network or major payments platform programmes have offered to date, and it reflects Meow’s positioning as a business banking provider rather than a payments processor. The company was founded in 2021 by a team of former cryptocurrency engineers and launched initially as a corporate treasury platform offering businesses access to high-yield investments and DeFi-adjacent yield products. It has since evolved into a full business banking service, with checking accounts, invoicing, and bill pay, and describes itself as holding over one billion dollars in assets on its platform.
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The company has raised approximately 30 million dollars in venture funding from Tiger Global, QED Investors, Lux Capital, Slow Ventures, Coinbase Ventures, and Gemini Frontier Fund. Whether Meow’s “world’s first” claim holds under scrutiny or is quickly overtaken by a larger incumbent is less consequential than the direction the announcement confirms: the agent economy needs financial rails, and the fintech firms that build them earliest will occupy a structurally advantaged position.2025 confirmed AI agents as the next major computing paradigm, and Meow’s April 2026 announcement suggests the financial infrastructure to match that paradigm is now being built in earnest.
Stoves come in three basic types: gas, electric and induction. There are significant differences among them, which we’ve outlined in this guide to stoves. For me, it’s never been a question; gas was the only fuel professional chefs in the kitchens I worked in growing up used, ergo gas was the only stove I ever considered. That all changed when I bought my first house.
Moving into a new home with an aging stove forced me to ask a question I thought I knew the answer to. My instinct, honed by years of experience with gas, was to stick with what I knew. But my day job complicated things. As a home tech reporter who covers large appliances and the health risks tied to cooking with gas indoors, I couldn’t ignore what I’d been writing about.
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I switched to a smart induction stove, and I couldn’t be happier.
Samsung/CNET
I’ve had asthma my entire life, one of the conditions thought to be aggravated by gas stove emissions, particularly in children. And my new kitchen, somewhat cut off from the rest of the house, made ventilation less an afterthought and more an urgent concern.
Ultimately, I opted for induction — Samsung’s feature-rich smart induction stove. After more than a year of use, peace of mind about air quality is just one of many reasons I’m happy I did. It’s faster, safer, cleaner and more energy efficient to boot.
Here are the five big reasons I made the switch with no intentions of going back.
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1. Air quality was the biggest factor
I was a gas stove purist — until I wasn’t.
Alessandro Citterio/Getty Images
What pushed me to move on from gas has nothing to do with cooking. Study after study has shown that natural gas stoves pose a real risk of environmental contamination. While the scuttlebutt over whether gas stoves are safe and what regulatory guardrails should be in place has largely quieted, the science remains.
Gas stoves are shown to leak more than previously thought, and those leaks have been shown to cause respiratory issues, particularly in children. As a lifelong sufferer of asthma and the owner of a new but not-so-well-ventilated kitchen, it didn’t seem worth the risk, even if most agree that more research is needed.
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2. Induction heats up freakishly fast
My induction stove boils a 60-ounce pot of water in less than 5 minutes. A gas stove takes about 8.
David Watsky/CNET
Modern induction heat is fast. Like, really fast. The Samsung Bespoke brings a pot of water to a boil in less than 5 minutes. A gas stove takes closer to 8. That may not seem like a big difference, but after returning home from a frantic day, and pasta is the only way to turn it around, you’ll notice.
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The digital dials took some getting used to but the heat responds with lightning speed to adjustments.
David Watsky/CNET
The quick heat comes in handy for more than just boiling water. Getting a cast-iron skillet really hot for searing steaks, chicken and burgers takes seconds, not minutes. Calibrating the temperature without a visible flame took some time and practice, but since I got the settings down, there hasn’t been an effect on my cooking. Plus, the temperature adjusts instantly with a slide of a finger on the touchscreen.
The number of oven cooking modes is probably overkill and the air fryer function is just OK.
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David Watsky/CNET
The oven is fast, too. It preheats to 350 degrees Fahrenheit in just over 9 minutes. A gentle ding or an alert on your phone lets you know when it’s preheated or when a timed cooking session is complete.
3. I don’t worry about having left the stove on
I buy into smart home features, here and there, but I’m not one who strives for connectivity in all my home electronics and appliances. My ice maker has app compatibility, for instance, but it’s never crossed my mind to use it.
However, being able to monitor certain aspects of your oven and stove remotely is a no-brainer. Case in point: I was recently an hour into a long drive when I became utterly convinced I’d left a pot with food on a still-running burner. So sure was I that I pulled over, intending to reroute back home.
That’s when I remembered to check the SmartThings app.
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The stove’s connectivity saved me hours of driving.
Screenshot by David Watsky/CNET
To my surprise, the app and range were still connected, even though I hadn’t logged in for weeks. The view showed all burners set to “off.” A sigh of relief and I was back on my way. Even if one had been errantly left on, I could have toggled it off right there from the interstate rest stop.
There are other, less dire uses for the smart app integration, like preheating the oven or dialing down the heat on a simmering sauce from another room. I admit I don’t use my range’s remote control daily or even weekly, but in that moment of uncertainty, the stovetop’s connectivity paid for itself.
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You can pull up YouTube cooking videos on the touchscreen, although I seldom do.
David Watsky/CNET
The range’s touchscreen hub can also connect to your phone via Bluetooth to play music or scan the internet for recipes and YouTube cooking videos, and display them for you as you cook along. I don’t find myself engaging often, but I can see why some cooks would.
4. Induction stoves are easier to clean
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Considering how easy induction stovetops are to clean, there really is no reason to cry over spilled milk.
mrs/Getty Images
The most welcome surprise in my switch to induction is the cleanup — or should I say, the lack thereof. Anyone who uses gas burners tucked under grates knows there’s just no keeping that stovetop clean, no matter how careful you are while cooking.
The scratch-free range, which has remained scratch-free for more than a year of use, takes no more than a wipe with a damp towel or sponge to clean, no matter how much of that night’s recipe rained down upon it.
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A year of regular use and there’s not a scratch in sight.
David Watsky/CNET
An involved cleanup after a long day, labor-intensive recipe or while hosting a gathering is one of the biggest buzzkills when cooking at home. Eliminating one inevitable and unenviable task is a big boon for induction.
5. Cookware compatibility was not an issue for me
My existing cookware was all induction-compatible.
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David Watsky/CNET
One of the biggest drawbacks of switching to induction is the lack of compatibility with cookware. Induction doesn’t work (or work well) with copper and aluminum pots and pans.
Most stainless steel, cast iron and ceramic cookware is compatible. I only use pots and pans made from those materials, so I have had no compatibility issues.
Quality kitchen brands always indicate whether their pans are induction-compatible. If you’re making the switch to induction, do some research and ensure you don’t have to buy new cookware after the fact.
If I could do it over, I’d skip the in-oven camera
The Samsung Bespoke Smart induction range I chose costs north of $2,000, about twice as much as a similar, less feature-heavy Samsung model. The key differences are that mine has “more advanced” AI-powered cooking modes and an internal oven camera, so you can monitor food remotely via phone and share time-lapse videos. I don’t use or rely on either of these.
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The control panels are also different, with the pricier model featuring an LCD. In my experience, LCDs have more issues and glitches than simpler digital interfaces, although mine has been great so far.
If I could do it again, I’d opt for this far cheaper but slightly less smart induction stove.
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Drive: An auto dealer software company is pitching AI-powered kiosks designed to replace car salesmen on showroom floors. Automotive News says the industry is “skeptical.” But be honest — would you really rather deal with the average car lot shark than a computer?
Epikar, a South Korean company that cooks up digital management solutions for car dealers, has named its new AI invention the Pikar Genie. The idea is that customers can talk to this device, ask it product questions, and basically do everything you’d do with a car salesman except for actually closing the deal and signing paperwork. Renault, BMW, and Volvo are already using some Epikar products at South Korean dealerships, but this new customer-facing AI product is still in its infancy.
AN reported that “Renault assigns three salespeople to its Seoul showroom enhanced with Epikar automation compared with six for other Renault showrooms in South Korea,” according to Epikar CEO Bosuk Han. The company’s now looking to expand into America and is apparently already testing its products at at least one dealership stateside. Car-dealer consultant Fleming Ford (Director of Strategic Growth at NCM Associates) said U.S. dealerships “aren’t ready for fully automated showrooms.”
“The showroom isn’t just where you buy a car,” Automotive News quoted him saying. “It’s where you decide who to trust to help you to choose the right car.”
An interesting story unfolded in the world of classic Nintendo games just yesterday, and it has already sent shockwaves across all of the retro gaming groups. A mysterious buyer paid $60,000 for a cartridge containing an early prototype of Punch-Out for the NES, and here’s where things get interesting. Rather than simply taking this unusual find home and storing it, the buyer collaborated with the Video Game History Foundation to extract the game data and upload the entire ROM online.
Frank Cifaldi of the Video Game History Foundation created a video walkthrough that takes you through every nook and cranny of the build, demonstrating how different it feels from the final product that fans all remember. TThe cartridge itself bears a mock-up label in Nintendo’s traditional black-box style, along with a plainly mismatched product code stamped on the mask ROM chips inside. This indicates that these chips are not the same as the rewritable Eproms often seen in test cartridges, hinting at a more advanced stage of testing than most prototypes reach.
So in this build, you only receive four boxers on the roster, and they appear in a predetermined order that never changes. Glass Joe enters the ring first, followed by Bald Bull, King Hippo, and Don Flamenco. Finish the match against Don Flamenco, and the screen cuts to a training sequence in which Little Mac appears in his humble training gear – then a password appears, and the entire loop begins again, with Glass Joe waiting in the wings. That’s it; there is no one else on the roster, and forget about Mike Tyson; this build predates his involvement.
You’ll be playing through this entire thing in complete silence because none of the code that’s supposed to manage music sound effects and speech clips made it into this release, so all of the matches are just a constant beat with no notes or grunts to be heard. The pre-match graphics lack some of the text that fans expect, and the major title bout announcement never appears after a streak of victories. For example, Bald Bull lacks the dramatic bull charge animation that he became famous for later on, while some other fighters rely on placeholder animations that are simply a couple of lines created initially for Glass Joe and replayed over and again.
One of the fun aspects of this build is that there are some hidden debug settings that allow players to take control of opponents who have never received a full programming treatment and cycle through their movesets at will. Yes, the controls cause some strange visual abnormalities, but they also open up a portal to characters who vanished before the game’s release. For example, if you select a fighter named Von Kaiser, all you get is a simple animation test while the credits roll, listing some of the names that have changed over time. Vodka Drunkenski appears where Soda Popinski would eventually be, Piston Hurricane replaces Piston Honda, and there are two additional submissions, Pizza Pasta Rockyhead and Mongol Khan, neither of which made it into the final game.
Last month FCC boss Brendan Carr illegally ignored remaining U.S. media consolidation laws to rubber stamp Nexstar’s $6.2 billion purchase of Tegna. It’s part of the generational Republican quest to steadily consolidate media, then replace whatever journalism remains with a soggy mish mash of lazy infotainment and right wing propaganda (see: Sinclair Broadcasting).
But there’s trouble in paradise: a judge issued a temporary restraining order blocking the merger from proceeding. For now.
“Defendants must immediately cease all ongoing actions relating to integration and consolidation of Nexstar and Tegna,” wrote Troy Nunley, the chief judge in US District Court for the Eastern District of California.
The savior in this case is curiously DirecTV, not-long-ago spun off from its own disastrous union with AT&T. DirecTV filed suit saying that the consolidation in local broadcast TV will erode what’s left of competition in the local broadcast TV sector, harming product quality, opinion diversity, and labor, while resulting in higher overall prices (for everyone) in exchange for even worse product.
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From the restraining order:
“Nexstar admits the merger will greatly increase its already huge “scale” and its “leverage,” i.e., the ability to force its TV distribution customers, including Plaintiff, to pay even higher fees for local news, live sports, and other content they distribute to their subscribers. Plaintiff alleges Nexstar will also shut down local newsrooms in dozens of markets, reducing the amount, variety, and quality of local broadcast news that Americans rely on for trusted information about their communities. Plaintiff asserts those harms from reduced competition are precisely what antitrust laws are designed to prevent.”
Nexstar was so certain the merger was a done deal, it had begun changing the physical signs and logos on many of the acquired stations it had begun integrating, something it’s since been forced to reverse. The company has also tried to insist it can’t comply with some of the Judge’s demands because some aspects of the early integration “can’t be undone.”
The deal would combine Nexstar’s stable of more than local 200 stations with Tegna’s 65 outlets in major markets nationwide, blowing past restrictions that no company can control more than 39 percent of households (the new combined company reaches 54.5 percent). In addition to the NexStar lawsuit, the companies are also being sued by a coalition of eight attorneys general and consumer groups.
Since Rupert Murdoch convinced Ronald Reagan to eliminate laws preventing one mogul from owning a paper and TV station in one market, Republican policies (and corporations) have pushed relentlessly to pursue the goal of a monolithic, highly consolidated media in exclusive service to the extraction class and corporate power. The result has been anything but subtle.
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Media scholars have been warning about the perils of this for decades, but only recently, under the ham-fisted efforts of Trumpism, have people truly begun seeing the full outline of the threat. The media sector (like most U.S. sectors) desperately needs an antitrust renaissance; and if the federal government is no longer willing to engage in adult supervision, other parties will have to fill the void.
France is moving on from Microsoft Windows. The country said it plans to move its government computers currently running Windows to the open-source operating system Linux to further reduce its reliance on U.S. technology.
Linux is an open-source operating system that is free to download and use, with various customized distributions that are tailored and designed for specific use cases or operations.
In a statement, French minister David Amiel said (translated) that the effort was to “regain control of our digital destiny” by relying less on U.S. tech companies. Amiel said that the French government can no longer accept that it doesn’t have control over its data and digital infrastructure.
France did not provide a specific timeline for the switchover, or which distributions it was considering. Microsoft did not immediately comment on the news.
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This is the latest effort by France to reduce its dependence on U.S. tech giants and use technology and cloud services originated within its borders, known as digital sovereignty, following growing instability and unpredictability on the part of the Trump administration.
Lawmakers and government leaders across Europe are growing more aware of the looming threat facing them at home, and their over-reliance on U.S. technology. In January, the European Parliament voted to adopt a report directing the European Commission to identify areas where the EU can reduce its reliance on foreign providers.
Since taking office in January 2025, Trump has upped his attacks on world leaders — straight out capturing one and aiding in the killing of another. He has also weaponized sanctions against his critics, who include judges on the International Criminal Court, effectively cutting them off from transacting with U.S. companies. Those who have been sanctioned have reported having their bank accounts closed and access to U.S. tech services terminated, as well as being blocked from any other U.S. service.
France’s decision to ditch Windows comes months after the government announced it would stop using Microsoft Teams for video conferencing in favor of French-made Visio, a tool based on the open-source end-to-end encrypted video meeting tool Jitsi.
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The French government said it also plans to migrate its health data platform to a new trusted platform by the end of the year.
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