Tech
Maker Builds 90,000-Watt Electric Scooter and Hit 99.4 MPH

Few electric scooters can touch 70 mph, let alone flirt with 100. Determined to close that gap himself, President Chay spent several weeks in his workshop piecing together something truly out of the ordinary. At the heart of it were three QS273 motors, each capable of putting out 30,000 watts on their own, adding up to a staggering 90,000 watts at peak output. Power came from three separate battery packs, each running at 72 volts and 45 amp hours, with every single pack requiring 600 individual lithium ion cells to build.
All that battery capacity translated directly into range, with calculations suggesting the scooter could cover more than 100 miles on a full charge. Keeping everything stable under that kind of weight and power was its own engineering challenge, and the answer was a robust aluminum frame built to absorb the stress without flexing. Dirt bike forks handled the front end, while custom steel brackets at the rear kept the axles locked firmly in place. Additional bracing was added around the neck and the belly of the frame to house all the electronics and keep the whole thing composed when the torque really starts to build.
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Suspension came next, with simple shocks and pillow block bushings fitted to keep all four wheels planted on even the roughest surfaces. By the time everything was bolted together and a rider climbed aboard, the whole machine tipped the scales at 400 pounds. Hit full throttle and none of that weight seemed to matter in the slightest. Fifty miles per hour arrived in roughly two seconds, leaving a very convincing set of black marks on the pavement as proof.

Testing started with a single motor on a controlled stand, and the numbers were immediately eye opening, with wheel speed climbing past 120 miles per hour before hitting its limits. Out on the open road with all three motors singing together, things got seriously interesting. The quickest run saw the GPS clock 99.4 miles per hour, close enough to the century mark that the team celebrated as though they had actually cracked it. What nobody quite expected was how planted and composed the scooter felt at those speeds. They even had the rider lift both hands off the handlebars for a stretch, and the scooter just carried on without so much as a wobble.

The ultimate test came in the form of a side by side drag race against a stock Gotrax scooter, and it was over almost before it began. The custom build launched off the line and was gone, leaving the Gotrax looking rather sorry for itself. Even after all those high speed runs the range held up impressively well, which was a result in itself.
Tech
Week in Review: Most popular stories on GeekWire for the week of March 8, 2026
Get caught up on the latest technology and startup news from the past week. Here are the most popular stories on GeekWire for the week of March 8, 2026.
Sign up to receive these updates every Sunday in your inbox by subscribing to our GeekWire Weekly email newsletter.
Most popular stories on GeekWire
The ‘Tesla exemption’ no more: Rivian and Lucid break through Washington state’s dealership wall
At the start of next year, Washington state shoppers will for the first time be able to visit showrooms for Rivian and Lucid Motors, take a test drive and buy an EV. … Read More
A whole new ballgame for trading cards: Startup uses robots and AI to sort and analyze collections
Gradient’s Renton, Wash., office space is home to 10 million sports and gaming cards, where a team of card geeks and engineers are using technology to upend a $15 billion U.S. … Read More
Microsoft’s return-to-office policy creates a return to slower commutes, traffic analysis shows
Inrix measured travel speeds on eastbound and westbound SR 520 and southbound and northbound I-405 during the weeks of Feb. … Read More
Opinion: You couldn’t pay me to leave Washington state, and I’d pay more to stay
My view on Washington’s proposed tax on very high incomes is simple: if I’ve found myself in the position of making that much in a year, I can afford to contribute a little more to the place that helped make that circumstance possible. … Read More
Contractors sue Modern Hydrogen, alleging the Bill Gates-backed startup left their final invoices unpaid
Five contractors are suing the Seattle-area clean energy startup for more than $363,458, alleging unpaid invoices when the company suddenly slowed operations late last year. … Read More
Atlassian layoffs impact 63 workers in Washington as CTO steps down
Atlassian announced Wednesday that it will lay off about 10% of its staff, or 1,600 employees, as the 24-year-old software firm transitions to an “AI-first company.” … Read More
Washington House passes 9.9% ‘millionaires tax’ as business leaders warn of ‘seismic shift’
Some tech leaders and entrepreneurs worry the legislation could undermine their sector by souring Washington’s relatively favorable tax laws for startup founders, investors and high-wage earners. … Read More
Tech Moves: Microsoft Research gets a new leader; Amazon head joins AI startup; JPMorgan exec departing
Igor Tsyganskiy is now leading Microsoft Research (MSR) as past president Peter Lee takes the helm of Microsoft Science. … Read More
New free, on-demand EV service launches in Redmond to shuttle riders to light rail
RedLink riders can access the service via the Circuit app. … Read More
Opinion: The wrong tax at the wrong time for Washington
Seattle entrepreneur Jesse Proudman on why he’s saddened by the state’s new income tax, writing that it comes at the “worst possible moment” amid the AI boom. … Read More
Tech
With 2 factories in the Amazon, this biz sells 1 bil Brazil nuts/yr to 45 countries
Brazil nuts are nearly impossible to farm, but White Lion Foods has cracked the challenge
The fitness and health industry has been growing rapidly around the world, including in Singapore. Alongside this shift, consumers are increasingly seeking out nutrient-dense foods that can support healthier lifestyles.
Among the most nutrient-dense foods on the planet is the Brazil nut, widely recognised as the richest natural dietary source of selenium.
Despite its nutritional benefits, however, producing Brazil nuts is far from straightforward. Unlike most nuts, they are not cultivated on plantations but are wild-harvested from trees deep within the Amazon rainforest.
Even when producers manage to source them, most Brazil nuts are sold either raw or coated in chocolate. This is because seasoning them has historically been difficult—the nut’s natural structure prevents flavours from sticking well.
But Singapore-based Truly Nuts! has taken on that challenge. In 2024, it launched what it claims to be the world’s first savoury-flavoured Brazil nuts to local supermarkets.
Behind the brand is Singapore-headquartered agri-tech company White Lion Foods, which sources and processes Brazil nuts directly in the Amazon rainforest. The company operates two factories there—nearly 18,000 kilometres from the city-state—that can process up to one billion Brazil nuts each year.
We spoke with Gareth Lloyd, 48 and Greg Vickers, 46, the co-founders behind the business, to learn more about their entrepreneurial journey and how they managed to turn a nut that’s nearly impossible to farm into a global business.
They went from DJ tours to farming crops
Gareth and Greg’s path into the food industry was far from conventional.


They first met during university in the United Kingdom and spent years working as electronic music DJs, performing across more than 15 countries and touring extensively throughout Latin America.
It was during these travels that they became familiar with the region’s agricultural exports. Countries like Peru were producing high-quality foods, such as avocados and blueberries, that were increasingly appearing in global supermarkets.
When Gareth moved to Singapore in 2012, he noticed many of these products were starting to be stocked locally, sparking the idea that other lesser-known exports could also find a market.
And thus, White Lion Foods was born. That same year, Gareth roped in Greg, who had been living in Brazil since 2010, and the duo invested about £60,000 each (about S$102,000 each) to start the Singapore-based agri-tech venture.


They first chose to focus on purple garlic. After extensive research, the duo discovered that these varieties were rare outside Peru, prompting them to concentrate on harvesting, processing, and exporting this unique crop grown high in the Andean mountains.
Over time, their business expanded globally, supplying purple garlic to markets “around the world,” and today, White Lion Foods claims to be the number one exporter of Andean purple garlic.
It was a milestone for the business, but focusing solely on Peruvian garlic soon revealed a major challenge.
We were basically investing all year, and the garlic harvest would come around Sept. We’d sell until Dec, and then we had no revenue for the rest of the year.
Gareth Lloyd
In other words, the company had year-round operating costs but only a few months of income.
To solve the seasonal revenue problem, the founders began experimenting with other crops that could complement the garlic harvest cycle.
Over the next few years, they experimented with a variety of crops—potatoes, onions, tomatoes, and even raisins—while exploring different supply chains. Many of these ventures, however, ended up as costly lessons.


Eventually, in 2016, the duo discovered Brazil nuts.
Unlike purple garlic, Brazil nuts are harvested between Jan and May, creating a complementary revenue cycle. “We suddenly had this brilliant cycle,” Gareth said. “Brazil nuts collected during Q1 and Q2, and garlic in Q4.”
Hence, the founders decided to focus entirely on these two products: garlic and Brazil nuts, which are now known to be their signature offerings.
An “unusual” nut


But harvesting Brazil nuts came with its own set of challenges.
They are unusual when compared to most other nuts found in supermarkets. Attempts to farm them commercially have failed, making their production entirely dependent on natural, wild ecosystems deep within the Amazon rainforest.
The Brazil nut tree itself can live for hundreds of years, producing large, coconut-like fruits that fall naturally to the forest floor when ripe during the rainy season. Local collectors, many from communities living in Amazon regions, gather the fallen fruits, crack them open, and transport the in-shell nuts back to processing facilities—it is largely a manual process.
As such, alongside the factory it had established in the Peruvian Amazon for purple garlic, White Lion Foods built another facility deep in the Brazilian Amazon in 2016 to manage Brazil nut processing, hiring a workforce capable of handling the labour-intensive work.
Currently, the company employs more than 10,000 local and indigenous harvesters to collect the fallen fruits, along with over 3,000 staff across both its factories. Gareth claimed that his workers are paid more than 50% higher than the regional market rate because he believes in supporting the local communities.


At White Lion Foods’ factories, the Brazil nuts are carefully cleaned and dried in controlled environments until their moisture content drops to around 2–3%, ensuring optimal quality and long shelf life.
The nuts are then sorted into different sizes and packed before being exported to retailers and supermarkets such as Aldi and Hyundai department stores under white-label arrangements.
Today, Gareth shared that White Lion Foods controls roughly 16% of the global Brazil nut market. The company also processes both Brazil nuts and purple garlic for partners and retailers across more than 45 countries.
Creating their own consumer brand
After years of supplying Brazil nuts as a white-label manufacturer, the founders decided to create their own consumer brand, with a focus on highlighting the Brazil nut itself.
For decades, these nuts had been sold mostly raw or coated in chocolate, so the duo set out to develop a way to introduce new flavours, particularly savoury ones, that the market had never seen before.


But savoury seasoning was difficult to apply because of the natural structure of Brazil nuts, which prevented flavours from sticking well.
After months of trial and error—and collaboration with confectionery flavouring experts in the UK—the company finally developed a process that allows savoury seasonings to adhere properly, unlocking a whole new way to enjoy this nutrient-dense superfood.
That led to the launch of Truly Nuts! in the UK in December 2023 through British travel retailer WHSmith’s outlets across the country and e-commerce platform, Amazon.
The brand started out with four Brazil nut flavours, including chilli, smoked, and chocolate variants.


Since March 2024, White Lion Foods begun selling Truly Nuts! products in Singapore. Its products are now stocked in retailers such as FairPrice, Cold Storage, and Guardian, with a 120g bag of Brazil nuts starting from S$8.50.
“The Brazil nut was such an undermarketed nut,” Gareth said. “People don’t know about it, they don’t know about the health benefits, and they don’t know that it supports the Amazon.”
Singapore was chosen as one of the brand’s early markets partly because of its growing appetite for healthier snacks. Moreover, that lack of awareness is precisely what the brand hopes to change.
The healthy snack market here has been on the rise and is projected to grow by about 70% to US$890 million (S$1.14 billion) by 2033, driven by consumers seeking convenient options amid increasingly busy lifestyles.
That said, the brand has also had to adjust some flavours to suit Asian taste preferences. Local consumers, Gareth noted, tend to prefer slightly lower salt levels but stronger flavour profiles in certain variants.
And of course, maintaining product quality has also led to tradeoffs, which the duo is willing to make.
Chocolate-coated nuts, for instance, are sensitive to heat—especially in tropical climates like Singapore. Instead of using stabilising chemicals often found in confectionery products, Gareth shared that the company transports its chocolate variants in refrigerated conditions to prevent melting.
While this incurs additional logistics costs, he believes it is necessary to keep the products free from additives.
Targeted expansion through travel retail
As White Lion Food and its Truly Nuts! brand grows, the company expects its facilities to process more than one billion Brazil nuts this year—equivalent to roughly 3,500 tonnes.
Revenue from its Brazil nut segment alone is projected to reach between US$40 million and US$45 million, with about US$2 million coming from Truly Nuts!. Gareth envisions White Lion Foods expanding to supply a third of the world’s Brazil nuts in the future.
Considering the brand is still relatively young, Gareth sees this as just the beginning. Rather than expanding into new countries all at once, the company plans to grow through travel retail first.


It might sound surprising, but his reasoning is simple: airports give the brand direct access to international travellers, helping build awareness and demand before moving into broader retail markets.
By May, Truly Nuts! aims to go live in about 80 more WHSmith airport outlets across the globe, including Europe and Singapore.
The company is also developing new product lines, with Brazil nut butter seen as having particularly high potential.
Reflecting on the company’s unconventional journey—from DJ tours to running processing facilities in the Amazon—Gareth says entrepreneurship rarely follows a linear path.
“You’ve just got to get going with it,” he said. “As I like to say, you should build the plane while you’re flying.”
- Learn more about Truly Nuts! here and White Lion Foods here.
- Read more stories we’ve written on Singaporean businesses here.
Featured Image Credit: Truly Nuts!
Tech
Premier League Soccer: Stream Liverpool vs. Spurs Live From Anywhere
When to watch Liverpool vs. Tottenham
- Sunday, March 15, at 12:30 p.m. ET (9:30 a.m. PT).
Where to watch
- Liverpool vs. Tottenham will air in the US on Peacock Premium.
After an embarrassing midweek defeat in Europe, woeful Tottenham Hotspur will be hoping to avoid further humiliation on Sunday as they travel to Anfield to face top-four-chasing Liverpool in the English Premier League.
Spurs continued their dire run of form with a 5-2 loss away to Atletico Madrid in the UEFA Champions League on Tuesday. Interim boss Igor Tudor came under fierce criticism in the aftermath of that defeat, following his controversial decision to substitute young goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky after just 17 minutes at 3-0 down.
Tudor remains in charge for today’s game, but after four defeats from each of his four games in charge, and with his side just a point above the relegation zone, this game could prove to be his last chance to save his brief tenure.
Liverpool’s midweek Champions League defeat to Galatasaray was not quite as disastrous as Tottenham’s. Nevertheless, the Reds’ 1-0 midweek loss in Istanbul will have boss Arne Slot determined to get his side back to winning ways as they look to climb back into the UCL qualification places.
Liverpool hosts Tottenham Hotspur on Sunday, March 15, at Anfield, with kickoff set for 4:30 p.m. GMT. That makes it a 12:30 p.m. ET or 9:30 a.m. PT start in the US and Canada, and a 3:30 a.m. AEDT kickoff in Australia on Monday morning.
Under-fire Tottenham boss Igor Tudor faces a defensive selection issue for this crucial game, with center back Micky van de Ven suspended following his red card in last week’s EPL defeat to Crystal Palace.
How to watch Liverpool vs. Tottenham in the US without cable
This match at Anfield will be broadcast on streaming service Peacock. To catch the game live, you’ll need a Peacock Premium or Premium Plus subscription.
Peacock offers two Premium plans, and after recent price increases, the ad-supported Premium plan costs $11 a month and the ad-free Premium Plus plan costs $17 a month.
How to watch the Premier League 2025-26 from anywhere with a VPN
If you’re traveling abroad and want to keep up with Premier League action while away from home, a VPN can help enhance your privacy and security when streaming.
It encrypts your traffic and prevents your internet service provider from throttling your speeds, and can also be helpful when connecting to public Wi-Fi networks while traveling, adding an extra layer of protection for your devices and logins. VPNs are legal in many countries, including the US and Canada, and can be used for legitimate purposes such as improving online privacy and security.
However, some streaming services may have policies that restrict VPN use to access region-specific content. If you’re considering a VPN for streaming, check the platform’s terms of service to ensure compliance.
If you choose to use a VPN, follow the provider’s installation instructions, ensuring you’re connected securely and in compliance with applicable laws and service agreements. Some streaming platforms may block access when a VPN is detected, so verify whether your streaming subscription allows VPN use.
Price $13 per month, $75 for the first year or $98 total for the first two years (one- and two-year plans renew at $100 per year)Latest Tests No DNS leaks detected, 18% speed loss in 2025 testsJurisdiction British Virgin IslandsNetwork 3,000 plus servers in 105 countries
ExpressVPN is our current best VPN pick for people who want a reliable and safe VPN, and it works on a variety of devices. Prices start at $3.49 a month on a two-year plan for the service’s Basic tier.
Note that ExpressVPN offers a 30-day money-back guarantee.
Livestream Liverpool vs. Tottenham in the UK
This Sunday afternoon clash is exclusive to Sky Sports and will be shown on its Sky Sports Main Event channel. If you already have Sky Sports as part of your TV package, you can stream the game via its Sky Go app. Cord-cutters will want to set up a Now account and a Now Sports membership to stream the game.
Sky’s standalone streaming service Now offers access to Sky Sports channels with a Now Sports membership. You can get a day of access for £15 or sign up to a monthly plan from £35 a month right now.
Livestream Liverpool vs. Tottenham in Canada
If you want to livestream EPL games in Canada this season, you’ll need to subscribe to Fubo. The service has once again secured exclusive rights to the Premier League and is broadcasting all 380 matches live.
Fubo is the go-to destination for Canadians looking to watch the EPL, with exclusive streaming rights to every match. It currently costs CA$27 for the first month, then CA$31.50 per month from then on.
Livestream Liverpool vs. Tottenham in Australia
Livestreaming rights for the EPL are now with Stan Sport, which is showing all 380 matches live, including this game.
Stan Sport will set you back AU$20 a month (on top of a Stan subscription, which starts at AU$12). It’s also worth noting that the streaming service is currently offering a seven-day free trial.
A subscription will also give you access to Premier League, Champions League and Europa League action, as well as international rugby and Formula E.
Tech
‘Marshals’: When Does Episode 3 Premiere on Paramount Plus?
Marshals, a new Yellowstone spinoff starring Luke Grimes as Kayce Dutton, is currently airing on CBS. You can also tune in with Paramount Plus.
The Yellowstone sequel series sees Grimes’ former Navy SEAL join an elite unit of US Marshals to bring range justice to Montana, according to a synopsis from CBS. The show also includes Yellowstone actors Gil Birmingham as Thomas Rainwater, Mo Brings Plenty as Mo and Brecken Merrill as Tate. Spencer Hudnut is the showrunner of Marshals — formerly known as Y: Marshals — and Taylor Sheridan is an executive producer.
When to watch new Marshals episodes on Paramount Plus
Episode 3 of Marshals airs on CBS on Sunday, March 15. Viewing options for Paramount Plus customers vary by subscription tier. You can watch the episode live if you have Paramount Plus Premium, which includes your local CBS station. If you subscribe to Paramount Plus Essential, you can watch the installment on demand the following Monday, but not live on Sunday.
Here’s how to watch the next two episodes of Marshals.
- Episode 3, Road to Nowhere: Premieres on CBS/Paramount Plus Premium on March 15 at 8 p.m. ET/8 p.m. PT/7 p.m. CT. Streams on Paramount Plus Essential on March 16.
- Episode 4, The Gathering Storm: Premieres on CBS/Paramount Plus Premium on March 22 at 8 p.m. ET/8 p.m. PT/7 p.m. CT. Streams on Paramount Plus Essential on March 23.
You can also watch CBS and the third episode of Marshals without cable with a live TV streaming service such as YouTube TV, Hulu Plus Live TV or the DirecTV MyNews skinny bundle. In addition to offering a lower-cost option, Paramount Plus lets you watch the other two Yellowstone spinoffs: the prequels 1883 and 1923.
After a price increase in early 2026, the ad-supported Essential version runs $9 per month or $90 per year. The ad-free Premium version runs $14 per month or $140 per year. Paying more for Premium gives you downloads, the ability to watch more Showtime programming than Essential and access to your live, local CBS station.
Tech
ByteDance will reportedly buy NVIDIA’s latest AI chips to use outside of China
TikTok’s Chinese parent company ByteDance has figured out a way to access NVIDIA’s latest AI chips despite export restrictions, according to a report by . The company is working with a firm called Aolani Cloud and building out Blackwell computing systems in Malaysia.
This should give ByteDance access to around 36,000 B200 chips. That’s NVIDIA’s most powerful processor. The hardware buildout will reportedly cost more than $2.5 billion. The company says it plans on using this new computing power for AI research and development outside of China.
The country has been unable to access the B200 chip, as it was designed in California and, as such, subject to US export controls. This has led to do what ByteDance is doing with Aolani Cloud. The Singapore-based firm will buy up the components from NVIDIA and will operate exclusively in Malaysia, giving ByteDance access in the process.
“By design, the export rules allow clouds to be built and operated outside controlled countries,” an NVIDIA spokesperson said. They also said that all of the company’s cloud partners go through review before being approved to receive its products.
A representative from Aolani Cloud that the company adheres to all applicable export control regulations and that ByteDance will be just one of many customers. It plans on providing cloud-computing services to multiple companies across Asia and the globe. However, it’s worth noting that Aolani currently operates with just $100 million worth of hardware and ByteDance is planning to inject a whopping $2.5 billion.
The US did recently , but they’ve been slapped with a 25 percent tariff. Additionally, the US government mandated that the export license would only be approved if NVIDIA accepted a Know-Your-Customer requirement, which is an attempt to ensure that China’s military can’t access the chips. NVIDIA .
Tech
Protecting data during hypervisor migration
Broadcom’s acquisition of VMware in 2023 set off a wave of migrations that shows no signs of subsiding. But moving from VMware to another hypervisor may introduce significant technical and operational risks.
IT teams must prepare for challenges that are not always apparent at the start of a migration.
Price hikes, licensing changes and shifts in customer support have driven VMware customers to look for alternatives. Recent operational problems haven’t helped.
Last year, VMware Workstation auto-updates failed due to a Broadcom URL redirect. In 2026, the migration continues. Gartner research VP Julia Palmer recently predicted that VMware would lose 35% of its workloads by 2028.
Many of those workloads will shift to platforms such as Microsoft Hyper‑V, Azure Stack HCI, Nutanix AHV, Proxmox VE or KVM. Unfortunately, the journey comes with challenges. Switching hypervisors is a high-stakes infrastructure change.
IT professionals need to focus on completing a successful migration with their data intact and available.
Why hypervisor migration is technically risky
It sounds simple: Export data, convert it to a new format and then import it into a new hypervisor. But that process is far riskier than it sounds.
That’s because hypervisors don’t interoperate. Multiple technical variables increase the risk of failed or unstable migrations. Hypervisors differ in disk formats, hardware abstractions, driver stacks and networking models.
Virtual hardware versions, storage controllers, chipset emulation and network virtualization layers don’t always translate cleanly.
Snapshots and templates behave differently. Even subtle configuration differences can create instability that only surfaces once workloads are under real production pressure.
Migrating from VMware can increase cost, risk and operational drag, while limiting strategic options.
Acronis Cyber Protect gives IT leaders control with a flexible, AI‑powered cyber protection platform that cuts migration time by up to 60% and keeps the business secure and responsive throughout change.
Backup is essential to a successful hypervisor migration
The most important prerequisite for any platform migration is not a conversion tool. It is verified, restorable backup.
Organizations need to protect workloads with full-image, application-consistent backups that IT pros can restore not only to the same hypervisor but to dissimilar hardware or an entirely different virtualization platform.
IT teams need to perform recovery drills before they start migration, not just after cutover.
A platform-agnostic backup architecture provides a necessary safety net. It enables restoration from the source environment to the destination environment, and it allows rapid reversion to the original platform if compatibility or performance issues arise.
The bottom line is that data remains safe and accessible.
Any-to-any hypervisor recovery — restoration from physical, virtual or cloud environments to any other destination — reduces migration risk and has the added advantage of reducing long-term vendor lock-in.
How to avoid three risks most teams underestimate during migration
Even the most carefully planned and executed migrations can fail for predictable reasons.
1. Teams often underestimate planned downtime
Too many teams plan for an ideal level of downtime as opposed to a worst-case scenario. Unfortunately, migrations frequently stretch beyond maintenance windows. If a window closes when systems are not stable, organizations can suffer missed transactions, stalled operations, SLA violations and reputational damage.
That’s why migration planning must include a formal business continuity strategy, Ask in advance:
- How long can each workload realistically be offline?
- What happens if rollback is required?
- Who makes the go or no-go decision?
- What is the communication plan if restoration time exceeds expectations?
Backup and recovery are critical. The ability to quickly restore workloads to their original platform can mean the difference between a short delay and a multi-day outage.
2. Backup and recovery gaps can plague transitions
Migration creates a dangerous gray zone for backup and disaster recovery, with environments are often split between old and new platforms. That is when recoverability must be strongest. The time it takes to restore backups from either environment is critical.
Common gaps appear when:
- Backup chains are broken during VM exports.
- Incremental backup jobs may fail after platform conversion.
- Application-consistent snapshots are not validated on the new hypervisor.
- DR replication targets are not synchronized during phased cutovers.
Backup and recovery must function continuously throughout the migration. IT teams need to maintain parallel protection during overlap periods so that workloads are recoverable from both the legacy and target platforms until the transition is finished.
3. An expanding attack surface means backup images need protection
Migration also expands your attack surface.
With two hypervisor stacks running, complexity spikes. Backup repositories, an image-level backups in particular, can become high-value targets. If attackers compromise them during migration, your rollback and recovery options disappear.
Immutability is essential during this phase. IT teams need to protect backup images against modification or deletion, even by privileged accounts. They need to tighten role-based access controls and limit administrative access.
Equally important is adherence to the 3-2-1 principle: At least three copies of data, on two different media types, with one copy stored off-site or offline. During migration, that third copy becomes critical insurance.
If both production and primary backup infrastructure are affected, an isolated copy preserves your recovery path.
The value of a natively integrated platform
Maintaining parallel protection is essential because it lowers operational risk. However, it also increases management complexity. Two hypervisor stacks, multiple storage systems and parallel protection policies must coexist without creating gaps.
A unified cyber protection platform can simplify this process for IT teams. A unified cyber protection platform can reduce complexity by delivering consistent backup, recovery and security controls across physical servers, hypervisors and cloud workloads through a single point of control.
Natively integrated protection and migration capabilities in Acronis Cyber Protect can reduce transition timelines while maintaining rollback readiness and continuous synchronization.
Migration as a resilience opportunity
The shift away from VMware has made one concept clear: Migration planning is a long-term competency, not a one-time project.
Teams that succeed treat hypervisor transitions as resilience exercises. They validate backups in advance, ensure cross-platform recovery capability, maintain rollback paths, harden backup storage against ransomware and verify data integrity after cutover.
With these safeguards in place, migration becomes more predictable and significantly more likely to succeed.
VMware migrations don’t have to be slow, risky or disruptive.
With Acronis Cyber Protect, IT teams gain a flexible, responsive platform that accelerates migration while delivering AI‑powered security, backup and recovery in one natively integrated solution.
If you’re planning a move away from VMware, see how Acronis helps organizations migrate faster and stay protected at every step.
Learn how Acronis Cyber Protect accelerates VMware migration.
Sponsored and written by Acronis.
Tech
The Luxury Car Brand With The Highest Customer Satisfaction Score Isn’t Mercedes-Benz
With newer car brands like Tesla gaining prominence, along with the broader rise of electric powertrains, and other formerly high-end technology becoming common on even the most basic new cars, it often feels that the line between luxury automakers and mainstream car brands is blurrier than ever.
Still, no matter what type of powertrain is under the hood, there are lots of car buyers who desire the prestige, performance, and extra amenities that come with these luxury brands, and they’re happy to pay the additional cost to own them. This market position is distinct enough for luxury brands to have their own separate category when it comes to ranking things like reliability and customer satisfaction. When it comes to the top-ranked luxury brand for customer satisfaction, the winner shouldn’t be too surprising for anyone who has followed the industry for a while.
In the 2025 American Customer Satisfaction Index Automobile Study, it was the Toyota-owned Lexus that ranked highest among luxury automakers, jumping up two spots and overtaking both Mercedes-Benz and Tesla when compared to the previous year’s rankings. A big part of of that is the wide-ranging and high-quality Lexus hybrid vehicle lineup, with hybrids in general earning higher satisfaction rankings across all brands, especially when compared to electric vehicles.
Hybrid is the way
ACSI conducted its automobile satisfaction survey between 2024 and 2025, surveying a little under 10,000 vehicle owners on a variety of different categories that summarize the ownership experience. The list includes traditional satisfaction categories like driving performance, efficiency, comfort, and reliability, along with two new categories added for 2025, total range on a fuel tank or electric charge, and expected resale value.
Lexus took the top spot among all luxury brands with a total score of 87 on a scale of 100, five points ahead of second-place Mercedes-Benz. The result isn’t shocking, as the brand’s corporate parent, Toyota, is also ranked highly when it comes to customer satisfaction. What especially drove Lexus’ rise in this year’s rankings is its hybrid vehicles. Hybrid and plug-in hybrid vehicles like the popular Lexus RX 500h crossover make up a big part of the brand’s volume, with the vast majority of the Lexus lineup offering some form of hybrid powertrain.
When separated by powertrain type across all luxury brands, hybrids earned the highest satisfaction score with an 83 out of 100, followed by gasoline at 80, and electric at 78. While Lexus does have EV offerings in its lineup, the brand has largely gone the way of parent company Toyota in focusing heavily on hybrid models over pure electric vehicles. Right now, that decision seems to be paying dividends, especially when compared to the European luxury brands that have pursued EVs more aggressively.
Other findings in the luxury car market
Overall, across the luxury segment, customer satisfaction scores were down slightly in 2025 from the previous year, with most of that decline attributed to poor performance from electric vehicles, particularly those from Audi and BMW. In its findings, ACSI points out that high driver frustration with those German EVs not only drags down an individual brand’s rankings, but aggregates customer satisfaction across all brands.
One of the new customer satisfaction categories added for 2025, which looks at the driving distance on a full charge or full tank of gas is especially interesting to look at, as it represents a real-world interpretation of driving range that can differ from official specs or EPA ratings. It’s here where luxury hybrids win once again, with a score of 76, compared to 74 for gasoline, and 71 for electric vehicles.
As for the future, with EV sales on a downward trend in America, it’s possible that brands like Audi, BMW, and Mercedes could regain some of their lost ground if EVs represent a smaller slice of their sales going forward, but for now, Lexus seems to be in the catbird seat. Along with luxury brand rankings, ACSI’s study also covers mass market brands, and in the 2025 mass market car customer satisfaction rankings, it was another Japanese automaker that earned the number one spot.
Tech
Siri and refined Liquid Glass controls on the docket for WWDC 2026
Apple introduction of its late Siri overhaul is expected to finally arrive during WWDC, as part of a trend by the company to improve the quality of the software it ships.

We’re still waiting for New Siri…
Apple was thought to be preparing its big update to Siri for a developer beta of iOS 26.4, as well as similar betas for macOS Tahoe and iPadOS 26.4. With it not visible in the developer beta builds at this late stage, the next probable launch time for it will be during WWDC in June.
However, Siri faces being only a part of a number of areas Apple will improve during its annual developer showcase.
Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Tech
Camp Snap Camera Review: At Least It Looks Good

Pros
- Great retro design
- As easy-to-use as you can get
- Lots of great color options
Cons
- Not as satisfying as you might expect
- Availability shenanigans
- Image quality isn’t great
The Camp Snap is a digital pocket camera with the design of a retro-styled film camera. It’s extremely inexpensive and leans into the digicam trend that’s popular among 20-somethings and younger. It doesn’t quite succeed in the same way similar cameras do, like the Flashback.
Image quality is fairly mediocre, even for a budget camera, which, to be fair, might be what some people are looking for with the retro trend. However, spending even a small amount more can get you better images to start with, giving you more options for how the final photos look.
For the price, the Camp Snap isn’t bad. In fact, it’s better than some ultrabudget cameras I’ve tested, but beyond the overall design, the Camp Snap has less to offer, even compared to other cameras with similar vibes and style.
Camp Snap specs
| Photo resolution | 8 megapixels (3,264×2,448) |
|---|---|
| Video resolution | N/A |
| Sensor size | 1/3.2-inch |
| Lens | 32mm (35mm equivalent) f/1.8 |
| Image stabilization | None |
| Screen type | Monochrome LCD with image count only |
| Storage | MicroSD (4GB card included) |
| Weight | 97grams (0.2 pounds) |
| App | None |
The Camp Snap has fairly unimpressive specs, not too surprising for something that costs $70. The version I bought was V105, which overall looks the same as previous versions but has the ability to install custom filters for the photos and a slight redesign of the flash toggle.
The toggle also turns the camera on and off. Previous versions used the shutter button to do that. I can see why they made that change. It’s far less likely to take 50 photos of the inside of your bag with a physical power switch.
Surprisingly, the camera actually has a removable microSD card on the bottom under a door that’s secured with a screw. That’s not exactly the most user-friendly design, which I suppose is why Camp Snap recommends connecting the camera via USB and barely mentions the card.
Next to the card slot, hidden by the same door, are the extent of the Camp Snap’s settings: a mode button and two others for up and down. This is to set the date recorded in the photo’s metadata. That’s it. No exposure settings, modes, switchable filters, nada.
This camera was designed to replicate the feeling of using disposable film cameras. If you want more than that, look elsewhere.
You can install a filter for your photos, though this process also isn’t user-friendly. To switch filters, you need to plug the camera into a computer and download a .flt file from the Camp Snap website, drop it into the camera’s memory and all images taken after that will use that filter’s settings. You can’t change it on the go, and unlike the Flashback, you don’t get unfiltered photos to adjust later.
You can, however, design your own filter if one of the premade options on the website isn’t to your liking. It’s an easy-to-use interface, complete with a preview of your adjustments.
Most people buying the Camp Snap will probably stick with either the preinstalled “Camp Classic” or “Vintage” filter (it’s called both on different parts of its site) or choose one of the other premade ones that are available, but being able to design your own this easily is a great feature.
However, again, switching filters isn’t as simple as pressing a button or scrolling through menus.
The filter design page on Camp Snap’s website.
Not having Bluetooth or Wi-Fi is likely one of the reasons the Camp Snap is so cheap. It’s also why spending a bit more on the Flashback is probably a wise investment. Not having to connect to a computer to do anything is definitely a bonus.
The other problem is that the base image quality isn’t great, limiting the effectiveness of the filters in general. I’ll get to that in the next section.
Usability and photo quality
All images in this section are unedited other than cropping and use the preinstalled Camp Classic/Vintage filter unless otherwise noted.
Using the Camp Snap isn’t quite as satisfying as the Flashback either. First, it feels even more cheaply made. You wouldn’t think there’d be much of a difference between the Camp Snap’s 97 grams and the Flashback’s 147 grams, but it’s noticeable, and the lighter Camp Snap feels even more disposable.
There’s less tactile and audible enjoyment as well, with a cheap-feeling shutter button, extremely unsatisfying electronic shutter sound and none of the ratcheting click-click-click of the Flashback’s “film” advance dial.
That said, with a single button and no settings to adjust, the Camp Snap is obviously very easy to use. It doesn’t even have a screen, unless you count a small monochromatic LCD that shows the picture count. You can line up a shot with an optical viewfinder. These never worked particularly well, but it’s better than nothing.
Going for the retro aesthetic is one thing, but it invites the question: What’s retro? Does that mean the 2000s digital cameras? Or is it 90s disposable film cameras? Black and white?
Digital cameras have long had settings and “filters” that adjust how the final image looks. Some, like many Fujifilm cameras, have built a cult following around their filters (or, as we in the cult call them, recipes).
The Camp Snap’s preinstalled filter is alternately called Camp Classic or Vintage, which they describe as “that classic summer camp vibe.” But again, summer camp from what period?
The images with the preinstalled filter have an overly warm color temperature that wasn’t typical in-era, but some imagine it was. The images are noisy and oversharpened, looking vaguely like a budget 2000s digital camera or early camera phone. The camera also tends to blow out highlights. They look better than the Kodak Charmera, at least.
From left to right: Camp Classic/Vintage, Kodaclone, 101Clone and a custom “neutral” filter made using the website tool’s Standard preset.
I can see what Camp Snap was trying for with the looks of some of the filters, but because the underlying images are mediocre, the filters end up looking like the kind of filters you’d get on a cheap digital camera that you never use after the first day.
Then again, that’s not entirely different than what Camp Snap says it’s going for with this camera. Such marketing just ends up feeling like “if you can’t fix it, feature it,” though. Or to put it another way, you could do what these filters are doing on a camera that produces better images, and the final result would overall be better.
Maybe I’m overthinking it. If people wanted “better” photos, they wouldn’t be looking to mimic old disposable cameras.
More camp, less snap
I’ve mentioned it a bunch in this review because I came away from my time with the Flashback rather enamored with it. It’s a nostalgia-induced dopamine hit for those who used disposable cameras and something delightfully retro for many (most?) of its potential customers that likely never experienced such things the first time around. That’s fine — every generation has that about something.
The bones on the Flashback were good, though. It took decent pictures for a $120 camera, and it was easy to use. I didn’t get that same warm feeling after my time with the Camp Snap. This is a very inexpensive camera that feels and performs like a very inexpensive camera, trying to mimic something it isn’t.
The Camp Snap has the added hassle of needing to connect to a computer to view your images. Not ideal. Even if you have a microSD card reader for your phone, you’d need to also carry a tiny screwdriver to get at the card. Also not ideal.
Then there’s the pictures themselves, which are retro but in a bad way. The Flashback presents images that are an idealized aesthetic of what once was. The Camp Snap is what was, specifically, the worst cameras of the era.
Swan boats with the 101Clone filter taken approximately 0.75 miles from the 101 highway.
Physically, though, it looks great, and is available in a selection of colors I wish more products had in this era of grays on grays on grays. I don’t believe for a second they sell out of specific colors as often as its website says. That manufactured scarcity seems to be a trend in budget camera viral marketing.
For a little more, the Flashback is the better option. Also, for the same price as that camera is a step-up Camp Snap model, the CS-Pro, which has a 16-megapixel resolution and the ability to choose between four filters on the fly. Plus, it upgrades the flash from the base model’s LED to Xenon.
That latter feature should help get that 90s flashbang look when using it. Camp Snap’s marketing says it has better image quality, but it still doesn’t have Bluetooth or Wi-Fi. It also has a silver-on-black design that looks like SLRs from the 70s. To each their own, but I prefer the color options of the base Camp, snappy as they are.
Tech
Does Canada Need Nationalized, Public AI?
While AI CEOs worry governments might nationalize AI, others are advocating for something similar. Canadian security professional Bruce Schneier and Harvard data scientist Nathan Sanders published this call to action in Canada’s most widely-read newspaper (with a readership over 6 million): “Canada Needs Nationalized, Public AI.”
While there are Canadian AI companies, they remain for-profit enterprises, their interests not necessarily aligned with our collective good. The only real alternative is to be bold and invest in a wholly Canadian public AI: an AI model built and funded by Canada for Canadians, as public infrastructure. This would give Canadians access to the myriad of benefits from AI without having to depend on the U.S. or other countries. It would mean Canadian universities and public agencies building and operating AI models optimized not for global scale and corporate profit, but for practical use by Canadians…
We are already on our way to having AI become an inextricable part of society. To ensure stability and prosperity for this country, Canadian users and developers must be able to turn to AI models built, controlled, and operated publicly in Canada instead of building on corporate platforms, American or otherwise… [Switzerland’s funding of a public AI model, Apertus] represents precisely the paradigm shift Canada should embrace: AI as public infrastructure, like systems for transportation, water, or electricity, rather than private commodity… Public AI systems can incorporate mechanisms for genuine public input and democratic oversight on critical ethical questions: how to handle copyrighted works in training data, how to mitigate bias, how to distribute access when demand outstrips capacity, and how to license use for sensitive applications like policing or medicine…
Canada already has many of the building blocks for public AI. The country has world-class AI research institutions, including the Vector Institute, Mila, and CIFAR, which pioneered much of the deep learning revolution. Canada’s $2-billion Sovereign AI Compute Strategy provides substantial funding. What’s needed now is a reorientation away from viewing this as an opportunity to attract private capital, and toward a fully open public AI model.
Long-time Slashdot reader sinij has a different opinion. “To me, this sounds dystopian, because I can also imagine AI declining your permits, renewal of license, or medication due to misalignment or ‘greater good’ reasons.”
But the Schneier/Sanders essays argues this creates “an alternative ownership structure for AI technology” that is allocating decision-making authority and value “to national public institutions rather than foreign corporations.”
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