At-home microcurrent devices have become popular skin care tools thanks to claims that they can help reduce the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles, giving you firmer, lifted skin. To find out whether this is true and whether these devices can replace professional treatment, we consulted dermatologists to ask if they actually work, what the potential benefits are, who shouldn’t use a microcurrent device, and, ultimately, whether they’re worth the cost.
Do microcurrent devices work?
At-home microcurrent devices aren’t cheap, costing hundreds of dollars. If you’re thinking about investing in one, you might be wondering whether they actually work. What do the experts say?
“Yes, at-home microcurrent devices can provide noticeable benefits, though they’re generally less powerful than professional-grade treatments,” said Hannah Kopelman, a dermatologist at Kopelman Aesthetic Surgery. “These devices deliver low-level electrical currents designed to stimulate facial muscles and boost circulation. Over time, this can create a temporary lifting effect and provide mild improvement in skin tone.”
Advertisement
While the effectiveness of at-home microcurrent devices hasn’t been thoroughly tested, some studies show they can deliver real results. In a 2024 study, 56 participants were instructed to use the Slendertone Face microcurrent device, and 52 were assigned to a control group. After using the Slendertone Face device five days per week for 12 weeks, participants reported significantly better skin tone, radiance and fewer wrinkles compared to the control group.
But before you start using an at-home microcurrent device, it’s important to set realistic expectations.
“At-home microcurrent devices can be a beneficial part of your skin care routine, but they work best for mild improvements and maintenance, rather than dramatic changes,” Kopelman said. “For individuals looking for more immediate or pronounced results, professional treatments remain the gold standard.”
Advertisement
Wellness Editor Anna Gragert’s results using the NuFace Trinity Plus, before, during and after.
Anna Gragert/CNET
Microcurrent device benefits can depend on the person
When you use an at-home microcurrent device consistently, it can have a wide range of benefits for your skin. “The main benefits include mild lifting and firming of the skin, improved circulation and enhanced lymphatic drainage, which can reduce puffiness. Some users also report that their skin looks more refreshed and radiant after consistent use,” Kopelman said.
For deeper wrinkles and significant sagging, however, Kopelman said these devices probably won’t have the same effect as professional treatments or more invasive in-office procedures.
While these at-home devices can be effective, the results aren’t one-size-fits-all. According to Dr. Robyn Gmyrek, a dermatologist at New York-based UnionDerm, “The benefits of at-home microcurrent devices vary from person to person based on age, health status and behavioral choices, like sun exposure, smoking, diet and the specific device used.”
Advertisement
Like with most skin care treatments and procedures, you shouldn’t expect results immediately. “With at-home devices, consistency is everything,” Gmyrek said. “I recommend using a microcurrent device daily, or at least three to five times per week. Think of it like the gym — if you don’t continue to go, you will lose the benefits.”
Microcurrent devices could have side effects
Generally speaking, at-home microcurrent devices are safe when used as directed. And because the microcurrents are small, the treatments shouldn’t be painful. Some side effects are possible, though.
“Some people may experience mild redness or a tingling sensation during use but this is usually temporary. However, improper use — like applying excessive pressure or using the device for longer than recommended — can lead to skin irritation or muscle fatigue,” Kopelman said.
In the 2024 study referenced above, only a few participants experienced mild skin redness during their treatments. None of the participants had any other adverse reactions, suggesting that these devices are mostly safe.
Advertisement
While there are dozens of at-home devices that deliver microcurrents, they’re not all created equal. Each device works differently and has unique advantages and drawbacks.
If you’re in the market for an at-home microcurrent device, there are a few things you should look for, according to Gmyrek. She recommends buying a device with FDA clearance, multiple intensity levels and different functions, such as LED light therapy. You should also look for a device that comes with or requires a conductive gel to properly transmit the microcurrent. Pick a device from a well-established brand with positive user and expert reviews.
The ZIIP Halo with its Electric Complex Gel.
Advertisement
Anna Gragert/CNET
How to use a microcurrent device, step by step
Before using an at-home microcurrent device, read the manufacturer’s instructions. Each device might be slightly different but here’s a general overview of how these devices should be used:
Wash your face: You should always start with clean, dry skin before using a microcurrent device.
Apply conductive: Most microcurrent devices require a conductive gel that allows the device to glide over your face and helps deliver the current into the deeper layers of your skin.
Select the intensity level: If your device has multiple intensity settings, select the one that is right for your skin at the time of use. Start low and gradually increase once you get used to the different settings.
Glide the device over your face: Using light pressure, gently move the device across your face in an upward and outward motion. You can use the device on your jawline, cheekbones, forehead and the sides of your neck (make sure to avoid the thyroid in the center).
Remove the gel from your face and device: Once you’re finished, wash the gel off your face. Follow the manufacturer’s instructions for cleaning the device — generally, you can wipe off the gel with a soft, clean cloth. Then, you can continue with the next steps in your skin care routine.
Repeat based on the manufacturer’s recommendation: Most at-home microcurrent devices should only be used five times per week, for 3 to 5 minutes, but some devices can be used daily. Check the instructions to see how often your device should be used for optimal results.
The best microcurrent devices we tested
To figure out which microcurrent devices are the best, CNET Wellness Editor Anna Gragert tested six devices over the course of two months. Based on price, modes, accessories, features, FDA clearance, cleaning instructions, app compatibility and the required conductive gel, she found the NuFace Trinity Plus to be the best microcurrent device overall.
The NuFace Trinity Plus costs $395. It helps you track time with audible beeps, has helpful tutorials on its app and is easy to charge with its included stand.
If you’re looking for a device with more features, such as massage and LED light therapy, the $420 TheraFace Pro is recommended. This device can also cleanse the face. Hot and cold rings are sold separately but can be used with the device. The only potential downside is that app tutorials are on the longer side and would be better with voice instructions.
Can you overdo it with a microcurrent device?
At-home microcurrent devices aren’t without risks, and using them too often can do more harm than good.
Advertisement
“Overuse can lead to inflammation in the skin, redness and swelling,” said Gmyrek. If that happens, you should stop using the device immediately until your side effects resolve.
“Using an at-home microcurrent device too frequently can also cause muscle fatigue, leaving the facial muscles feeling sore or overly tight. Sticking to the manufacturer’s recommended usage schedule can help avoid this issue,” added Kopelman.
Before you start using an at-home microcurrent device, read the instructions on the frequency of use, which will vary by product. For example, the Foreo Bear is designed for everyday use. However, the NuFace Trinity Plus and Skin Gym Microcurrent Wand should be used five times per week for 60 days, then up to three times per week for maintenance.
Don’t be tempted to use the device more often than recommended. Experts agree that overusing won’t provide better benefits or faster results. Plus, you could end up damaging your skin in the process.
Advertisement
Who shouldn’t use a microcurrent device?
Although at-home microcurrent devices are typically safe, not everyone is a good candidate.
“Individuals with certain medical conditions, such as epilepsy, a pacemaker or other implanted electrical devices, should avoid using microcurrent devices, as the electrical currents could interfere with their function,” said Kopelman.
Microcurrent devices should also be avoided during pregnancy, unless it’s cleared by a health care provider.
Advertisement
If you have certain medical conditions or are pregnant, a microcurrent device may not be for you.
Tatsiana Volkava/Getty Images
Professional vs. at-home microcurrent devices
Microcurrent is a popular offering at many medical spas and skin care clinics as a standalone treatment or an add-on to other services. According to experts, in-office treatments offer more bang for your buck.
“Professional microcurrent devices used in clinical settings are much more powerful and can deliver a more significant, long-lasting lifting effect in a shorter period of time,” said Kopelman.
Additionally, professional treatments can be better personalized to your needs, potentially giving you better results faster.
Advertisement
“Licensed professionals are also trained to adjust settings based on your skin’s needs, which makes the treatment more customized,” said Kopelman. “At-home devices, by contrast, are designed to be safe for general use, so they deliver lower current levels and require more frequent treatments to maintain results.”
At-home microcurrent devices aren’t cheap, either. FDA-cleared devices can cost anywhere from $150 to upward of $400. Most devices also require a conductive gel, which is sold separately.
However, at-home devices tend to be slightly cheaper than professional procedures. In-office microcurrent treatments often cost between $250 and $500 per session but it depends on various factors, including the type of treatment, length of treatment and your location.
The bottom line
At-home microcurrent devices can be a great addition to your skin care routine if you want to improve skin firmness, reduce puffiness and sculpt your face. But it’s important to have realistic expectations about the results. While at-home devices do work, they aren’t nearly as effective as professional treatments.
Advertisement
If you’re on the fence about getting an at-home microcurrent device, there are a few things you can consider. First, think about your skin goals. An at-home microcurrent device won’t get rid of deep wrinkles and it’s not an alternative to Botox, dermal fillers or skin lasers.
You should also determine how often you will realistically use the device. Here’s some advice from Gmyrek: “Be honest with yourself — if you aren’t going to use an at-home device consistently, don’t bother spending the money on it. Instead, spend that money on in-office treatments that are more effective.”
The dermatologists we contacted said that at-home microcurrent devices can be beneficial but work best for mild improvements. If you’re looking for more immediate results, you may want to consider professional treatments instead.
When used as directed, microcurrent is generally safe. However, some people may experience mild, temporary redness and tingling during use. If used incorrectly, microcurrent may cause muscle fatigue or skin irritation.
Uber has spent the last year quietly pushing beyond the two businesses most people associate it with. There’s ride-hailing, of course, and delivery, but spend time in the app and you’ll now find hotel bookings powered by Expedia, “shop for me” concierge features, and boat rentals in Europe.
Under the hood, so to speak, there’s also a lot happening. Think debit cards for drivers, a data-labeling side hustle for these same earners looking to make more moolah, and a six-month-old, business unit called AV Labs, which is developing a fleet of sensor-equipped vehicles that’s separate from Uber’s regular driver network and designed to gather ever-larger amounts of driving data. Uber frames the initiative as a way to strengthen its relationships with autonomous vehicle partners, several of which it also holds equity in, but it sure looks like a hedge, as well. Uber competes directly with some of those same partners, with Waymo chief among them, and owning the data layer gives Uber both some leverage and optionality.
Whether Uber becomes a full-blown “everything app” similar to some Asian super-apps like Grab, remains an open question. But in this conversation, Uber Chief Product Officer Sachin Kansal walks TechCrunch through the company’s financial-services ambitions, its increasingly complicated relationship with Waymo, its new AV Labs data operation, and how AI is starting to show up in ways riders and drivers will actually notice.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Advertisement
TC: You unveiled hotels, boat rentals, and more shopping features earlier this year. How did that list get made, and what didn’t make the cut?
SK: Every year our teams are obviously building a lot of stuff, and a subset of that we decide is worth sharing with the world on the biggest stage. This year the theme that we gravitated towards was really travel. 1.5 billion trips on the Uber platform every year actually happen outside of a user’s home city, so we know that travel is something that’s a very common use case for Uber users. Our headline announcement this time was actually introducing hotels on Uber as a partnership with Expedia. But travel is so much more than that — you need rides to go from the airport to the hotel, and you need food. We heard from a lot of our users that a lot of them had stopped using room service and were just using the Uber Eats app. With “shop for me,” the goal was for us to enable you to shop from any local store even if that store is not available on Uber Eats with the entire catalog. Travel really is, in my opinion, the third leg of the stool — we had rides, then we added eats, and now we are adding travel.
Is Uber moving toward offering its own financial services, the way “everything apps” in Asia do?
Financial services for us cuts across multiple different entities — consumers, but also drivers and couriers, and merchants. We have multiple products today focused mostly on drivers and couriers, where we have what we call the Uber Pro card, which they can use as a debit card and transfer all their earnings onto. We are starting to experiment with some of those products for merchants in certain parts of the world right now. As far as consumers are concerned, we’ll see if that makes sense for us in the long term. Right now there is a currency for consumers to use — we call them Uber credits — and this ties to our membership program. On hotels, for example, members get 10% cash back on a $1,000 transaction, that’s $100 back as credit that you can then use on rides and eats.
Advertisement
Would Uber ever offer its own buy now, pay later product?
I’m not sure, because we want to make sure that the experts do what the experts do. We already have announced partnerships with others in the industry who are already providing that service, so that at checkout you have the ability to do that. In terms of our general product strategy, we’re not trying to be everything to everyone.
With boat rentals, in Europe, tapping the tab hands users off to a partner’s own booking flow rather than checking out inside Uber. Is that handoff model a template for what’s coming?
Definitely there are some instances, especially when we are doing something new, for us to rely on our partners, because a two-way integration just does take a lot of time, and in some cases it’s good for us to try before we integrate deeply. In the case of Expedia, we decided it just makes sense to integrate deeply — we built the entire UI on our own in partnership with Expedia. But in some cases it may make sense for us to hand off the rest of the experience to the experts in that field, and if you get great traction, we can always integrate them deeply.
Advertisement
Your Uber One membership product now has 51 million members and accounts for roughly half of bookings. Do you have data showing the cross-sell actually works — that a delivery user later starts taking more rides?
On the delivery side, it takes you two to three orders for you to break even the monthly fee that you pay. As members get more habituated to the program, it’s increasing their frequency within the line of business they are already using. And it’s also leading to more usage of the other sides of the business — we are seeing people who are mobility only also start to use delivery, and people who are delivery only also start to use mobility.
Delivery has been one of the hardest businesses in tech to make profitable. Is Uber Eats still leaning on ride-hailing to stay healthy?
During the early years of Uber Eats it was not profitable yet, but over the last several quarters, Uber Eats has been independently a profitable business for us, and generating a lot of profit.
Advertisement
A story I wrote this spring framed Uber as unexpectedly competing more directly with Airbnb, which is now offering airport transfers through a partner. Do you see it that way? Who are you most focused on?
There’s no dearth of competitors — Lyft in the U.S., Didi and 99 in Latin America, Bolt, Ola around the world, and on delivery, DoorDash, Delivery Hero. But I only spend a very small percentage of my time thinking about that. The bigger percentage of my time, or what keeps me up at night, is are we providing our users all the value that we can provide.
You recently wound down the Waymo pilot in Phoenix while scaling elsewhere. How do you keep the experience coherent when you’re partnering with — and in some cities competing with — the same supplier?
Phoenix was the first city that we launched with Waymo, with about a dozen cars, but our scale launches have been in Austin and Atlanta, where we have hundreds of cars with them. When we recently looked at the Phoenix pilot, we mutually decided that it doesn’t make sense for us to continue. Waymo is an excellent partner of ours, but in many cities they’re also a competitor. We are not in the race to be an L4 autonomy provider — what we are focusing on is laying down the race tracks so we can work with multiple players. We believe in the hybrid network, human drivers as well as autonomous vehicles in the same city, because it allows us to balance demand and supply.
Advertisement
Regarding AV Labs, what can Uber offer autonomy partners that they don’t already have?
We are going to be equipping hundreds of cars with sensors, deployed through our fleet partners, and through that we’ll be collecting millions of miles worth of driving data. That really helps with the long-tail problem — you want to see all the edge cases, not just the P95, P99 level. Beyond the data itself, there’s so much know-how from our 10 million earners in terms of how pickups and drop-offs work. We handle 25 million lost items every single year — how do you operationally handle that in the world of autonomy? That’s the kind of operational expertise we can bring.
Is Uber selling driver and rider data to Gen AI companies?
I would divide this into two parts. In terms of Gen AI companies, we are able to label data for them using our earner base, or through audio collection, and yes, we have commercial relationships with them and we are selling it to them — that’s a part of the business that is new, and we are extremely bullish about it. AV Labs is separate, and we are still figuring those models out for sharing that data with partners. It’s a little early.
Advertisement
Are drivers recording conversations with riders for this data work?
No, no, no — I want to be very clear, there’s no conversation being recorded as part of that while they’re on a ride. When they’re not on a trip, they’re not driving, they’re not delivering, they’re just talking, or they’re listening to a piece of audio and transcribing it. They get paid for doing that, by the way.
Where has AI actually shown up in ways a rider or driver would notice?
If you are an earner on our platform, we have an earner assistant — the number one question on their mind is how do I make more money, and it will say, look, it’s actually pretty light in the South Bay, but you may want to go five miles away where there’s a lot of demand. On the Eats side, there’s a grocery cart assistant where you can say “I want milk, eggs, bread” and it creates the cart very quickly. And on rides, you’re able to use voice to request a ride — say “I’m looking for a ride to the airport, I have six pieces of luggage, six people.”
Advertisement
So a fully agentic Uber — “plan and book my whole trip” — is on the horizon?
I can’t put a date on it, and I can’t tell you exactly what the feature set will be, but I think AI is going to be a huge enabler of that, where I can leave the complexity to the platform and just tell an agent what exactly I want. Easier said than done — we want to make sure we’re not just checking a box by shipping an agent that maybe doesn’t work that well.
As CPO, how do you personally prioritize with so many ideas in flight?
I would say I spend 70% to 80% of my time making sure that our existing products, or the products we are about to launch, are as solid as possible. All the new ideas are like shiny objects — if you have 100 ideas, maybe five of them are good, and those five then need a lot of cultivation and conviction. So probably 20% of the time is on new ideas — including, by the way, I go out and drive and deliver myself, just to see our product from the other side firsthand.
Advertisement
When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.
It’s OS 27 public beta day, but developer beta testers are getting a little treat with version 2 updates of the iPadOS 27 and macOS 27 beta 3 release.
While it isn’t clear exactly what Apple might have changed in its second version of macOS 27 beta 3 and iPadOS 27 beta 3, they are now available. Every other OS 27 beta retained its beta 3 build numbers for the public beta.
The build number for macOS 27 beta 3 version 2 is 26A5378n, up from 26A5368g. The iPadOS 27 beta 3 version 2 build number is 24A5380I, up from 24A5370h.
There is a chance that there was some specific bug or security fix between the two operating systems that needed to be addressed for the public release. Apple tends to keep the developer beta and public beta on the same release version.
Advertisement
The release notes for iPadOS 27 and macOS Golden Gate 27 don’t have any specific references to the version 2 update. The update dialog in Settings doesn’t state any specific changes either.
For those using the developer betas already, it is important to install the new updates as soon as is reasonable to ensure stability and security. For those still not using any betas, AppleInsider continues to advise users to avoid installing betas on critical hardware.
Recently, politicians in the UK pushed forward with plans to eviscerate privacy and free speech on the internet by announcing a ban on social media for users under 16 that is set to take effect in Spring 2027.
The UK government continues to falsely characterize this policy as a necessary response to growing concerns about online harms for young people. In reality, much like the Online Safety Act, it will cause more harm than it will prevent.
Users of all ages are burdened with proving their age before accessing content, with social media platforms such as Snapchat, TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, and X included in the ban. There remains no reliable, privacy-preserving method of verifying the age of every internet user and methods vary from one platform to the next.
Young people will not simply be protected from being contacted by adults or endlessly scrolling—they’ll also lose access to educational videos on YouTube, local events on Facebook, and potentially cut off from distant friends and family.
Advertisement
Public policy must be effective, proportionate and respectful of fundamental rights. Young people deserve better than a policy built on panic, and all internet users deserve a safe and free internet. A social media ban generates headlines, but it will not solve the problem.
A Brief History of Age-Gating in the UK
Age restriction proposals in the UK date back to a decade ago, when the proposed Digital Economy Bill was put forth to (among other things) restrict young people from accessing pornographic websites. While the Digital Economy Act of 2017 passed without age-based restrictions, it laid the groundwork for later age verification measures.
Over the next few years, age checks for porn websites were announced then delayed several times. But it wasn’t until a consultation under the 2016-2019 May government and the 2020 publication of the Online Harms Whitepaper that age verification became a broader idea.
In 2023, the UK passed the controversial Online Safety Act, establishing powers that could weaken privacy protections and freedom of expression for internet users worldwide. In July 2025, the government implemented age assurance measures on sites hosting “harmful” content.
Advertisement
And despite politicians affirming repeatedly that the Online Safety Act would solve all of the problems with online safety, this year they decided it in fact did not go far enough. American social psychologist and The Anxious Generation author Jonathan Haidt—who has called for age-related social media bans around the world, despite significantscientific doubt about his research—met with the UK Health Secretary in February to push for the ban.
In March, politicians introduced plans for a social media ban into the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill to “prevent children under the age of 16 from becoming or being users” of “all regulated user-to-user services,” to be implemented by “highly-effective age assurance measures”—effectively banning under-16s from social media.
When this proposal came before the House of Commons, MPs defeated and proposed their own amendment: enabling the Secretary of State to introduce provisions “requiring providers of specified internet services” to prevent access by children, under age 18 rather than 16, to specified internet services or to specified features; and to restrict access by children to specified internet services which ministers provide.
But the social media ban does not stop there. The provision also requires internet service providers to limit the time kids spend online, and has rules about who can contact them online. These extreme rules will take decisions about using technology away from families and put them in the hands of government regulators.
Advertisement
The history of this proposal shows that the UK government has repeatedly returned to the same flawed idea: restricting access to online services by requiring age checks for everyone. But the fundamental problems have not changed. There is still no widely available way to verify age online without compromising privacy—but even if there were, broad restrictions on social media will inevitably limit access to lawful speech, and valuable online communities, and arts and culture.
Romain Dumas guided Ford’s Super Mustang Mach-E up the Goodwood hill in 41.98 seconds during Sunday’s Timed Shoot-Out. That mark beat the next quickest entry, a new Gen4 Formula E car driven by Daniel Ticktum, by 0.48 seconds. It also left the rest of a strong field more than four seconds behind.
Ford had previously won the top spot with the SuperVan 4.2 in 2024 and the F 150 Lightning SuperTruck in 2025, making this their third consecutive win. So this came as no surprise, but it was still cause for celebration for Dumas, who won his fifth Shoot-Out overall and third in a row. This time it was with the electric Super Mustang Mach-E, a beast of a car designed from the ground up to be a real electric hillclimb monster, rather than a production car with an electric motor slapped in. These three UHP 6 phase motors provide 1600 horsepower, but they are distributed to all four wheels, which helps keep it on track. The power comes from a 50 kWh battery pack, and regenerative braking can reach 710 kW, which should help slow it down on the tiny course.
BUILD A RACING LEGEND – Relive motorsport history with the LEGO Technic 1966 Ford GT40 MKII Race Car model kit for adults ages 18 years old and up
REALISTIC FEATURES & FUNCTIONS – Steer using the knob on top, open the doors to explore the interior, lift the engine cover to reveal the V8 engine…
AUTHENTIC 1966 DESIGN – This vintage race car model features iconic black and silver design inspired by the real Ford GT40 MKII champion car
They’d made a few changes, including a large rear wing, lowering the ride height, upgrading the brakes, and adjusting the suspension. All to go through the brief yet demanding course as quickly as possible. That new aero kit generates a remarkable 6900 pounds of downforce at 150 mph, which you can guarantee helps when you’re on a narrow strip of tarmac with walls and hay bales surrounding you. And you know Dumas is fairly good at managing tight courses. In fact, just three weeks before, he won the Pikes Peak International Hill Climb in the identical car in 8 minutes, 18 seconds. He had come from a 12-mile mountain route and was still able to maintain a good speed on the 1.16-mile English hill.
Advertisement
Qualifying demonstrated that the car was pretty quick, but Sunday appeared to be a challenge, with the heat and dust making grip difficult for many of the drivers. Dumas got out to a shaky start, but eventually gained momentum and carried it all the way to the finish. It ended up being the top two electric cars for the first time in the event’s history, and to make matters even better for Ford, all combustion vehicles were well behind.
It’s noteworthy to state that the time difference between first and second is less than half a second, but the time difference between second and third is more than four seconds. When competing against great drivers and automobiles, that kind of margin is significant. The top ten results were rather unambiguous, with a 1974 Shadow DN4 finishing third at 46 points 31 seconds and a VW Polo Rallycross coming in fourth at 46 points 32 seconds.
Ford collaborated with the STARD team to develop build this monster. They had also collaborated with them on the previous two winning electric vehicles. Each time, they refine what works and what doesn’t, and this knowledge is taken forward into larger racing efforts and future road car development. So, even though this was a unique hillclimb car, it remains relevant. Ford even stated that this 41.98-second performance was faster than their own computer simulations predicted the car could do on this track, indicating that there is still more work to be done.
Microsoft announced that a bunch of new adjustments are coming to the Windows Search Box in Windows 11. Each individual item is a minor improvement, but hopefully in aggregate, the changes will add up to a better experience for search. Members of the Windows Insider program may start seeing the changes beginning today.
The whole user experience for the Windows Search Box will be streamlined. The home screen has been pared back for less visual clutter, which should make it easier to access recent searches easily. The results display also looks cleaner, with larger spacing creating room to show useful metadata for hits. Users can now toggle whether they want to see hits from the web and the Microsoft Store beside local results. Web searches will no longer show sponsored content such as products and promotions at the top of the results. The improved search should also do a better job of finding both files and apps.
After a long, not terribly successful push to try and make Copilot happen, Microsoft has been shifting focus back toward making quality of life improvements to Windows 11. There have been incremental updates, like allowing users to adjust the size of the Start menu, alongside more meaningful changes such as a system for rolling back faulty drivers.
Summer is firmly here and the temperatures are feeling borderline apocalyptic in much of the northern hemisphere. Why not avoid the angry sun and stay inside where it’s (hopefully) cooler and distract yourself with some of the best movies on streaming right now?
Your choices are notably rich too. The spring hit sci-fi movie Project Hail Mary, about the global freeze threatening Earth as a result of the sun mysteriously going out, is now on Prime Video, after winning theater audiences over with the help of an adorable pile of pebbles. If, however, you want to embrace the flames, you’ll find some like minds in Avatar: Fire and Ash on Disney+, where a violent new tribe of Na’vi just want to see the world (well, a semi-sentient living moon) burn.
If you instead find the heat hellish, then a double bill of Satanic panic might be more fitting. Both Ready or Not 2, also on Disney+, and They Will Kill You on Hulu tap into a previously unexplored yet surprisingly rich subgenre of “estranged sisters with melee weaponry killing murderous cultists”—insert the “weird it happened twice” meme here, but just go with it. Or if you prefer not to switch your brain entirely off for entertainment, there’s also the far more cerebral Archive or the dark dystopia of The Long Walk to take your mind off the unbearable heat.
Here are WIRED’s picks of the best movies to watch right now.
Advertisement
Project Hail Mary
Waking up aboard a spaceship to find himself the only crew member still alive, amnesiac middle school science teacher Ryland Grace (Ryan Gosling) makes for an unlikely astronaut. Even worse, he’s Earth’s last hope for survival, sent out into space in search of a way to stop a strange phenomenon devouring the sun itself—and almost every other star in the sky. It’d be an impossible task solo, but luckily Ryland has back-up in the form of Rocky (James Ortiz), the first alien humanity has ever met, a five-legged stone creature who communicates in song.
Adapted from the book of the same name by Andy Weir (author of The Martian), Project Hail Mary is a fantastic slice of survival drama and hard science fiction, but the real heart of the movie is Ryland’s and Rocky’s growing friendship. Prepare to fall in love with an excitable rock spider-thing—fist my bump, friends.
Avatar: Fire and Ash
Picking up from 2022’s The Way of Water, human-soldier-in-a-Na’vi-body Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) and his family are in mourning following the death of their eldest son Neteyam, leading wife Neytiri (Zoe Saldaña) down a dark path. As the family struggles to stay together, the colonialist human forces led by Miles Quaritch (Stephen Lang) forge a deadly alliance with a warmongering tribe of fire-worshipping Na’vi ruled by the nihilistic Varang (Oona Chaplin)—who aims for destruction to spite the Na’vi’s god, Eywa. James Cameron’s almost inconceivably ambitious saga returns with a visually spectacular outing taking viewers through striking new regions of the lush jungle moon Pandora. Fire and Ash is no jumping on point, but thankfully you can binge the entire trilogy (for now; Avatar 4 and 5 are planned) on Disney+.
Ready or Not 2: Here I Come
The first Ready or Not from 2019 was something of a sleeper hit. A gory slasher with a sense of humor, it played with the fears and uncertainties of marriage and joining a new family, with bride-to-be Grace (Samara Weaving) caught in the murderous traditions of her fiance’s clan. This sequel, helmed by returning codirectors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett, picks up right after that first film’s credit roll, leading to Grace’s reunion with her estranged sister Faith (Kathryn Newton)—just in time to be swept into another murder game against a cabal of billionaires and aristocrats looking to fill a power vacuum left by Grace’s almost-inlaws. Schlocky, campy comedy horror, elevated by the presence of Sarah Michelle Gellar in an almost anti-Buffy role, Ready or Not 2 isn’t high art but it’s a hell of a lot of fun.
Advertisement
They Will Kill You
If Ready or Not 2 is schlock, then They Will Kill You is a step up the ladder—an almost exploitation-level hack-’em-up that takes liberal inspiration from Sam Raimi’s original Evil Dead trilogy and smashes it unapologetically together with Gareth Evans’ one-man-against-a-tower-block action epic The Raid.
QinetiQ testing of SuperDielectrics’ water-based zinc cells showed up to 13x longer high-power cycle life, 100C discharge in 36 seconds, and zero thermal runaway
The company is pitching its solution to AI datacenters as a ‘shock absorber’ that can deal with power requirement spikes safely and reliably
SuperDielectrics’ Faraday 3’s first commercial deployment is slated for early 2027 as it goes up against existing Lithium-ion battery-based energy storage as an alternative that can be deployed inside the data center
Cambridge-based advanced battery technology company SuperDielectrics recently published independent test results for its upcoming water-based Zinc battery, which could help cement its de facto presence in most projects that leverage renewable energy, whose output is often inconsistent.
The next-generation battery offers up to 13 times longer life cycle under high-power cycling, zero thermal runway, and charging and discharging gains that eclipse those of Lithium-ion-based batteries.
This makes it a great add-on for critical infrastructure, as well as for a new, fast-growing sector that is extremely power-intensive with huge power spikes in tow: AI data centers.
Latest Videos From
A solution that caters specifically to the AI power problem?
SuperDielectrics is painting its battery technology as the holy grail for AI data center problems, and with good reason: it is where all infrastructure spending will be concentrated over the next decade, and the firm decidedly wants a piece.
Advertisement
SuperDielectrics’ core innovation is a unique, patented polymer that enables it to deliver results that dwarf those of similarly configured single-layer lithium-ion cells. With the battery leveraging Zinc in addition to the proprietary polymer, the abundantly available metal could mean that batteries would be cheaper, immune to geopolitical and supply chain vulnerabilities, and easier to scale.
Room temperature testing of the battery showed impressive results when compared to lithium-ion-based alternatives, with SuperDielectrics claiming:
– Up to 13x longer cycle life under high-power cycling (10 mins charge and discharge, 100% depth of discharge);
Advertisement
Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!
“These results provide independent benchmarking of the technology at the heart of our batteries: a proprietary polymer separator that combines rapid ion transport with the safety advantages of an aqueous electrolyte system,” noted Shelley Brown, CTO of SuperDielectrics.
Advertisement
“The outcome is an energy storage solution purpose-built for high-power, fast-cycling applications, offering an alternative to lithium-ion systems that typically rely on extensive oversizing and additional safety infrastructure to manage demanding power profiles.”
There is more to the story that makes the solution ideal: Unlike lithium-ion-based solutions, the battery is safe to deploy in datacenters, whereas off-site deployments are currently required for lithium-ion-based solutions due to their potential as a fire hazard.
AI datacenters are known to be particularly power-intensive and often require significantly higher peak power when performing certain computing tasks. Lithium-ion batteries are not ideal for this because not only do frequent charging and discharging degrade them fairly quickly, but they also do not charge or discharge as fast as the Zinc-based offering from SuperDielectrics.
Advertisement
As a result, as noted by the CTO of SuperDielectrics, data centers need to overcompensate for this limitation by buying more capacity than needed to allow smooth operations without pushing existing lithium-ion-based infrastructure too hard.
There is a trade-off, however: Zinc batteries generally sacrifice energy density to offer advantages over lithium, and SuperDielectrics’ silence on capacity does not work in its favor here.
Despite this, thanks to AI compute requirements’ near-violent power swings requiring a moderator, SuperDielectrics seems to have a winner on its hands, at least on paper, but it might have its limits for datacenters that require longer backup times. The question that comes to mind is whether a smoothing layer can grow into genuine storage, especially for rack-scale product deployment.
On the flip side of the equation, SuperDielectrics is not the only one toying with a ‘safe’ battery solution; Chinese researchers are concentrating on a similar approach even as the automobile industry is already using sodium for EVs, which is already racking up wins in extreme low-temperature conditions.
Along with iOS 27’s public beta, Apple has also released macOS 27 Golden Gate’s public beta build, so that early adopters can get their hands on the new features, including Siri AI, and provide timely feedback to help ensure a stable iOS launch in September.
If you’re sold on all the new features but don’t want to put your faithful MacBook through developer beta duty, a public beta offers a much more refined experience. To install macOS 27’s public beta, follow the steps given below.
Shikhar Mehrotra / Digital Trends
So how do you actually install it?
Head to beta.apple.com and enroll your Mac in the free public beta program; no developer account needed.
Once you’re signed up, head to System Settings > General > Software Update.
Next to Beta Updates, click the small “i” button.
A dropdown will appear in the top-right corner, and from there you select macOS 27 Golden Gate Public Beta.
Hit Done, and your Mac will start pulling down the update.
You should know that developer betas have been fairly solid so far, but there have been some Safari memory hiccups and occasional reliability issues with beta builds in general. Back up your Mac first, and think twice about installing it on your primary machine.
Apple
What’s actually new in Golden Gate?
Like iOS 27, Siri AI is the headline update here as well. It indexes your Messages, Mail, and other content so it can actually answer questions and take action instead of fumbling through web searches.
Spotlight search, which got noticeably flaky on macOS Tahoe, feels far more dependable in this build. Apple also tweaked the Liquid Glass look and unified window corner radii so things stop looking inconsistent across apps.
Writing Tools and Visual Intelligence both got smarter, and Safari now has an extension builder that works off plain-English prompts instead of code. Shortcuts got the same treatment. Expect a handful more betas before the final Golden Gate build ships alongside iOS 27 and the iPhone 18 Pro this September.
Security cameras frequently promise peace of mind yet deliver grainy clips, nonstop false alerts, or hidden fees that add up fast. The Tapo C530WS from TP-Link, priced at $55.99 (was $70), takes a simpler route and focuses on the basics done right. A 5-megapixel sensor records in 3K resolution. Details hold up well when you zoom during playback, whether checking a face at the front gate or reading a plate on a vehicle that pulled into the driveway. Daytime color stays natural and edges remain defined across the frame.
Night Vision uses a Starlight sensor, which picks up any available light when collecting color footage rather than immediately converting to black and white. The camera is capable of reaching relevant distances outside without shining a large spotlight that would alert anyone in the area. This strategy ensures that the scene remains recognized even in deeper darkness. This model covers a lot of ground because of the built-in mobility, which allows you to spin the view almost 360 degrees left and right and tilt it up and down quite a little. In the Tapo app, you may simply drag the view to a new location or establish a few fixed spots for easy jumps later. When motion is detected, the camera will smoothly follow it across the screen without pausing in mid-sentence.
𝟑𝐊 𝟓𝐌𝐏 𝐂𝐥𝐚𝐫𝐢𝐭𝐲 & 𝐙𝐨𝐨𝐦 – Experience incredibly detailed resolution with 3K 5MP live view for stunning…
𝐂𝐨𝐦𝐩𝐥𝐞𝐭𝐞 𝐀𝐫𝐞𝐚 𝐂𝐨𝐯𝐞𝐫𝐚𝐠𝐞 – Enjoy 360º horizontal and 135º vertical views with pan/tilt…
𝐒𝐭𝐚𝐫𝐥𝐢𝐠𝐡𝐭 𝐂𝐨𝐥𝐨𝐫 𝐍𝐢𝐠𝐡𝐭 𝐕𝐢𝐬𝐢𝐨𝐧 – Activate Full-Color Mode to see more in…
The motion detection component is operates entirely on the camera and identifies people, pets, as well as autos, but only sends notifications for specific occurrences. Unlike more simple motion sensors, which will fire off at the slightest movement, such as a leaf blowing in the wind or a shadow shifting, there is no additional cost to gain the whole set of capabilities.
Advertisement
Video is saved directly to a microSD card (up to 512GB) in the camera, allowing you to record for weeks (or more) at once, depending on how you set up the camera. If you only need to preserve specific clips of footage, the free Tapo app allows you to go back and watch them or simply watch what’s going on live on your phone. There is an optional cloud plan available if you want additional backup, but it is not required to get the camera running properly.
For most users, setting up the device is simple: scan the app code, connect to your 2.4GHz Wi-Fi network, and attach the unit using the included accessories. It’ll function nicely on a wall or ceiling and has an IP66 classification, which means it can survive some dust and water ingress. A conventional adapter provides power, so make sure there is an outlet nearby or use a protected extension lead.
When it comes to installing it properly, the first thing to search for is a strong Wi-Fi connection. Some people use a simple extender / booster to solve the problem if their router is too far away from where they want the camera to be. Once configured, the app responds quickly to pan and tilt commands, and you can also link it to your Alexa or Google Assistant, allowing you to talk to it if desired.
We are expecting to hear news about the new generation of Google’s Pixel smartphone lineup when the company hosts its next showcase event in August. But in the meantime, a possible leak has gotten us colorfully-inclined buyers pretty excited.
9to5Google, by way of sister site 9to5Toys, found three listings on Amazon that might show some new looks coming to the Pixel 11. These potential placeholders depict one smartphone in a bold magenta and another in a rosy peach hue. The publication noted that there are some convincing details in the listings’ specs. The colors have one set of names in the titles and a different set in the description, and the second trio aligns with a previous leak suggesting a fuchsia model was on the way. At the time of publishing, none of the Amazon listings in 9to5Google‘s article are live.
It’s entirely possible that these are not from official Google sources. But I would really like it if they turn out to be real. Paying for our gadgets is going to be a grim and painfully expensive experience, can’t we at least have the actual hardware we’re splurging on be vibrant and joyful?
You must be logged in to post a comment Login