Bloomberg says a new Sonos app refresh is in the works
A key feature is extra iOS compatibility
Anyone else getting déjà vu?
The Sonos calendar may well have skipped 2025 in terms of that ‘two new product releases annually’ promise, although the company did release a new amplifier at the start of the year – and apparently 2026 will be a much busier year for the brand. So shall we see what shiny new gifts Sonos Clause (sorry) has wrapped up for us in his sack? It’s… an app overhaul. Another one.
According to Bloomberg, the company is planning to rework and refresh its app offering in the next few months, with an early version apparently already working internally. It’s unclear if that means the Sonos app is merely working, or really workable for the many customers still disgruntled over the last update. Apparently, the changes will be optional, and slowly integrated into the app rather than presented as one big push. (Lesson learned there, it seems.)
So what could actually change? Apparently you’ll now be able to control your Sonos device from the iPhone lock screen, using Apple’s recent developments in the area. It’s all to do with Apple’s Live Activities (the interactive, real-time notifications that appear on the iPhone Lock Screen and in the Dynamic Island) which would certainly be a welcome upgrade for iPhone owners.
That presumably won’t be the only change, as it’s something the Android app already offers, but it’s the only one we’ve heard about so far. A company cannot drip-release features if there’s only one, though, so we’ll likely hear about more nearer the time.
Keeping fans ‘appy
The word combination of ‘Sonos’ and ‘app’ may give users conniptions given that a bungled May 2024 app change which was only really fixed in 2025 is now what fans think about when they hear those words used together.
The then-new app had laggy volume controls, missing features from the older app, and a more confusing design that took users too long to get their heads around. While it’s mostly fixed now, a brief skim of the Sonos subreddit still yields post after post of complaints about the app and its bugs.
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As a baseline, Sonos’ new new app really needs to not to present these issues, or it could signal the end of trust in the brand: fool me once, and all that. The affections of plenty of Sonos fans are on the line, and if the company is planning a gangbusters product launch slate this year, it’s going to need some ardent cheerleaders to help it along — especially with the growing slate of WiiM products hitting the market…
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Xiaomi has officially confirmed that the Xiaomi 17 series will launch on February 28, 2026, at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona. The Chinese smartphone maker will debut the devices in India on the same day as the global unveiling. The company will begin the event at 2 PM Barcelona time (6:30 PM IST) and will likely livestream it for viewers worldwide. Alongside the new smartphones, Xiaomi will also introduce the Xiaomi Pad 8 in India.
A key highlight of the Xiaomi 17 lineup is its upgraded camera partnership with Leica. The companies have shifted from simple collaboration to a strategic co-creation approach. In practical terms, Leica is now more involved in camera design and tuning. Moreover, the goal is to offer users a more refined photography experience with improved lighting, natural colors, and professional-level output.
Xiaomi 17 Ultra
The Xiaomi 17 Ultra will be the star of the show. That’s because it’ll come with a massive 6.9-inch AMOLED display with 1.5K resolution, a 120Hz refresh rate, and a brightness of up to 3500 nits. In terms of performance, the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset will be the beating heart, with variants up to 16GB of RAM and 1TB of internal storage.
Additionally, it includes a 200MP periscope sensor to deliver high-quality zoom shots. The phone also houses a 6800mAh battery with 90W fast charging. The company uses leather and matte finishes in the design, taking inspiration from classic Leica cameras.
Xiaomi 17 & Pad 8
The Xiaomi 17 will debut alongside the Ultra version at the same event. It features a 6.3-inch AMOLED display and a 50MP triple-camera setup on the back. The phone is powered by the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 processor and features a 7000mAh battery.
Alongside the smartphones, Xiaomi is expected to introduce the Xiaomi Pad 8 in India. The tablet comes with an 11.2-inch 3.2K LCD screen supporting a 144Hz refresh rate. Furthermore, it runs on the Snapdragon 8 Elite processor and offers up to 16GB RAM. For photography and video calls, it features a 50MP rear camera and a 32MP selfie camera. The device features a 9200mAh battery.
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Expected Price
The company has not revealed India-specific pricing so far. In global markets, Xiaomi plans to launch the Xiaomi 17 Ultra at around €1,499 and the regular Xiaomi 17 at about €999. Pricing in India may change depending on local taxes and import costs.
Spotify is rolling out a new feature that’s meant to make transitions in between tracks even smoother. If you’ll recall, the streaming service released the ability to create customized transitions within playlists in August last year. It gave people a way to create uninterrupted progressions and eliminate awkward silences between songs. Now, Premium users will be able to make sure the songs in their playlists flow seamlessly even further by reordering tracks based on their keys and BPM or beats per minute.
The new feature can rearrange playlists with one tap. All paying users have to do is tap Mix on one of their playlists and then tap the Edit button. From there, they can scroll down to find the Smart Reorder option. Tapping Smart Reorder will automatically rearrange songs according to their keys and BPM without users having to do anything else. They just have to click Save so that the change to their playlist takes effect.
Spotify says users have streamed over 220 hours of their mixed playlists since it introduced custom transitions last year. It also listed some of the most popular ones on the platform, including The Weeknd’s Wake Me Up transitioning into After Hours and Flo Rida’s Low into Rihann’s S&M.
The disconnect between AI enthusiasm and practical implementation has never been more apparent. While 90% of UK business leaders report using AI regularly, only 16% have successfully integrated it into their CRM systems[1]—the very platforms that power their customer relationships and revenue generation.
This gap represents both a challenge and an opportunity for mid-market businesses in 2026. As artificial intelligence moves from experimental to essential, organisations that master CRM integration will gain significant competitive advantages in sales efficiency, customer engagement, and revenue growth.
John Cheney
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The current state of AI adoption
Recent research into AI usage within UK B2B organisations reveals a market in transition. The data shows that business leaders aren’t AI-averse; rather, quite the opposite. The vast majority are already using AI tools in various capacities, from content generation to data analysis. However, when it comes to embedding AI into core business systems like CRM, adoption rates drop dramatically.
This 74% point gap between general AI usage and CRM integration tells an important story. It suggests that while businesses understand AI’s potential, they’re struggling with the practical challenges of implementation, particularly within mission-critical systems.
The good news? This is about to change. According to the research, 59% of sales and marketing leaders[2] plan to significantly increase their AI adoption over the next year, with CRM systems a primary focus area.
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Why CRM has lagged behind
Several factors explain why CRM systems have been slower to embrace AI than other business functions.
Legacy infrastructure challenges remain a significant barrier. Many mid-market companies run CRM platforms that weren’t designed with AI in mind, making integration complex and costly.
Data quality concerns also play a role. AI is only as good as the data it learns from, and CRM databases often contain inconsistent, incomplete, or outdated information. Leaders worry about amplifying existing data problems through AI-powered automation.
Lack of internal expertise creates hesitation. Sales and marketing teams understand their processes, but may lack the technical knowledge to evaluate AI tools or implement them effectively. Without clear guidance, it’s easier to maintain the status quo.
Fear of disruption shouldn’t be underestimated. CRM systems are business-critical, and any changes risk impacting revenue generation. This makes leaders understandably cautious about major system overhauls.
The productivity paradox
Here’s what makes the AI-CRM gap particularly costly: early adopters are already seeing substantial benefits. The report shows that companies using multiple AI features within their CRM report productivity gains approaching “substantial impact” levels, particularly in reporting, analytics, and operational efficiency.
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Those using just a single AI tool see far more modest improvements, suggesting that AI’s real value emerges when integrated comprehensively across workflows rather than deployed piecemeal.
This creates a widening performance gap. While some organisations leverage AI to automate administrative tasks, surface strategic insights, and accelerate sales cycles, others remain mired in manual data entry, inconsistent record-keeping, and time-consuming research tasks.
What effective AI-CRM integration looks like
The most successful implementations focus on addressing specific pain points rather than pursuing AI for its own sake:
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Automated administrative work eliminates the busywork that prevents sales teams from selling. Meeting transcription, note-taking, and CRM updates can happen automatically, freeing hours of productive time each week.
Intelligent guidance systems help sales teams make better decisions. By analysing opportunity data, communication history, and past successes, AI can recommend next steps, suggest relevant case studies, and identify the strategies most likely to advance each deal.
Proactive data hygiene addresses one of CRM’s biggest challenges. Rather than relying on manual updates, AI agents can prompt teams to fill gaps, correct inconsistencies, and maintain accurate records based on meeting outcomes and email exchanges.
Enhanced prospect research transforms preparation time. Instead of manually gathering background information, identifying key contacts, and tracking company news, AI agents can compile comprehensive prospect profiles automatically, even scoring leads against ideal customer criteria.
Getting AI-CRM integration right in 2026
Organisations should start by identifying the specific tasks consuming the most time without generating proportional value.
The research makes clear that successful AI adoption requires more than just technology; it demands thoughtful integration, aligned processes, and proper training. Organisations should start by identifying the specific tasks consuming the most time without generating proportional value. These high-volume, low-complexity activities are ideal candidates for AI automation.
Next, ensure your data foundation is solid. AI amplifies what already exists, so addressing data quality issues before implementation prevents compounding problems later. Invest in training and change management. The best AI tools still require human judgment and oversight. Teams need to understand not just how to use new features, but when to trust AI recommendations and when to override them.
Finally, measure impact rigorously. Track time savings, data accuracy improvements, and revenue metrics to demonstrate ROI and identify areas for refinement.
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The 2026 opportunity
The AI-CRM divide won’t remain static. As the technology matures and integration becomes simpler, the competitive advantage will shift from those who adopt AI first to those who deploy it most effectively.
Instead of “Should we use AI in our CRM?” The conversation needs to evolve to “Which specific workflow inefficiencies can AI solve?” and “How do we build the organisational muscle to continuously adapt as AI capabilities expand?”
The early movers in AI-CRM integration are already discovering something crucial: the technology itself is only half the equation. The real transformation comes from rethinking sales processes, redefining team roles, and fostering a culture where human expertise is amplified by intelligent automation rather than replaced by it.
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For mid-market businesses, 2026 presents a rare window. The tools are mature enough to deliver real value, but adoption is still limited enough that competitive differentiation is achievable. Those who move decisively, not recklessly, but with clear strategy and proper preparation, will find themselves selling smarter, closing faster, and building stronger customer relationships while their competitors are still debating whether to begin.
The AI-CRM gap will close. The only question is which side of it your business will be on when it does.
Apple’s expected less-expensive MacBook is one of the company’s worst-kept secrets, but if it’s priced right, it could become a huge hit — just as certain previous MacBooks did.
The original MacBook from 2006 — image credit: Apple
This anticipated new MacBook is expected to be significant because it will use an iPhone processor instead of the Mac‘s now usual M-series ones. It is that lower-cost processor that means Apple may be able to compete with Chromebooks. That’s key now, and it was important when Apple would release a MacBook range in 2015. But back in 2006 with the follow up to the iBook, the MacBook, the budget-priced and low specification Chromebook was five years away. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Uber is one step closer to going airborne. On Wednesday, the company previewed its air taxi booking service ahead of an expected launch in Dubai later this year. The inaugural Uber Air program will let travelers book Joby Aviation’s electric air taxis through a familiar process in the Uber app.
The experience of booking an air taxi will be much like reserving a four-wheeled Uber. In the app, after entering your destination, Uber Air will appear as an option for eligible routes. The Uber app will book a flight and an Uber Black to pick you up and drop you off at a Joby “vertiport.”
The process of booking a flying taxi will be instantly familiar. (Uber)
Joby’s air taxis, built exclusively for city travel, can accommodate up to four passengers and luggage. (Uber says size and weight guidelines will be announced closer to launch.) The interior is about the size of an SUV and has “comfortable seating” with panoramic windows. They can travel up to 200 mph and have a range of up to 100 miles. Four battery packs and a triple-redundant flight computer are onboard for safety purposes.
The air taxis aren’t (yet) autonomous and will each have a human pilot onboard. That would at least suggest high prices. After all, pilots aren’t nearly as cheap as Uber’s legion of independent-contractor drivers. But the company insists its air taxi rides will somehow be around as expensive as an Uber Black trip.
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Joby’s air taxis have “panoramic” windows with a view of the city below. (Joby)
Dubai is only the beginning of the companies’ plans. The US-based Joby says it’s in the final stage of FAA type certification and hopes to launch service in New York and Los Angeles. Globally, it’s targeting the UK and Japan as well.
As for how realistic a US launch is anytime soon, well, that’s up for debate. On one hand, President Trump signed executive orders last year that would create a pilot program to test such aircraft. But safety and cost considerations may require a grounding of expectations.
The aircraft requires a human pilot, at least in these early stages. (Joby)
In November, Robert Ditchey, a Los Angeles-based aviation expert and test pilot, toldNBC News that he didn’t think air taxi service “was ever going to happen” in American cities. “They’re dangerous,” he warned. “We have had helicopters fail and crash on top of buildings in Los Angeles. We’ve had helicopters fail at takeoff and landing in airports. They’re dangerous not from a fire point of view but in terms of landing on top of people and buildings.” In addition, he warned that air taxis can’t be developed in sufficient numbers to make them economically viable “unless they are subsidized by a government.”
Uber and Joby have partnered since 2019. In 2021, Joby bought the Uber Elevate ride-hailing division, which essentially integrated the companies’ services. Last year, Joby acquired Blade Air Mobility’s passenger business, which could open the door to eventually electrifying Blade’s routes.
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The video below shows one of Joby’s air taxis taking a test flight in Dubai.
Apple’s forthcoming touch-screen MacBook Pro models — the company’s first-ever laptops to support touch input — will feature the iPhone’s Dynamic Island at the center top of their OLED displays and a new interface that dynamically adjusts between touch and point-and-click controls, according to a Bloomberg report citing people familiar with the plans.
The 14-inch and 16-inch models, code-named K114 and K116, are slated for release toward the end of 2026 and won’t be part of Apple’s product announcements in the first week of March. The redesigned interface brings up a contextual menu surrounding a user’s finger when they touch a button or control, and enlarges menu bar items when tapped, adapting the available controls based on whether the input is touch or click.
Apple does not plan to position the machines as iPad replacements or describe them as touch-first; the physical design retains the full keyboard and large trackpad of the current MacBook Pro. Last year’s Liquid Glass redesign in macOS Tahoe, which added more padding around icons and touch-optimized sliders in the control center, was partly groundwork for this shift.
LG Electronics is doubling down on its partnership with will.i.am, expanding the xboom lineup with the new Buds Plus and Buds Lite. The additions join the existing xboom Buds and continue the “xboom by will.i.am” collaboration, which positions the nine-time Grammy winner not just as a marketing face, but as what the company calls its “experiential architect.”
According to LG, the new models were tuned and approved by will.i.am and carry forward the series’ sonic profile—balanced, warm, and designed for everyday listening rather than exaggerated flash. The Buds Plus and Buds Lite also retain the core design philosophy of the xboom range, focusing on stable performance, accessible pricing, and a foundation aimed at delivering consistent, high-quality wireless audio.
LG xboom Buds Plus
At the top of the xboom earbuds lineup, the $179.99 Buds Plus steps things up with a UVnano+ charging case. The case uses UV-C light to help reduce bacteria on the earbud mesh, underscoring a user-focused approach that goes beyond sound quality and into everyday hygiene. Wireless charging support is included as well, keeping the feature set in line with what buyers now expect at this tier.
With up to 30 hours of total battery life, the earbuds deliver 10 hours of continuous playback on a single charge, with another 20 hours available from the charging case. That kind of stamina supports longer listening sessions, enhanced by 3D Spatial Audio designed to create a more immersive and dimensional soundstage.
Active Noise Cancelling (ANC) is onboard, supported by a six-microphone array designed to reduce external noise and improve call clarity. The result is a more focused, distraction-free listening experience. Stabilizing fins are also included to help ensure a secure, comfortable fit during longer sessions.
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The Buds Plus also offers multi-point connection for seamless switching between devices and an IPX4 rating for water and sweat resistance, making them ideal for both focus and fitness.
Customizable EQ settings allow users to further personalize audio.
LG xboom Buds Plus also supports Auracast and includes a built-in Bluetooth transmitter, expanding its wireless flexibility. This allows users to connect to a broader range of compatible devices and share audio more seamlessly across supported platforms.
LG xboom Buds Lite
Occupying the entry-level position in the xboom lineup, the $69.99 Buds Lite aim squarely at value-conscious buyers without stripping things down to the bare minimum. The compact, lightweight design makes them easy to live with day to day, but LG hasn’t ignored performance.
Battery life is actually one of their stronger plays: up to 35 hours total, with 11.5 hours of continuous playback from the earbuds and another 23.5 hours from the charging case. That’s more than enough for commuting, workdays, and a few workouts in between.
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Despite being the smallest model in the xboom range, the Buds Lite retain several premium touches, including an IPX4 water resistance rating and customizable EQ settings, giving users some control over their sound rather than locking them into a single tuning.
LG’s angle isn’t just specs. The will.i.am partnership is positioned as hands-on, shaping the tuning and overall identity of the xboom line. Add features like UVnano+ hygiene tech, Auracast, a built-in Bluetooth transmitter, strong battery life, and spatial audio, and the Buds Plus in particular look well equipped for their tier.
Buds Lite are for everyday listeners who want long battery life and useful features at a sharp price. Buds Plus target buyers who want more connectivity and ANC without drifting into $250 territory.
Among countertop appliances, few have such a singular purpose built right into their name as the rice cooker. Easiest way to cook rice? A rice cooker, obviously. Unlike other handy countertop kitchen appliances such as air fryers, blenders and slow cookers, the rice cooker tells you not only what it does, but exactly what you should put in it.
But the name “rice cooker” doesn’t tell you everything you can put in it, however. From basic on/off rice cookers to multi-function, fuzzy logic models, rice cookers can indeed do a great deal more than just cook rice. From breakfast to dessert, the rice cooker can support a number of culinary projects and ambitions throughout the day that go way beyond rice.
I queried recipe developers and culinary pros for those preparations where they swear by the rice cooker. With their input, here are 12 ways to use a rice cooker that may surprise you.
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1. Other grains
Oatmeal couldn’t be easier than when made in a rice cooker.
Nora Carol Photography/Getty Images
At its core, a rice cooker cooks rice by relying on a water-to-grain ratio and switching from cook to warm mode once the water has been fully absorbed. To that end, any grain that relies on this method can also be made in the rice cooker, such as quinoa, barley and farro, to name just a few.
Oatmeal is also a grain whose prep can be relegated to the rice cooker, making for a fuss-free breakfast. “A rice cooker is my favorite way to make steel-cut oats because it maintains steady heat and requires zero stirring, which prevents scorching,” says Shawna Clark, founder of Healthy Foodie Girl. “I recommend lightly spraying the insert with oil and using the porridge or brown rice setting if available,” she says, “since oats foam more than rice and benefit from slower cooking.” In that vein, the rice cooker can even be used for a warm overnight oats breakfast, a marked improvement on overnight oats made in the fridge.
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2. Savory oats
As a variation on the grain theme, with a little light sautéing that can also be done directly in the rice cooker, savory oats also make for a good rice cooker project. “I’m a savory breakfast gal at heart and this is one of my top three breakfasts,” says Farwin Simaak, recipe developer at Love and Other Spices.
If your rice cooker has a sear/sauté function, this is made easier, but even in a conventional rice cooker, you can get onion going for a few minutes for this savory preparation. “Sauté your onion and optional garlic in butter,” says Simaak, “and use old-fashioned rolled oats, and broth instead of water for flavor.” Once the water has been absorbed and the savory oats are cooked, “serve with poached eggs, a drizzle of chili oil and a sprinkle of chopped green onions,” she says.
3. Egg custard/frittata
Rice cookers can easily handle an egg frittata.
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Pamel Vachon/CNET
Unlike the air fryer, which requires a pan within the cooking chamber, your rice cooker insert is already a pan for liquid ingredients. “I use my rice cooker to set egg custards,” says Ed McCormick, founder of Cape Crystal Brands. “Not scrambled eggs, but smooth, sliceable preparations.” Egg custards can be sweet or savory in nature. The latter are especially ideal for producing even shapes to add to breakfast sandwiches.
“The rice cooker heat is steady,” says McCormick. “That’s the main thing — nothing spikes, nothing scorches. I’ve ruined enough custards on the stove to notice the difference.” With cheese, veggies and/or meat, your egg custard becomes a frittata. You can use a separate pan in the rice cooker, especially if you’re aiming for a smaller portion. If you’re cooking directly in the insert, be sure to spray the pan with cooking spray or grease it with butter or oil. And for best custard-setting results, “leave the lid alone,” McCormick advises. “Opening it early is where things go wrong.”
4. Garlic confit
There is virtually no end to the culinary uses for punchy garlic confit.
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Pamel Vachon/CNET
Confit is a fancy term for food that has been cooked slowly in its own fat. Duck confit may be the banner item for such a preparation, and while you could probably do it in the rice cooker with enough patience, an everyday preparation that’s rice cooker gold is garlic confit.
“I use my rice cooker to make confit garlic,” says Kyle Taylor, founder of He Cooks. “It’s handy because it holds a gentle, steady heat without me babysitting a pot.” For best results, he recommends keeping the garlic fully submerged in oil, and only using the warm setting if your cooker runs hot.
Transforming firm cloves of garlic into something deeply aromatic and spreadable, without the effort of mincing, will likely have you using your rice cooker for this purpose regularly. “You can basically use garlic confit in any application you would otherwise use garlic,” says Taylor. “It offers a more mellow, sweet, and complex flavor,” and he recommends using the finished confit in aioli, sauces, vinaigrettes, or just spreading it directly on toast.
5. Boiled eggs
Speaking of eggs, I have previously championed using an air fryer for easy boiled eggs. If the thought of “boiling” eggs without water makes you uneasy, consider using a rice cooker for this purpose. “A rice cooker is basically just a pot with a lid,” says Lindsey Chastain, founder of The Waddle and Cluck, which makes it ideal for low-lift preparations like boiled eggs.
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The rice cooker’s gentle heat is especially good for soft-boiled eggs. “The eggs work better if you use the steam basket in the rice cooker,” she says, if your model includes one, “but you can also just pop them in water.”
6. Dumplings
Your rice cooker doubles as a steamer for making easy dumplings while your rice or grains cook below.
Jackyenjoyphotography/Getty Images
If it weren’t called a rice cooker, it could also be accurately referred to as a slow cooker or even a steamer, making it ideal for dumplings.
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“Dumplings — particularly soup dumplings — are another favorite in a rice cooker since it functions similarly to a steamer, with moist, even heat,” says kitchen appliance specialist Kate Vine of Dinners Done Quick. “They steam really well, and you can add veggies in, too, if you want a full meal,” she says. “Space the dumplings out, add at least 1/2 cup water to the basin, and if you want brown bottoms, add a little oil after the water is fully cooked out and let them sit for 2 to 3 minutes to brown.”
Asian cookbook author Patricia Tanumihardja also recommends the rice cooker for a next-level, singular dumpling. “I tried making the viral, one-pot dumpling known as Asian lasagna in my rice cooker and it turned out perfect,” she says. “No fiddling with a steamer or a bain marie in the oven. Love it!”
7. Queso/fondue
A rice cooker is essentially a small slow cooker, making it the perfect vessel to keep a cheese dip warm and melty.
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Imran kadir photography/Getty Images
You can also put your rice cooker to use when hosting with this genius hack. “A rice cooker is my favorite way to keep queso or cheese dip warm and perfectly smooth,” says Emmy Clinton of Entirely Emmy. “The consistent gentle heat and ‘warm’ setting keep the cheese from hardening or separating, keeping the texture perfect all night,” she says. Keep your queso or fondue only on warm, and stir every so often to keep the heat evenly distributed. “You can also add small amounts of cream, milk or Greek yogurt” if the dip starts to thicken, says Clinton.
8. Soups, stews and curries
Many rice cookers come equipped with slow-cook functions or timers that let you set and forget for a long time, making them ideal for simmered preparations like soups, stews and curries, or for reheating these dishes in a gentle, even way. (More basic rice cooker models may be able to handle the workload for these, but will likely require more babysitting or more time.) Many of the experts I queried pointed to various preparations.
“I also make rendang (Indonesian beef curry) in the rice cooker,” says Tanumihardja. “It doesn’t dry out as much as it does when cooked on the stove, but I like my rendang saucy anyway,” she says. “It’s great because it’s mostly hands-off, and there’s no danger of it burning. Every time the button pops, you’ll be reminded to stir the dish.”
“The rice cooker is my favorite place to make French onion soup,” adds Chastain. “Just add the cheese for the last few minutes and it turns out perfectly.”
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9. One-pot meals
Herman at Home
With some careful layering and strategizing, your rice cooker can also be used for entire one-pot meals, especially those with a rice base.
“I’ve also made full meals in the rice cooker such as Hainanese chicken and rice and black bean spareribs,” says Herman Chan of Herman at Home. “All you do is wash the rice, add liquid, seasonings and protein on top of the rice, then turn on the rice cooker,” he says. “Once the rice cooker is done, you have perfectly cooked rice and protein ready to eat.”
You can experiment with what you add to the rice for complete dinners. “I will mix uncooked rice with meat, aromatics and seasonings in the pot and cook it as usual,” says Tanumihardja. “I will either steam vegetables on top of the rice mixture in a steamer basket,” she says, “or add it in toward the end of the cooking time.”
10. Dessert
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My rice cooker basque-style cheesecake was tasty.
Pamela Vachon/CNET
Steamed or simmered desserts in a variety of styles are also potential fodder for your rice cooker. “Personally, I’ve made the Asian dessert taro sago in the rice cooker,” says Chan, referring to the dessert soup that contains taro, tapioca and coconut milk. “It simmers the dessert until it reaches the perfect consistency,” he says. As noted in the “egg custards” heading above, dessert custards and bread puddings are also well represented in the canon of rice-cooker recipes.
11. Cake
Yes, even cake can be made in a rice cooker, especially Japanese-style fluffy sponge cakes. “In Asian culinary culture, we often steam our cakes instead of baking them in an oven,” says Tanumihardja. “I discovered that I can basically steam my cakes in the rice cooker instead,” she says. “It requires less setup time, fewer dishes to wash, and it’s hands-off. I just push the cook button and I can go off and do other things.”
Note that for rice cooker cake, including cheesecake, you need to use a recipe that is appropriate for your size of rice cooker. Cake flour is also important here, and if you have a basic model without a timer, steam or cake function, it may take a lot of waiting and restarting the rice cooker once it automatically switches to “warm” mode.
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12. Chocolate fondue
And as the final “ta-da” on unique rice cooker uses, “Chocolate fondue is one of my favorite unexpected ways to use a rice cooker,” says Clinton. “It gives gentle and steady heat that melts the chocolate evenly without burning it,” without the need to babysit a double boiler.
“My trick is to use the cook setting briefly to melt the chocolate, then switch your rice cooker to the warm setting once the chocolate is completely melted,” she adds. “Be sure to keep an eye on it, and stir frequently while it’s melting.” Once it’s finished, you can stir in coconut oil, cream or heavy cream to achieve a perfectly fluid texture.
Photo credit: SARAO Astronomers discovered a strange beacon deep in space: a natural microwave laser so powerful that physicists refer to it as a gigamaser. A team utilizing South Africa’s MeerKAT radio telescope discovered an extraordinarily strong signal at 1667 megahertz while scanning the sky for distant galaxies rich in molecular hydrogen.
Photo credit: Inter-University Institute for Data-Intensive Astronomy The signal came from H-ATLAS J142935.3-002836, a merging galaxy system located 8 billion light years away. Light from this system takes a long time to reach us, back when the universe was only a fraction of its present age. According to the experts, this is the brightest and most distant hydroxyl maser ever measured. The name “megamaser” has already been used to describe other cases of amplified power, but this one is so powerful that the team dubbed it a “gigamaser.” Its total power is 100,000 times that of a typical star, and it all arrives in a stunningly tiny slice of the microwave spectrum.
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When galaxies collide, as they do when they “slam together,” gravity expands the gas and dust. In this chaos, hydroxyl molecules, which are just a simple mixture of hydrogen and oxygen, are pushed into a frenzy. Radio waves from the active core, which is often powered by a massive black hole, then cause these molecules to release all of their energy in perfect rhythm, much like a flawlessly synchronized orchestra. This produces coherent microwave radiation. The same principle that powers lasers on Earth, but with a wavelength around the length of a regular dinner plate, or 18 cm.
The merger significantly accelerates star formation and feeds the center black hole, creating the ideal conditions for all of this amplification to occur. As all of these new stars develop and heat the dust, they begin to light brightly in the infrared, and as all of the gas is squeezed together, it makes excellent small pockets for a maser to burst into action.
It’s a miracle that we can detect this phenomenon at such a long distance; it’s as if a galaxy in the center of the line of sight is bending the radio waves coming towards us via gravitational lensing. That’s what Einstein said would happen; large objects warp space and time, so in this situation, the galaxy acts as a lens, magnifying the signal and making it strong enough for MeerKAT to detect. If that galaxy wasn’t there, the signal would be too faint for the telescope to detect.
Masers of this power are excellent indicators of when galaxies were undergoing massive mergers in the distant past, which is what drives star formation and black hole expansion, both of which are important factors in the evolution of present galaxies. The gigamaser provides an excellent perspective on all of this at a time when such mergers were far more typical. [Source]
HP has revealed that memory now accounts for 35% of the cost of materials it needs to build a PC, up from between 15 and 18% last quarter. And the company expects RAM’s contribution will rise through the year. From a report: Speaking on the company’s Q1 2026 earnings call, interim CEO Bruce Broussard said the company has secured long-term supply agreements for the year and also “qualified new suppliers [and] built in strategic inventory positions for key platforms and cut the time to qualify new material in half to accelerate our product configuration changes.”
That sounds a lot like HP Inc is signing up new suppliers at a brisk pace. Broussard said the company has also “expanded lower-cost sourcing across our commodity basket, lowering logistics costs with agile end-to-end planning processes.” The company is using its internal AI initiatives to power those new processes. The company is also “configuring our products and shaping demand to align the supply we have with our customer needs” and “taking targeted pricing actions to offset the remaining cost impact in close partnership with both our channel and direct customers.”