from the this-is-why-we-can’t-have-nice-things dept
There’s a meaningful push afoot to implement statewide “right to repair” laws that try to make it cheaper, easier, and environmentally friendlier for you to repair the technology you own. Unfortunately, while all fifty states have at least flirted with the idea, only Massachusetts, New York, Texas, Minnesota, Colorado, California, Oregon, and Washington have actually passed laws.
Passage can be a challenge due to the relentless lobbying of numerous industries that very much enjoy a monopoly over repair (especially tech and auto). New York State’s law, for example, was watered down by NY Governor Kathy Hochul after passage because tech companies didn’t like it.
The same thing is afoot in Colorado, where tech companies are trying to neuter that state’s right to repair laws. Colorado’s assortment of laws, which first appeared in 2022, have implemented protections covering wheelchairs, agricultural farming equipment, and consumer electronics, making it easier for consumers in all those sectors to afford repairs and gain easier access to parts, manuals, and tools.
But tech companies like Cisco and IBM have pushed Colorado lawmakers to sign off on SB26-090, the Exempt Critical Infrastructure from Right to Repair law, which would neuter much of the protections under the pretense of making the public safer. As you might imagine, the companies’ are trying to use a definition of “critical infrastructure” that’s so large and vague as to render all the protections meaningless:
Advertisement
“I can point out at least five problems with the bill as drafted,” Gay Gordon-Byrne, the executive director at the Repair Association, said during the hearing. “The definition of critical infrastructure is completely inadequate. The definition that has been proposed in this bill is not even a definition.”
While tech company lobbyists have convinced the Colorado Labor and Technology committee to advance the bill, it still needs approval by the Colorado Senate and House, which may prove more difficult now that outlets like Ars Technica and Wired have shed a little light on the effort.
It’s worth pointing out that while eight states have now passed right to repair laws, none have actually enforced them despite numerous, ongoing infractions across countless industries. That’s something that’s going to need to change if state rhetoric on the subject is to be taken seriously.
Apple released the new 13.6-inch MacBook Air with an M5 chip in March of this year, and its impact is being noticed by users whose mobile lifestyles rely on capable hardware and portability. People who are constantly on the move, such as video content providers, or students who carry their gadgets across campus on a daily basis, benefit from this combination. The aluminum shell weighs 2.7 pounds but is only 0.44 inches thick.
The 13.6-inch Liquid Retina display supports screen resolutions of up to 2560 by 1664 pixels. Brightness is up to 500 nits, and it supports one billion colors and a wide gamut, making what you see in images and videos much more lifelike. The text remains incredibly fine at 224 pixels per inch, allowing you to work late into the night editing documents or spreadsheets without suffering from eye strain headaches. Plus, the True Tone technology is sophisticated enough to automatically alter the white balance to fit the lighting in the room, which is quite useful while staring at a computer for long periods of time.
MIGHT TAKES FLIGHT — MacBook Air with the M5 chip packs blazing speed and powerful AI capabilities into an incredibly portable design. With Apple…
SUPERCHARGED BY M5 — With its faster CPU and unified memory, the M5 chip delivers even more performance and fluidity across apps, making…
APPLE INTELLIGENCE — Apple Intelligence is the personal intelligence system that helps you write, express yourself, and get things done…
Under the hood is the M5 chip, a 10-core CPU with four performance cores and six efficiency cores for maximum efficiency. You start with an 8-core GPU and can upgrade to a 10-core GPU if you desire. A 16-core neural engine handles heavy tasks in real time, and memory bandwidth is 153 gigabytes per second.
Advertisement
The battery life lasts for even the longest of days, according to Apple, and the 18 hour mixed use rating includes video conversations, document editing, as well as streaming, so you don’t have to constantly run to the outlet. When you use the included adapter, it charges quickly and returns to full speed in about an hour.
On the left side, you’ll find two Thunderbolt 4 ports that can handle charging connections, external drives, and displays. The other edge features a headphone connector for connecting wired audio. Wireless connectivity is also excellent; Wi-Fi 7 keeps you connected even in congested places, and Bluetooth 6 provides crystal-clear links to your headphones or other peripherals. If you want to expand your workspace, the laptop allows you to connect two monitors at the same time when the lid is closed.
Typing feels completely natural on the illuminated keyboard, as the keys have just enough travel to provide feedback without all the unpleasant clacking. The trackpad responds quickly to your gestures, and the big area gives you an excellent idea of where your fingers are. Furthermore, Touch ID makes it extremely simple and quick to log in, eliminating the need to fumble for passwords or other credentials. The 12-megapixel camera in the bezel above the screen keeps your face crisp during video conversations, while the four speakers fill the room with sound for movies or music, including spatial audio.
Inflection.io CEO Aaron Bird, left, and new CMO Adam Schoenfeld at the company’s office in Seattle’s Pioneer Square. (Inflection.io Photo)
Two Seattle startups with intertwined histories are joining forces.
Inflection.io, a B2B marketing automation company, announced Wednesday that it has acquired Keyplay, a startup that helps sales teams identify and score target accounts.
The deal reunites Inflection CEO Aaron Bird and Keyplay CEO Adam Schoenfeld, who have known each other for 15 years, and collaborated and invested in each other’s companies.
Schoenfeld is joining Inflection as CMO, and his Keyplay co-founder Andrew Rothbart is joining the company as a senior member of the engineering team.
As Schoenfeld put it, Inflection is building the platform he wishes he’d had as a marketer, putting him in the role of both marketing leader and target customer for the product.
Advertisement
Terms of the deal were not disclosed. Keyplay had raised $3 million in a seed round in 2022. Inflection has raised about $14 million to date, most recently a $7.6 million round in June 2024.
The combined company will have 47 employees globally, with team members across North America and an office in Bangalore, India. Inflection just opened a new office in Seattle’s Pioneer Square neighborhood, where its CEO, CMO, SVP of Customer Experience, and senior engineers are based.
The backstory: Schoenfeld said the acquisition reflects how the market has shifted since Keyplay was founded in 2022, focusing on helping B2B companies identify their best target accounts. He came to realize, around the middle of last year, that this was more feature than company.
He explained that it “became clear that buyers are driving toward a smaller number of core platforms built for AI agents. I didn’t see a path for Keyplay to become a consolidator.”
Advertisement
It was a hard thing to admit after building his career as an entrepreneur by capitalizing on and operating within niches, but he ultimately concluded that Keyplay needed to attach itself to a broader platform.
“When agents start building campaigns, writing emails, picking audiences, the question stops being ‘what’s the best account scoring tool?’ and becomes ‘does my execution layer have the context it needs to act?’ ” Schoenfeld said.
Bigger platform: Inflection is positioning itself to provide that context, as an AI-native alternative to Marketo, the B2B marketing automation software that has dominated the category for two decades.
Bird knows the market (and Marketo) well. He founded Bizible, a Seattle marketing analytics company, in 2011. Marketo acquired Bizible in 2018 and was itself acquired by Adobe later that year for $4.75 billion.
Advertisement
Bird served as SVP of Product at Adobe Marketo before leaving to launch Inflection in 2021 with former Bizible colleagues Dave Rigotti and Vic Davis.
Answering questions about the acquisition, Bird said he was “highly motivated” to bring in Schoenfeld, Rothbart, and their team, recognizing how they could accelerate Inflection in both marketing and engineering, while adding more senior talent to the startup’s Seattle office.
He said Rothbart has been “on the leading edge of how modern engineering teams should work with AI, and he has deep domain expertise right in our sweet spot — building and scaling intelligence-driven GTM systems.”
Shared history: Schoenfeld, previously co-founder of Simply Measured, the Seattle social media analytics startup acquired by Sprout Social, was on Bizible’s board during its growth and acquisition, and invested in Inflection’s $5 million seed round.
Advertisement
Bird, in turn, invested in Keyplay’s $3 million seed round.
Schoenfeld called the cross-investment “a funny small-world scenario,” noting that their long friendship naturally led to supporting each other’s startups as angel investors.
“This didn’t have a direct impact on the deal,” Schoenfeld said. “But because we’d been closely following each other from the start, in both directions, it helped us get up to speed on the strategic fit much faster than two strangers would have.”
Bird had floated the idea of a deal early in Keyplay’s life, making offhand comments like “someday we should buy you.” Keyplay was engaged with a few possible buyers, but Inflection rose to the top of the list. Talks got serious in January, and the deal closed in mid-March.
Advertisement
What’s next: Inflection plans to integrate Keyplay’s account scoring and intelligence into its platform starting this quarter, giving its AI agents built-in knowledge of which accounts to target and why. Existing Keyplay customers will continue using the standalone product for now, with a path to access its capabilities inside Inflection over time.
I’ve never been a fan of Apple’s MacBook, but I have to admit that the platform is getting a lot of things right. Living with Windows has been a hassle recently, and Apple has been inching ahead for all the right reasons. While I still rely on Windows, familiarity alone isn’t the whole game anymore.
In 2026, there are some macOS conveniences that feel less like luxury perks and more like basic computing features Microsoft should have figured out by now. And the annoying part is that Apple’s advantage is not always raw power or flashy AI. A lot of the frustration comes from smaller, more practical things. These are the sort of features that quietly save time, make things feel super smooth, and make a computer feel like it belongs in the same world as the phone in your pocket.
Sharing Wi-Fi passwords should not still feel this good on a Mac
This is the one that always gets me. Apple lets you share Wi-Fi passwords from an iPhone, iPad, or Mac to another nearby Apple device almost instantly, as long as the devices are nearby and the accounts are properly set up. I’ve seen people around me use this feature for years, and it feels like I’m locked out of it.
Apple
You can even share Wi-Fi passwords from a Mac to another Mac, iPhone, or iPad. It is such a small thing, but it feels magical in the exact way modern computing should. Meanwhile, Windows still makes something this basic feel manual. You’re still stuck relying on good old memory. But in 2026, this is just embarrassing.
Universal Clipboard is still one of Apple’s most unfair advantages
Seamless is the thing you come to expect from the Apple ecosystem, and nothing showcases this more than the Universal Clipboard feature. Copy something on your iPhone, paste it on your Mac. Copy an image on your Mac, drop it into a message on your iPad. Apple’s Universal Clipboard sounds boring until you actually use it, and it becomes the kind of feature you start to miss immediately when you go back to a less-connected setup.
Apple officially supports this across iPhone, iPad, and Mac as a part of its Continuity stack. And this is what puts macOS ahead. It makes the ecosystem with multiple devices feel like extensions of one workspace. To be fair, Windows has gotten a lot better about linking to phones, but Apple still makes the handoff feel more invisible and more natural.
Unlocking your Mac with an Apple Watch is exactly the kind of laziness I respect
This may be the most Apple thing on the list, but I mean that as praise. If you are wearing an unlocked Apple Watch, your Mac can automatically unlock when you wake it, and the watch can also approve password prompts and admin requests. Apple supports this officially as Auto Unlock, and the convenience is obvious.
Apple
Is it life-changing? Probably not. Is it the exact sort of effortless quality-of-life feature that makes a platform feel more premium and more thoughtful? Absolutely.
Honorary Mention: Continuity Camera
Apple letting an iPhone become a Mac webcam is one of those features that sounds like a gimmick right until you realize how useful it is. Continuity Camera lets a Mac use the iPhone’s vastly better camera system wirelessly or over USB, and Apple also supports some nifty tricks like Center Stage, Portrait mode, Studio Light, and even Desk View.
Apple
You can also use the same Continuity feature to scan documents or snap photos straight into Mac apps like Notes, Finder, and others. Windows has caught up with native smartphone camera support with Phone Link, but it isn’t as feature-packed as Apple’s solution.
My problem with macOS is that it keeps getting the little things right
So my jealousy just comes down to Apple constantly solving everyday annoyances before Microsoft does, and once those solutions exist, it becomes harder to go back. Sharing Wi-Fi passwords, copying across devices, and unlocking your computer with a watch aren’t enough individually to make me abandon Windows overnight. But together, they create a kind of convenience stack that feels annoyingly mature.
Back in late February Nissan Leaf owners began to receive messages from Nissan informing them that the remote features in their cars would cease operation as the NissanConnect app would drop support for Leaf EVs produced before 2020 as well as eNV200 vehicles that were produced until 2022. The indicated cut-off date was March 30, giving affected users about a month to come to terms with the fact that their vehicle would soon to losing any and all remote control features.
What this highlights is an increasingly pertinent question when it comes to ‘connected cars’, which feature a built-in wireless modem to provide a range of additional features. These require access to a remote server for even simple remote features like controlling the charging process or turning on the heating. This has left many Leaf users rather dissatisfied.
While for such basic remote features you could make the argument that they’re just silly convenience features that do not affect the car’s functionality, modern cars are increasingly becoming reliant on such remote features, including for things like navigation and checking subscriptions for features like heated seats.
Advertisement
Increasingly it would seem that we’re looking at the Car-as-a-Service (CaaS) model being implemented.
I know we’re all excited for the upcoming iPhone Fold, but be wary of fake leaks — like the supposed unboxing video that’s been making the rounds online.
Upcoming phones will always be the subject of rumors and leaks, and no device is more hyped than the foldable that Apple has purportedly been working on for years. Lots of that early info points toward a release later this year during the usual September iPhone release window, which makes the lead-up fertile territory for falsified leaks like the aforementioned video.
Unfortunately, with the advance of generative AI tools that fabricate videos based on text prompts and other inputs, it’s easier than ever to fake your way to internet fame. Nowadays, videos churned out by gen AI tools have the correct number of fingers on hands, better lighting and far fewer indicators that they’re inauthentic.
Advertisement
But there are still some tells that you’re not seeing the real deal — both in the video and when it’s released.
Developers 2 days ago: No way, that iPhone leak is fake. It would be terrible Developers today: Wow, Apple foldable phone is going to change everything https://t.co/jpMRykRD2Kpic.twitter.com/zjI4VL0Fx4
First, let’s dissect the video. A person in a gray long-sleeved shirt or sweatshirt rotates a box labeled “iPhone Fold” and pulls it open. On the first watch, a lot of signature Apple elements are present. The product is tucked inside snug packaging and presented screen-side-out to the opener, and there’s both a charging cord and supplementary materials tucked underneath. It all looks authentic enough — at least believably not generated by AI.
But AI or not, there are a few details that are strong evidence that this isn’t an actual Apple device. When opening the package, there’s a peel-off protector for the inner screen, not the outer. The multicolored insert claims the device is IP68 dust- and water-resistant, which is rare for foldables. Only the Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold and Honor Magic V6, among a handful of others, have water-resistant ratings.
Advertisement
The device itself is suspect, and if not AI-generated, it’s likely 3D-printed. The cream-colored back makes an odd sound when scratched (unlike what glass or ceramic sounds like), and the device’s halves don’t fold neatly against each other — another thing that the design-obsessed Apple likely wouldn’t allow. What’s more, when it’s fully unfolded, the back of the supposed foldable has a big gap between both halves over the hinge, which other phone makers have solved in their flexible-screen devices.
There’s skepticism around its design, too. Yes, Apple’s patents point toward a wider style of foldables similar to the first Google Pixel Fold, but the supposed iPhone Fold in the video is so squat in its dimensions that its internal screen would make for bizarre dimensions that aren’t tall enough to fit the aspect ratio of, say, an iPad.
iPhone Fold may or may not be the final name of the device, as rumors have disagreed for years on its product designation, with the most recent suggesting it could be deemed the iPhone Ultra.
Since we don’t see it turn on, there’s no indication of how its software is laid out — which form of iOS or even iPadOS it might use. That makes this short, squat design even more suspect.
Advertisement
And then there are the factors outside of the video. Apple leaks happen, but we’ve only had a few pre-release leaks like CAD files, official renders or cases that agree on a design — and yet, this is supposedly the iPhone Fold’s final form, which looks somewhat but not completely like a recent CAD render.
To the video’s credit, taking this many words to suspect and disprove its authenticity is a credit to its plausibility. There’s a lot of commitment to Apple staples, from product packaging to theorizing the final design of the foldable itself. If nothing else, it’s a functional guess at what the supposed iPhone Fold might look like, and how it might look coming out of the box.
We’ll know in September at the earliest if Apple chooses to release its foldable in that window — and I’m sure we’ll see plenty of other leaks and rumors on the device before then.
After achieving an 8.5 out of 10 repairability score, the Pixel 10a is one of the most serviceable mid-range smartphones currently on the market.
Following a teardown of the handset, PBKreviews awarded the Pixel 10a maximum marks in three of five repairability categories: finding replacement parts, replacing the screen, and replacing the battery.
This strong repairability result is a big win for the Pixel 10a, especially when considering its £/$499 RRP, as many rivals in the same price range score significantly lower. With this in mind, consumers could be more likely to opt for a Pixel 10a and seek out repair options, rather than buying replacements.
A rubberised mesh gasket protects the speaker from water ingress, a design detail that contributes to the phone’s IP68 water resistance credentials while keeping the internal layout accessible enough to avoid significantly complicating disassembly during repair procedures.
Advertisement
The teardown process also requires a hair dryer or heat gun to loosen the adhesive securing the back plate which although is a common approach among mid-range smartphones, this does add a step that less experienced users may find challenging without the right tools.
Advertisement
However, the Pixel 10a does lose ground in one area, with the USB port soldered directly onto the mainboard proving the trickiest fix in the entire teardown. This is an issue because soldered ports typically require mainboard-level replacement rather than a straightforward component swap, a limitation that offsets some of the accessibility gains elsewhere in the internal layout.
The internal organisation and time required for repairs sit in a middle ground, with the overall layout considered enough to avoid major disassembly headaches but not streamlined enough to match the simplicity of the battery and screen replacement processes.
The Pixel 10a officially launched in March, with an RRP of £/$499 for the 128GB model and £/$599 for the 256GB variant, both with 8GB of RAM.
Dyson just announced its first-ever handheld fan, the HushJet Mini Cool. As the name suggests, it uses the company’s proprietary HushJet air projection system. This tech first showed up on an air purifier that .
Dyson promises the fan can deliver focused airflow of up to 25m/s, which works out to 55mph. The brushless motor spins up to 65,000 RPM. This thing looks like a legitimate cooling system, despite its size. It also weighs just 7.5 ounces.
It offers five speeds and a boost mode, which should be useful during that next heat wave. It charges via USB-C and ships with a charging stand. The fan can also stand on its own, making it a decent choice for a desk. The rechargeable battery can get up to six hours of use per charge.
Dyson
The HushJet Mini Cool costs $100, which is cheap for a Dyson product but expensive for a handheld fan. It’s available in a trio of colorways. The gray model is available tomorrow. The red version goes on sale this May and the blue one will be available for purchase in June.
The courts keep pounding the nails home. What this government is engaged in is illegal, on multiple levels. If you subtract the pro-MAGA Fifth Circuit and 6/9ths of the Supreme Court, you have a judicial quorum that says rights are still rights, despite this administration’s claims otherwise.
DHS has issued memos claiming (without facts or law in evidence) that officers can arrest people and enter homes without signed judicial warrants. This has always been false. And it’s not edging any closer to the truth no matter what this administration might say in Truth Social posts and/or court filings.
The administration is losing repeatedly in its bigoted war on non-whites. But it never accepts obvious defeat. It always heads back to court, full of steam and bullshit. And, in most cases, its losses are even more obvious the second time around.
A federal judge in California found on Wednesday that U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials had violated a previous order regarding warrantless arrests, and ordered agents operating in her judicial district to fully document their reasons for making any future stops.
The judge, Jennifer L. Thurston of the Federal District Court for the Eastern District of California, had previously found that immigration operations in Kern County, Calif., appeared to have been based on racial profiling, with agents making arrests when people they stopped could not produce proof of citizenship on the spot. Last year, she restricted the agency from continuing to carry out random immigration sweeps in the region, citing a “pattern and practice of agents performing detentive stops without reasonable suspicion.”
Advertisement
On Wednesday, Judge Thurston found that border agents appeared to have violated that order when they carried out an immigration sweep last year in a Home Depot parking lot in Sacramento.
The opinion [PDF] doesn’t cut corners or grant Trump’s DOJ more respect than it has earned. (It’s running in the red at the moment.) Multiple people who were arrested following a “targeted” operation, that saws mostly involved federal officers waiting in a Home Depot parking lot in hopes of rounding up day laborers, sued the government. The government has already lost once. This order clearly explains why the government is losing twice. Pretending conjecture is the same thing as established facts does nothing more than inform the court that you suck at your job.
The surveillance two days earlier somewhat contributes to understanding the statistical relationship, revealing that on one prior occasion, two out of a group of 20 individuals gathered in that location were noncitizens (roughly 10%). Yet, that statistic, which leaves the remaining 90% of the group unclassified, does little to dispel the concern that seeking work as a day laborer may be “[a] characteristic common to both legal and illegal immigrants.” See Manzo-Jurado, 457 F.3d at 937. Nor does it demonstrate that the Home Depot parking lot is used “predominantly” by noncitizens seeking day labor work.33 See id. at 936. Rather, the present record reveals little more than that the Home Depot parking lot is “a location . . . frequented by illegal immigrants, but also by many legal residents, [which] is not significantly probative to an assessment of reasonable suspicion.”
Yep. Fuck your “Kavanaugh stops.” Probable cause has never been “wow, they look kinda Mexican.” Hanging around places where you have a [checks government’s claims in support of its actions] 10% chance of catching illegal immigrants isn’t “probable.” It’s an inadvertent admission that you might be wrong 90% of the time.
The upshot of the ruling is this: The government needs to provide individualized reasonable suspicion, if not actual probable cause, to arrest migrants in California. The court does grant some concessions this DOJ definitely hasn’t earned, but at least it adds some guardrails:
Advertisement
The Court declines to preclude Defendants from using “boilerplate” when documenting stops and/or arrests pursuant to the PI Order and this clarification. However, Defendants are cautioned that copy and paste language may give rise to an inference that an individualized assessment was not made.
In short, if the government wants to claim its anti-migrant arrests are supported by reasonable suspicion and/or probable cause, it needs to show its work. And if the only work it can show has been cribbed from other cases, it should expect its overtures to be rejected by the court.
While this may not seem like much, it is at least worth the paper it’s printed on. The Trump administration seems incapable of flooding the zone at this point. It ran out of energy (and personnel) barely over a year into its unexpected resurrection. The DOJ no longer has enough lawyers to do everything the administration demands of it, much less press the dubious “but I’m a king tho” assertions Trump seems to feel it should be doing day in and day out.
Running a fast-break offense and a bet-you-miss defense only works until it doesn’t. The courts are delivering a counter-flood and the DOJ doesn’t have enough loyalists left to overpower the full-court press. The administration is headed towards an institutional collapse because whatever can be considered the “center” of this whirlpool of bigoted fuckwits will never hold. We’ll take every win we can get until we can finally celebrate the demise of a president who seems to think he’s the King George incarnation that makes his voter base so erect it will vote against its own interests.
A massive campaign impacting nearly 100 online stores using the Magento e-commerce platform hides credit card-stealing code in a pixel-sized Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) image.
When clicking the checkout button, the victim is shown a convincing overlay that can validate card details and billing data.
The campaign was discovered by eCommerce security company Sansec, whose researchers believe that the attacker likely gained access by exploiting the PolyShell vulnerability disclosed in mid-March.
PolyShell impacts all Magento Open Source and Adobe Commerce stable version 2 installations, allowing unauthenticated code execution and account takeover.
Sansec warned that more than half of all vulnerable stores were targeted in PolyShell attacks, which in some cases deployed payment card skimmers using WebRTC for stealthy data exfiltration.
Advertisement
In the latest campaign, the researchers found that the malware is injected as a 1×1-pixel SVG element with an ‘onload’ handler into the target website’s HTML.
“The onload handler contains the entire skimmer payload, base64-encoded inside an atob() call and executed via setTimeout,” Sansec explains.
“This technique avoids creating external script references that security scanners typically flag. The entire malware lives inline, encoded as a single string attribute.”
When unsuspecting buyers click checkout on compromised stores, a malicious script intercepts the click and displays a fake “Secure Checkout” overlay that includes card details fields and a billing form.
Advertisement
Payment data submitted on this page is validated in real time using the Luhn verification and exfiltrated to the attacker in an XOR-encrypted, base64-obfuscated JSON format.
Decoded payload Source: Sansec
Sansec identified six exfiltration domains, all hosted at IncogNet LLC (AS40663) in the Netherlands, and each getting data from 10 to 15 confirmed victims.
To protect against this campaign, Sansec recommends the following:
Look for hidden SVG tags with an onload attribute using atob() and remove them from your site files
Check if the _mgx_cv key exists in browser localStorage, as this indicates payment data may have been stolen
Monitor and block requests to /fb_metrics.php or any unfamiliar analytics-like domains
Block all traffic to the IP address 23.137.249.67 and associated domains
As of writing, Adobe has still not released a security update to address the PolyShell flaw in production versions of Magento. The vendor has only made a fix available in the pre-release version 2.4.9-alpha3+.
Also, Adobe has not responded to our repeated requests for a comment on the topic.
Website owners/admins are advised to apply all available mitigations and, if possible, upgrade Magento to the latest beta release.
Advertisement
Automated pentesting proves the path exists. BAS proves whether your controls stop it. Most teams run one without the other.
This whitepaper maps six validation surfaces, shows where coverage ends, and provides practitioners with three diagnostic questions for any tool evaluation.
Garmin has added fertility tracking to many of its best wearables
The feature comes via a partnership with Natural Cycles
It’s coming to the Fenix 8, Forerunner 570, Venu 4, and more
The best Garmin smartwatches are more than just fitness trackers these days — they can help you get a clearer picture of your overall health, with many metrics that extend well beyond exercise. That’s just been expanded further with the introduction of fertility tracking, which is bound for Garmin users thanks to a collaboration with Natural Cycles.
If you haven’t heard of Natural Cycles, it is currently the only birth control app cleared by the FDA. That means it’s well placed to enable cycle tracking on Garmin wearables and make understanding your fertility a little easier.
The new feature is coming to many of Garmin’s most popular watches, including the Fenix 8, Forerunner 570, Venu 4, and Venu X1. It should therefore be available to a wide variety of Garmin’s customers.
Article continues below
Advertisement
It works by measuring your skin temperature and then uses that reading to “unlock fertility insights in the Natural Cycles app,” Garmin says. This empowers users to “better understand their reproductive health.” Your temperature is tracked overnight, with information synced to the Natural Cycles app in the morning.
Plan or prevent a pregnancy
(Image credit: Garmin / Natural Cycles)
One of the benefits of using a smartwatch to track your fertility is that it is simple and non-invasive. There’s no need for any kind of hormone-based treatment or complex procedure, just a few metrics that can be gathered from your wrist.
Advertisement
Garmin is not the first nor the only company to have added fertility features to its wearables. Rivals, including Apple, Whoop, Fitbit, and more, also offer some kind of cycle tracking, meaning you’ve got a lot of options if you want this kind of functionality on your wrist.
The cycle-tracking features from Garmin and Natural Cycles aren’t available everywhere just yet. Garmin says it’s currently available in Australia, Brazil, Canada, the European Union, Norway, Singapore, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States. There’s no word yet on when it might be rolled out elsewhere.
Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more.
But for now, it’s a welcome improvement to Garmin’s wearables and one that could help you keep track of a vital part of your life.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login