The Morning After: Our verdict on the Pixel 10 Pro Fold

A little after the launch of the rest of the Pixel 10 family, Google’s new foldable is here. The Pixel 10 Pro Fold is a beast — which may not be the first thing you want to hear about a foldable.

Engadget

It’s perceptibly thicker than its biggest rival, Samsung’s Galaxy Z Fold 7. But avoiding the race for thinness gives Google’s new foldable some advantages. The Pixel 10 Pro Fold has the best cameras of any foldable and enhanced hardiness with the top dust resistance rating. And remember: This thing is $1,800. There’s more: It has PixelSnap, Google’s version of MagSafe, and a bigger battery compared to its predecessor. Make sure to check out our full review right here.

Engadget

It’s a week of heavy-duty gadgets, and I don’t mean CAT-branded phones and off-road EVs. We’ve also tested out Razer’s updated 18-inch laptop. Predictably, perhaps, it has all the power you’d want as well as the PC maker’s excellent build quality. It’s got lots of ports too. Rejoice! Prices start at $2,799.

— Mat Smith

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The news you might have missed

Researchers find just 250 malicious documents can leave LLMs vulnerable to backdoors

Tensor’s Robocar will be ‘Lyft-ready’ out of the factory

Ferrari’s first EV is coming next year with big speed, big sound and a Jony Ive design

Nintendo’s mystery animated short revealed

A week of confusion.

Nintendo

Nintendo spent the week confusing its fans with a teaser video on its Today app. The Pixar-tinged animation focused on a baby playing with toys and a magical pacifier (dummy) and not much explanation about what game (or toy) it was teasing. Fortunately, more recently the games maker released a second version of the animated short, but this time you can clearly see widdle Pikmin creatures moving a baby’s building blocks and pacifier around. Yeah, it’s a Pikmin thing. Now, is it a movie or a game? Regardless, it’s cute.

Continue reading.

Sony and AMD tease the graphics tech coming to the next PlayStation

Say hello to Project Amethyst.

Sony just dropped a new video with Mark Cerny, who was the lead designer for the PlayStation 4 and PS5, and Jack Huynh, senior vice president and general manager of AMD’s Computing and Graphics Group. They chatted up a storm about a series of technologies, collectively dubbed Project Amethyst. It is very early days, however, as the technologies “only exist in simulations.” They teased upscaling, better ray tracing and other machine learning-based rendering techniques. One of the more intriguing new concepts is Universal Compression, which builds on the PS5’s existing Delta Color Compression technique. It will theoretically allow Sony’s next console to compress everything that goes through its graphics pipeline, reducing the amount of memory bandwidth needed and even potentially cutting power consumption.

Continue reading.

A Minecraft Movie is getting A Minecraft Sequel

The original has grossed nearly a billion dollars globally.

A Minecraft Movie was a box office hit. So you know what that means in Hollywood? Sequels! Variety reports that Warner Bros. has penciled in the sequel for a July 23, 2027, premiere date, just two years after the original. When you know something can print money, you make more of it.

Continue reading. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-engadget-newsletter-111913347.html?src=rss 

Apple doubles its biggest bug bounty reward to $2 million

Apple is updating its Security Bounty program this November to offer some of the highest rewards in the industry. It has doubled its top award from $1 million to $2 million for the discovery of “exploit chains that can achieve similar goals as sophisticated mercenary spyware attacks” and which requires no user interaction. But the maximum possible payout can exceed $5 million dollars for the discovery of more critical vulnerabilities, such as bugs in beta software and Lockdown Mode bypasses. Lockdown Mode is an upgraded security architecture in the Safari browser. 

In addition, the company is rewarding the discovery of exploit chains with one-click user interaction with up to $1 million instead of just $250,000. The reward for attacks requiring physical proximity to devices can now also go up to $1 million, up from $250,000, while the maximum reward for attacks requiring physical access to locked devices has been doubled to $500,000. Finally, researchers “who demonstrate chaining WebContent code execution with a sandbox escape can receive up to $300,000.” Apple told Wired that it has awarded over $35 million to more than 800 security researchers since it introduced and expanded the program over the past few years. Apparently, top-dollar payouts are very rare, but Apple has made multiple $500,000 payouts. 

The company said in its announcement that the only system-level iOS attacks it has observed in the wild came from mercenary spyware, which are historically associated with state actors and typically used to target specific individuals. It said its new security features like Lockdown Mode and Memory Integrity Enforcement, which combats memory corruption vulnerabilities, can make mercenary attacks more difficult to pull off. However, bad actors will continue evolving their techniques, and Apple is hoping that updating its bounty program with bigger payouts can “encourage highly advanced research on [its] most critical attack surfaces despite the increased difficulty.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/apple-doubles-its-biggest-bug-bounty-reward-to-2-million-102844667.html?src=rss 

Someone programmed a 65-year old computer to play Boards of Canada’s ‘Olson’

The Programmed Data Processor-1 (PDP-1) is perhaps most recognizable as the home of Spacewar!, one of the world’s first video games, but as the video above proves, it also works as an enormous and very slow iPod, too.

In the video, Boards of Canada’s “Olson” is playing off of paper tape that’s carefully fed and programmed into the PDP-1 by engineer and Computer History Museum docent Peter Samson. It’s the final product of Joe Lynch’s PDP-1.music project, an attempt to translate the short and atmospheric song into something the PDP-1 can reproduce. 

As Lynch writes on GitHub, the “Harmony Compiler” used to translate “Olson” to paper tape was actually created by Samson to play audio through four of computer’s lightbulbs while he was a student at MIT in the 1960s. He used it to recreate classical music, but it’ll work with ’90s electronic music in a pinch, too.

“While these bulbs were originally intended to provide program status information to the computer operator,” Lynch writes, “Peter repurposed four of these light bulbs into four square wave generators (or four 1-bit DACs, put another way), by turning the bulbs on and off at audio frequencies.” The signal from each bulb is then downmixed into stereo audio channels, transcribed via an emulator and merged into a single file that has to be manually punched into the paper tape that’s fed into the PDP-1.

It’s a laborious process for playing even the simplest of songs, but it’s worth it to hear Boards of Canada’s already nostalgic music from an even older classic computer.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/audio/someone-programmed-a-65-year-old-computer-to-play-boards-of-canadas-olson-220857441.html?src=rss 

The ESA’s Power of Play report paints a portrait of the the world’s gamers

The Entertainment Software Association has released its Power of Play report, which presents a snapshot of who is playing video games, and why, all around the world. There are a lot of interesting data points here from more than 24,000 respondents, all of whom are older than 16 and play at least weekly. The doubters who think gaming is just for kids may be surprised to learn that the average age of the respondents is 41 years old, and the gender split is nearly even between men and women.

One of the most intriguing aspects to the report were the benefits people said they received from playing games. The top answer was that games offered mental stimulation, which 81 percent of the respondents said. Eighty percent said games provided stress relief, 73 percent said games made them feel happier and 64 percent said games connected them with other people which helped them feel less isolated or lonely. 

ESA Power of Play 2025

ESA

And although having fun was the top reason respondents gave for playing (66 percent), they also said gaming could improve their skills. Seventy-seven percent said gaming increased creativity, 76 percent said it improved problem-solving and 74 percent said gaming upped both cognitive skills and teamwork or collaboration.

The report also points to how popular mobile gaming still is. Overall, 55 percent of the respondents said mobile was their favorite gaming platform. Half of the respondents under age 35 play on mobile, and an impressive 61 percent of the over 50 gamers also play on mobile.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/the-esas-power-of-play-report-paints-a-portrait-of-the-the-worlds-gamers-205105064.html?src=rss 

A Minecraft Movie is getting A Minecraft Sequel

If Hollywood has taught us anything, it’s that a blockbuster that makes bank will get a sequel (or seven). Enter A Minecraft Movie, with its surprisingly effective humor and $957 million box office payday. (Who had “Jack Black will anchor a nearly billion-dollar movie” on their 2025 bingo card?) So, it’s no surprise that Warner Bros. has officially greenlit a sequel.

Variety reports that Warner Bros. has penciled in the sequel for a July 23, 2027, premiere date. That would place it around two years after the original, which is the second-highest-grossing film of the year so far. (Disney’s Lilo & Stitch is in first, with a cool $1.03 billion at the box office.)

Warner Bros. / X

The sequel will reportedly bring back director Jared Hess. The Napoleon Dynamite creator will also co-write the screenplay with Chris Galletta. Producers are said to include Mary Parent, Cale Boyter, Roy Lee, Eric McLeod, Kayleen Walters, Torfi Frans Ólafsson and Jason Momoa.

Engadget was among the many publications taken aback by how good A Minecraft Movie was. After all, a film about an open-ended building game, starring one of the leads of the crummy Borderlands, didn’t sound promising. But we found it surprisingly funny, with just the right degree of winking self-awareness. On top of that, Devindra Hardawar said it “delivers a decent message about championing creativity in a world that wants to beat down free-thinking non-conformists.” Amen to that.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/a-minecraft-movie-is-getting-a-minecraft-sequel-203509569.html?src=rss 

The final details of Samsung’s Android XR headset have been all but confirmed

After announcing its intentions to make an XR device in 2023, and revealing the design and intended use-cases for the headset alongside the announcement of Android XR in 2024, Samsung has shared precious few details about Project Moohan. A new leak from Android Headlines is set to change that, detailing not only the specs of Samsung’s new headset, but also a final name and new controller accessories ahead of the device’s rumored launch later this fall.

Samsung’s Project Moohan — officially called “Samsung Galaxy XR” per Android Headlines — is a marriage of sorts between the discontinued Meta Quest Pro and an Apple Vision Pro. It features an adjustable headband, primarily acts as passthrough goggles to the world around you and supports an external battery pack. While Samsung’s demos of the Project Moohan focused on the headset’s ability to accept voice commands and track eye and hand movements through built-in microphones and cameras, Android Headlines reports the headset will also support two controller accessories that look a lot like Meta’s Touch Plus controllers for the Quest 3.

Android Headlines

More expected are the internals and software experience on the new device. Project Moohan will use a Snapdragon XR2 Gen 2 chip to power its One UI-ified version of Android XR, just as Qualcomm promised when it announced the new processor in 2024. Samsung appears to be taking a lighter touch when it comes to software. Screenshots shared by Android Headlines show an app grid with the company’s browser, photos and camera apps, but the rest lines up with what Google’s shown of Android XR. 

The headset will also reportedly feature one high-resolution 4K micro-OLED screen per eye, as previously rumored by Korean publication The Elec, and around a two hours of battery life, which is comparable to the Vision Pro. Importantly, Project Moohan is also lighter. The headset reportedly weighs 545 grams, a good bit less than the over 600-gram Apple headset.

The only thing really missing now is a price for Project Moohan and a release date. Samsung shared in its Q2 2025 earnings that it still expected to ship the headset in 2025, but hasn’t announced an event to introduce the new device. Whenever it does launch, it sounds like it’ll be expensive. In August 2025, rumors pointed to Project Moohan costing anywhere from 2,500,000 to 4,000,000 Korean won (around $1,700 to $2,800).

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ar-vr/the-final-details-of-samsungs-android-xr-headset-have-been-all-but-confirmed-200915560.html?src=rss 

Researchers find just 250 malicious documents can leave LLMs vulnerable to backdoors

Artificial intelligence companies have been working at breakneck speeds to develop the best and most powerful tools, but that rapid development hasn’t always been coupled with clear understandings of AI’s limitations or weaknesses. Today, Anthropic released a report on how attackers can influence the development of a large language model.

The study centered on a type of attack called poisoning, where an LLM is pretrained on malicious content intended to make it learn dangerous or unwanted behaviors. The key finding from this study is that a bad actor doesn’t need to control a percentage of the pretraining materials to get the LLM to be poisoned. Instead, the researchers found that a small and fairly constant number of malicious documents can poison an LLM, regardless of the size of the model or its training materials. The study was able to successfully backdoor LLMs based on using only 250 malicious documents in the pretraining data set, a much smaller number than expected for models ranging from 600 million to 13 billion parameters. 

“We’re sharing these findings to show that data-poisoning attacks might be more practical than believed, and to encourage further research on data poisoning and potential defenses against it,” the company said. Anthropic collaborated with the UK AI Security Institute and the Alan Turing Institute on the research.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/researchers-find-just-250-malicious-documents-can-leave-llms-vulnerable-to-backdoors-191112960.html?src=rss 

OpenAI’s TikTok of AI slop hit one million downloads faster than ChatGPT

Sora, OpenAI’s app and social network for AI-generated videos, has been downloaded over one million times, according to Sora head Bill Peebles. The app reached one million downloads in less than five days, Peebles says, “even faster than ChatGPT did.” That’s despite OpenAI only making the app available in North America, and its decision to require users to have an invite to actually use it.

Like TikTok, Sora offers an endless vertical feed of videos, only Sora’s videos are AI-generated rather than uploaded by users. Creating a 10-second video of your own is as simple as writing a prompt to OpenAI’s Sora 2 model in the app. And through the Sora’s Cameo feature, you can even create videos of yourself and anyone else who’s agreed to share their likeness to the service.

sora hit 1M app downloads in <5 days, even faster than chatgpt did (despite the invite flow and only targeting north america!)!

team working hard to keep up with surging growth. more features and fixes to overmoderation on the way!

— Bill Peebles (@billpeeb) October 9, 2025

The limited guardrails OpenAI has put on Sora has already led to a rash of videos featuring OpenAI’s Sam Altman and content that clearly infringes on copyright. The fact that Sora can so readily create videos of recognizable characters like Pikachu raises questions about what OpenAI’s model was trained on, and has unsurprisingly prompted pushback from the larger entertainment industry.

In response, the company has updated Sora to give users more control over what videos their likeness can appear in. OpenAI plans to offer similar controls to rights holders, giving them “the ability to specify how their characters can be used (including not at all),” according to Altman. It’s not clear why these controls weren’t available when Sora launched, but both seem like good changes.

Because of Sora’s invite system, it’s difficult to say if the over one million downloads the app has received translates to as many users. It’s not unusual for someone to download an app and never use it. Whatever the case, OpenAI’s bet on AI-generated videos seems like it might be a winning one, provided the company finds a way to actually make more money than it looses generating videos for Sora.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/openais-tiktok-of-ai-slop-hit-one-million-downloads-faster-than-chatgpt-181216271.html?src=rss 

One of our favorite budgeting apps has 30 percent off annual plans right now

Monarch Money is one of our favorite budgeting apps and, fittingly enough, there’s a way for newcomers to save money on a subscription right now. If you use the code WELCOME at checkout, you can get an annual plan for 30 percent off. It typically costs $100, but you can get 12 months of access for $70 with this code.

There are some key caveats here. The discount is only for new users, and it can’t be combined with other offers. The code only works when you sign up through the web. You can’t redeem it through the Monarch mobile app.

We feel that Monarch has a steeper learning curve than some other budget trackers and that certain aspects of the app are slightly more complex than they probably need to be. But it offers a great deal of customization and granularity, which outweighs our misgivings.

On the main dashboard, you’ll see your net worth along with your latest transactions, spending versus the previous month, your income so far for the month and details about upcoming bills, your investments and goals you’ve set. There’s also a link to a month-in-review page, which offers an in-depth overview of what’s been happening with your money that month. You’ll also be able to take a peek at how your net worth has changed over time.

Monarch can connect to your bank and track Apple Card, Apple Cash and Savings accounts. It can pull in your transactions and balance history automatically and detect your recurring expenses and income. The app can even keep your car valuation up to date. While it might take a little work to set up Monarch (and you might have to tweak things here and there), it’s a detailed budgeting app that can help you keep better track of your income, expenditure and net worth.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/deals/one-of-our-favorite-budgeting-apps-has-30-percent-off-annual-plans-right-now-174011690.html?src=rss 

Tensor’s Robocar will be ‘Lyft-ready’ out of the factory

Lyft is partnering with San Jose-based Tensor Auto. Lyft says it has reserved “hundreds” of Tensor robotaxis and will operate its own fleet. The other piece of the partnership: Tensor will make its Robocar “Lyft-ready” straight out of the factory.

Shipping the Robocar with Lyft’s platform will allow a futuristic form of passive income for owners in regions with level 4 regulatory approval. “Traditional car ownership means a vehicle loses value as it sits idle most of the time,” the companies wrote in a press release. “Tensor Robocars flip this model, turning personal luxury vehicles into productive assets that can generate income around the clock.”

It’s similar to what Tesla plans to do with its yet-to-be-shipped Cybercab. Lyft’s rival Uber announced a similar plan in July, involving 20,000 Lucid EVs.

That’s also a rendering.

Tensor / Lyft

Tensor plans to deliver its first Robocars by the end of 2026. The company says the “Lyft-ready” autonomous vehicle (AV) will include over 100 sensors. (That includes 37 cameras, five lidars, and 11 radars.) Eight NVIDIA chips, based on Blackwell GPU architecture, help it interpret sensor data. Tensor says the computer is capable of 8,000 trillion operations per second.

This is far from Lyft’s first AV partnership. Among others, it teamed up last month with May Mobility to launch an autonomous fleet in Atlanta. Lyft also plans to match users with Waymo rides in Nashville starting next year. However, Bloomberg notes that the Tensor partnership is Lyft’s first where it will purchase its own AV fleet.

Tensor spun out of the Chinese robotaxi company AutoX. The company says it divested and discontinued its China operations to focus exclusively on the US-based Tensor. The Robocar will be produced in Vietnam through a partnership with VinFast.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/evs/tensors-robocar-will-be-lyft-ready-out-of-the-factory-182010143.html?src=rss 

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