The Morning After: How to follow Amazon’s hardware event tomorrow

Amazon doesn’t usually do device events in February, but in a year of turbulence, why not? The company is holding a presentation in New York, and, like in the past, Amazon won’t be livestreaming anything.

Engadget will attend, however, and liveblog the event so you’ll know what’s happening. Amazon has teased its next-gen Alexa for what feels like years, promising a conversational vibe and the ability to process and execute complex requests. Is it ready to chat? And what random tech will Amazon cram it into? Clocks? Microwave ovens?

Here’s what we’re expecting.

— Mat Smith

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The biggest tech stories you missed

Disney+ just dropped an explosive trailer for Andor season 2

How to get MagSafe charging on an iPhone 16e

Nintendo Switch 2 is launching soon, here’s everything we know so far

Slice-of-life soccer game Despelote kicks off on May 1

A fancy camera so minimalist it doesn’t even have a memory card slot

There’s a huge built-in SSD instead.

Sigma

Sigma’s newest camera is the BF, a 24.6-megapixel full-frame, mirrorless camera with a built-in SSD instead of a removable memory card. The BF is compatible with L-mount lenses, and as well as photos, its 35mm full-frame sensor can capture 6K video and supports things like HEVC encoding and capture speeds at up to 120 frames per second. At the highest settings, the camera can cram in up to two and a half hours of video footage — probably enough. The Sigma BF will be available, body-only, for $1,999 in April, in black or silver.

Continue reading.

A second of Google Veo 2 AI video footage will cost 50 cents

A minute will cost $30, then.

Google’s Veo 2 model, announced last December, now has pricing. At the moment, Veo 2 is limited to two-minute clips at up to 4K resolution — a lot more than ChatGPT’s 1080p 20-second snippets. It’s difficult to compare pricing as Sora is part of a subscription-based service. If you’re paying for a $200 ChatGPT Pro plan, that’s 500 videos per month, while the Plus plan caps at 50 videos at 720p and only five seconds.

Even if many don’t bite at that pricing, Google is already testing its Veo 2 AI to generate backgrounds for YouTube Shorts.

Continue reading.

An M4 MacBook Air could be here in just a few weeks

Apple might announce a powerful new Air in March.

Apple

In his Power On newsletter, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reports Apple is readying itself for the launch of the upgraded laptop next month. The company is reportedly winding down inventory of the existing models. The M4 MacBook Air is expected to come in two sizes, 13-inch and 15-inch, like the previous model.

Last year’s M3 MBA launched awkwardly: Apple unveiled the M4 chip just a few months later.

Continue reading.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-engadget-newsletter-121547503.html?src=rss 

Slice-of-life soccer game Despelote kicks off on May 1

Despelote is heading to Switch, PlayStation 4, PS5, Xbox Series X/S and PC on May 1. Despelote is a super stylish soccer game that’s secretly about life in the Ecuadorian city of Quito in 2001, and it comes from local developers Julián Cordero and Sebastián Valbuena, and published by Panic

You play as 8-year-old Julián, and spend your time kicking the ball, meeting people and exploring life during Ecuador’s economic recovery just ahead of the unifying 2002 World Cup. The in-game city comprises actual photographs of places around Quito, but the backgrounds are covered in a layer of high-contrast grit, while people and the soccer ball stand out as stark line drawings. The audio was recorded on location, too, and the result is a game that looks and sounds like a soothing memory. 

Despelote was announced in 2023 and originally due to land in 2024, but it now has a firm date of May 1. It’s already picked up a handful of accolades, including four nominations at the 2025 Independent Games Festival. There’s a demo on Steam, if you’re intrigued.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/slice-of-life-soccer-game-despelote-kicks-off-on-may-1-234256915.html?src=rss 

Sigma’s latest camera is so minimalist it doesn’t have a memory card slot

Sigma has announced the BF, a new 24.6-megapixel full-frame, mirrorless camera that has a built-in SSD rather than an a CFexpress or SD card slot. The company is known for making lenses and unconventional cameras, and the BF’s design and unique approach to storage definitely fit the bill.

The Sigma BF is milled from a single block of aluminum, and looks it, with mostly flat, angular edges that don’t seem entirely designed for human hands, save for a thumb rest on the back. This is all part of the BF’s deliberately minimalist approach, which extends to the lack of text on the body of the camera and the camera’s haptic buttons. Besides the thumb rest, the back of the BF features a high-resolution display, pill-shaped status monitor for highlighting whatever setting you’re adjusting, a dial for navigating menus, an option button, a power button and a playback button. The top of the BF is even simpler: there’s just two microphones and a shutter button.

The BF is compatible with L-mount lenses, and on top of photos, its 35mm full-frame sensor can capture 6K video, and supports things like HEVC encoding and recording at up to 120 frames per second. The built-in 230GB SSD in the BF is “capable of storing more than 14,000 JPEG files, 4,300 uncompressed RAW images or 2.5 hours of video at the highest-quality setting,” according to Sigma. Like plenty of modern mirrorless cameras, the BF also comes with several different color modes that can tweak the look of your photo. Options include modes like standard and rich, and color specific settings like powder blue, forest green and sunset red.

Sigma

All of that sounds cool in theory, especially if you’re interested in a camera with an idiosyncratic design, but you have to be willing to pay for it. PetaPixel writes that the Sigma BF will be available body-only for $1,999 in April 2025, in either black or silver.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/cameras/sigmas-latest-camera-is-so-minimalist-it-doesnt-have-a-memory-card-slot-223502411.html?src=rss 

Tron: Catalyst hits consoles and PC on June 17

Tron: Catalyst, the follow-up to Tron: Identity and the next game from Bithell Games, is set to launch on June 17, 2025. The game is technically standalone, but builds on Identity’s narrative and tackles the world of Tron from a new isometric perspective.

Paired with the release date, Bithell Games and publisher Big Fan also showed off a new trailer at the ID@Xbox Showcase that offers a glimpse of how combat and narrative work in the game. You play as Exo, a program from the “Arq Grid” with an ability called “The Glitch,” that lets you exploit time loops in the game, replaying levels with new knowledge to uncover secret and shortcuts. Exo will of course be challenged by the leaders of the Grid throughout, forcing you to fight through enemies on foot or a Light Cycle. As Engadget learned in an early preview of the game, you’ll also be able to upgrade your combat abilities to suit your preferred style of play.

Tron: Identity is a visual novel, so Catalyst represents a bit of a departure in terms of gameplay, but that’s one of the things that makes the game intriguing. Some amount of narrative choice is still there based off the trailer, it’s just sandwiched between new, exciting, action-adventure bread.

Tron: Catalyst will be available on Xbox Series X/S, PlayStation 5, Nintendo Switch and PC on June 17, 2025.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/tron-catalyst-hits-consoles-and-pc-on-june-17-205146866.html?src=rss 

Xbox showcase gave release dates for three indie games we’re looking forward to

Monday’s ID@Xbox indie showcase included release dates for a few upcoming games we’ve been tracking. 33 Immortals, which lets you round up 32 pals to try to escape hell with, arrives next month, with the escape room mansion game Blue Prince coming in April and the quirky shooter Revenge of the Savage Planet following in May. All three will be on Game Pass on day one.

33 Immortals

Thunder Lotus Games

Get ready to run like hell in 33 Immortals, which Engadget’s Mat Smith previewed at Summer Game Fest 2023. The multiplayer roguelike top-down action game inspired by Dante’s Inferno and has charmingly retro graphics — not pixel art but more like old-school animation, a la Space Ghost. (Yes!)

It supports up to 33 players per 25-minute raid. But because developer Thunder Lotus Games isn’t scaling down the difficulty for smaller squads, you may need the help of 32 friends to get the hell out of hell.

33 Immortals arrives in Early Access on March 18 for PC, Xbox Series X/S and Xbox One. It will be a day-one title for Game Pass.

Blue Prince

Dogubomb

Meanwhile, Blue Prince is a puzzler that drops you into a sprawling mansion; its room configuration is up to you. You’ll explore the manor’s (changing daily!) 44 rooms with a limited number of movements, trying to find the mysterious 45th room to get your inheritance. If you can’t find it before using up your turns, then no easy money for you.

Blue Prince feels like a build-your-own escape room wrapped up in a strategy game and tied together with home-renovation sim twine,” Engadget’s Jessica Conditt wrote in our preview. “Even though it supports a broad mix of unrelated concepts, Blue Prince feels a lot like home. And it will be, once I find that 46th room.”

Blue Prince launches on April 10. It will be available on PC (via Steam), PS5 and Xbox Series X/S. It will be a day-one title for Xbox Game Pass and the PS Plus Game Catalog.

Revenge of the Savage Planet

Raccoon Logic Studios

Arriving a bit later is Raccoon Logic’s delightfully zany Revenge of the Savage Planet. The sequel to 2020’s Journey to the Savage Planet is another satirical adventure shooter with plenty of wacky new gadgets to take down the planet’s hostile beasties.

You can use the goo cannon to create slick surfaces to trip up enemies. There’s also a whip to do your enemies like Devo. Or swing across otherwise inaccessible points with a grapple. You can also try your hand at a lasso that lets you capture creatures like Pokémon. (But hopefully, not too much like Pokémon.)

Revenge of the Savage Planet comes to PC, PS5/4 and Xbox Series X/S on March 18. It will be on Game Pass on day one.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/xbox-showcase-gave-release-dates-for-three-indie-games-were-looking-forward-to-212015408.html?src=rss 

How to follow the Amazon devices event on February 26

It’s sort of out of character for Amazon to be hosting a devices event in February, as opposed to its usual Fall launch. But this Wednesday (February 26) at 10am ET, the company is holding a presentation in New York City. As it’s done in the past, Amazon won’t be livestreaming this event, and you won’t be able to watch Panos Panay and his colleagues present to members of the media. Don’t worry about FOMO, though, because we’ve got you. Engadget will be attending and liveblogging the event, so if you follow our updates it’ll almost feel like you’re right there with us! We’ll have commentary on the announcements, as well as the in-person vibes and quality of snacks. Our Sam Rutherford will be sharing pictures, too, so you won’t miss a thing. Bookmark this page and come back on February 26 to stay informed!

In case you were curious if it’ll be worth your time, here’s a quick refresher on what we expect to see at Amazon’s devices event this week: Alexa. The company has teased its next-gen assistant for what feels like years at this point, promising a conversational cadence and the ability to process and execute complex requests.

Rumors are sparse on what Amazon has up its sleeve, so we’re not too sure whether there will be any new hardware. It’s quite likely the company will show us updated Echo speakers to go along with the smarter Alexa, or a refreshed model of the Echo Buds that serve as a conduit for the assistant. For now, though, we assume there won’t be new Kindles at the event, since Amazon released those late last year. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/how-to-follow-the-amazon-devices-event-on-february-26-200022212.html?src=rss 

Here’s how to get MagSafe charging on an iPhone 16e

The Apple iPhone 16e looks like a solid handset for most consumers. It’s got plenty of power, a gorgeous display and the Action button that first debuted with the iPhone 15 Pro series. It doesn’t, however, offer any way to wirelessly charge the device using MagSafe. 

Just because Apple excluded the feature doesn’t mean you’re completely out of luck. Here are a couple of options for using MagSafe charging on an iPhone 16e. The easiest way to get this going is to pick up a MagSafe-compatible smartphone case that has been specifically designed for Apple’s latest handset.

This ESR case seems like a solid entry, and it’s on the cheaper side. We haven’t gotten a chance to review it yet, but an older ESR release with MagSafe functionality easily made our list of the best iPhone cases.

The second option is to go with a simple adapter ring. We recommend this one from PopSockets. It’s budget-friendly, easy to use and allows integration with other MagSafe accessories. Just pop it on a pre-existing case. It’s not compatible with silicone, textured or anti-fingerprint coated cases.

The final option? Charge your phone the old-fashioned way, via USB-C, and just tuck the cable out of the way. This may not fool anyone, but it’ll juice the phone up quicker. The iPhone 16e uses the older Qi1 wireless charging standard and maxes out at 7.5w, while the other iPhone 16 models support Qi2 at speeds up to 25w, provided you have the right charger.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/smartphones/heres-how-to-get-magsafe-charging-on-an-iphone-16e-201026681.html?src=rss 

Anthropic’s new Claude model can think both fast and slow

Another week, and there’s another new AI model ready for public use. This time, it’s Anthropic with the introduction of Claude 3.7 Sonnet. The company describes its latest release as the market’s first “hybrid reasoning model,” meaning the new version of Claude can both answer a question nearly instantaneously or take its time to work through it step by step. As the user you can decide what approach Claude takes, with a dropdown menu allowing you to select the “thinking mode” you want it to take.

“We’ve developed Claude 3.7 Sonnet with a different philosophy from other reasoning models on the market. Just as humans use a single brain for both quick responses and deep reflection, we believe reasoning should be an integrated capability of frontier models rather than a separate model entirely,” writes Anthropic. “This unified approach also creates a more seamless experience for users.”

Anthropic doesn’t name OpenAI explicitly, but the company is clearly taking a shot at its rival. Between GPT-4, o1, o1-mini and now o3-mini, OpenAI offers many different models, but unless you follow the company closely, the number of systems on offer can be overwhelming; in fact, Sam Altman recently admitted as much. “We hate the model picker as much as you do and want to return to magic unified intelligence,” he posted on X earlier this month.

Anthropic says it also took a different approach to developing Claude’s reasoning capabilities. “We’ve optimized somewhat less for math and computer science competition problems, and instead shifted focus towards real-world tasks that better reflect how businesses actually use LLMs,” the company writes. To that point, current Claude users can look forward to “particularly strong improvements in coding and front-end web development.”

Claude 3.7 Sonnet is available to use starting today across all Claude plans, including Anthropic’s free tier. Developers, meanwhile, can access the new model through the company’s API, Amazon Bedrock and Google Cloud’s Vertex AI. 

Speaking of developers, Anthropic is also introducing Claude Code, a new “agentic” tool that allows you to delegate coding tasks to Claude directly from a terminal interface. Available currently as a limited research preview, Anthropic says Claude Code can read code, edit files, write and run tests, and even push commits to GitHub.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/anthropics-new-claude-model-can-think-both-fast-and-slow-203307140.html?src=rss 

Disney+ just dropped an explosive trailer for Andor season 2

It’s been well over two years, but the wait is almost over. The second season of Andor hits Disney+ on April 22. The platform just dropped a juicy trailer to get all of us Star Wars fans pumped and ready.

The footage shows plenty of cool stuff, including the return of Rogue One’s chief antagonist Orson Crennic and the beloved droid K-2SO. The Death Star makes an appearance, which isn’t surprising given the ending of the first season. Mon Mothma also attends an extravagant “let them eat cake” type of party. 

There are a few bombastic explosions and several shots of the titular Cassian Andor walking down hallways. One thing this trailer doesn’t spoil is the plot. The footage is just a hodgepodge of cool moments, so we still have no idea what our favorite rebel spy will be getting up to in season two. To me, this is a good thing.

For the uninitiated, Andor is a prequel to Rogue One: A Star Wars Story and is set after the rise of the empire but before the events of the original Star Wars movie. It’s very good, with a tone that can only be described as “prestige Star Wars.” It stars Diego Luna, Stellan Skarsgård, Kyle Soller, Denise Gough and, sometimes, Forest Whitaker. Season two brings new actors into the fold, like Adria Arjona.

Disney+ is doing something unique with the release schedule here. Three episodes premiere on April 22, followed by another trio each week for a month. That adds up to 12 episodes. April is a big month for returning genre TV, as season two of The Last of Us premieres on April 13.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/tv-movies/disney-just-dropped-an-explosive-trailer-for-andor-season-2-184842360.html?src=rss 

Gmail will stop using SMS for two-factor authentication

Google is planning to end support for SMS-based two-factor authentication in Gmail, Forbes reports. Sending a code to your personal phone via text message has long been an option Google offered to verify your identity, but it has unavoidable security issues the company wants to address.

The goal is to “reduce the impact of rampant, global SMS abuse,” Gmail spokesperson Ross Richendrfer tells Forbes, and the solution, at least for now, is QR codes. Instead of entering your number and receiving a text with a code you need to enter, Google will throw up a QR code you need to scan with your phone. The reliance on your smartphone is still present, but now you don’t have to rely on the lax security of SMS messages.

Using SMS two-factor authentication is better than nothing, but text messages aren’t as secure as other methods. Criminals can intercept your message just by convincing your carrier to port your number to a new phone. By tricking a provider to send multiple SMS messages to a number a criminal operation controls in a process called “traffic pumping,” they can even make money on each text, Google says. Considering the volume of SMS messages the company sends to both verify users and make sure people aren’t bulk-creating accounts to send spam, it’s not hard to see how SMS could be problem.

Ultimately, the goal for Google and other companies like it is to use passkeys and move away from passwords entirely, but adoption is slow, and making the current, much more familiar process secure is still meaningful. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/cybersecurity/gmail-will-stop-using-sms-for-two-factor-authentication-185615193.html?src=rss 

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