Madison Prewett: 5 Things to Know About the ‘Bachelor’ Alum, From Age to Marriage

Madison Prewett was on ‘The Bachelor.’ before marrying her husband, Grant Troutt. Learn about her and her post-reality TV life now.

Madison Prewett was on ‘The Bachelor.’ before marrying her husband, Grant Troutt. Learn about her and her post-reality TV life now. 

Meta is reportedly going to slash spending on the metaverse

Meta is reportedly planning steep cuts to its metaverse division, according to Bloomberg. This is happening just a few years after the company changed its name from Facebook to reflect its renewed interest in that same metaverse.

Bloomberg notes that the metaverse department could get hit with significant budget cuts in the near future, with layoffs potentially occurring early next year. The budget cuts could go as high as 30 percent and will likely impact the virtual worlds product Meta Horizon Worlds and the Quest virtual reality headset. The publication did note that this isn’t a done deal just yet.

Company insiders say this is all part of Meta’s annual budget planning for 2026 and that the cuts were discussed at a series of meetings at CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s compound in Hawaii. The metaverse team was reportedly asked for deeper-than-average cuts because the technology hasn’t exactly taken the world by storm.

As a matter of fact, the whole metaverse idea has been a dud with investors, who see it as a drain on resources. Consumers aren’t exactly keen on the idea either, even if they still buy VR headsets and traditional games. It’s one thing to throw on a headset to shoot bad guys for 20 minutes but it’s a whole other thing to, well, wander around a fake Abercrombie & Fitch for hours looking to spend real money on fake clothing for an avatar.

$META has spent $37.7B on reality labs over the last two years pic.twitter.com/ppW7uo2sGB

— Buddy Wiseman-Barker (@buddy_barker) December 4, 2025

The report does suggest that Zuckerberg still believes that people will one day spend the majority of their time in virtual worlds, but these cuts signal that he understands that this idea is still years or decades away from fruition. The metaverse sits within a company division called Reality Labs that has lost more than $70 billion since 2021. Zuckerberg has also largely refrained from mentioning the metaverse in public and in earnings calls.

So what will Meta be spending money on instead? It’s reportedly focused on further developing large AI models and chatbots, in addition to hardware products linked to AI experiences like those Ray-Ban smart display glasses.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ar-vr/meta-is-reportedly-going-to-slash-spending-on-the-metaverse-164547153.html?src=rss 

Amazon’s Kindle Scribe Colorsoft finally has a release date: December 10

When it announced the latest series of Kindle Scribe writing tablets in October, Amazon didn’t have a specific release date to share beyond “later this year.” And now that we’re approaching the final weeks of 2025, the company is meeting its own deadline by sharing that it will be available on December 10. That detail is now posted on the Amazon product page for the Kindle Scribe Colorsoft, if you’d like to see the date for yourself.

As a refresher, this is the third generation of the Kindle Scribe line of E Ink writing tablets. This year was the first time Amazon made three different versions of the Scribe, turning it into a series of products. At the entry-level, the Scribe without a front light will start at $430, while the model with a front light starts at $480. The Kindle Scribe Colorsoft, which, as it name suggests, can render colors, will start at $630.

All three flavors will feature the updated hardware and design that’s a bit more symmetrical than previous generations, which had a thicker bezel on one side. They’re also thinner than older Scribes and come with redesigned Kindle software that can help make note-taking a bit more efficient. Based on my hands-on with the Kindle Scribe Colorsoft, it also seemed to render colors more vividly than competing devices like the reMarkable Paper Pro, though I’ll definitely need to get a review unit in for better comparison.

For now, check out our hands on of the Kindle Scribe Colorsoft and review of the reMarkable Paper Pro and even of the last-gen Kindle Scribe to see if this is something you might want. While December 10 is cutting it pretty close to the holiday gifting season, it’s still weeks ahead of Christmas, so it might still be worth keeping an eye on.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/amazons-kindle-scribe-colorsoft-finally-has-a-release-date-december-10-170000910.html?src=rss 

Pixel-art cyberpunk game Replaced arrives in March

Based on what we’ve seen, Replaced is a gaming art director’s dream. The long-delayed indie title has lush pixel-art environments, set in a cyberpunk fever dream. And now we finally know when it’s arriving. Mark your calendar for March 12, 2026.

If you’ve been following Replaced‘s journey, you’ll know that’s four years after its original release date. Shit happens! In this case, that included having to relocate from Belarus to Cyprus after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022. It will be the first game from developer Sad Cat Studios. Thunderful Games is publishing.

Gaming still from Replaced. “Pit’s Diner,” set in a dystopian cyberpunk world (pixel art). Various shady characters mill about.

Sad Cat Studios / Thunderful Games

Replaced is set in a dystopian alternate 1980s America. In this timeline, nuclear winter has reshaped the world. “Step into a world where neon lights flicker over rain-soaked streets, industrial decay meets futuristic technology, and every shadow holds a secret,” the blurb reads. You play as R.E.A.C.H., an AI unwillingly trapped in a human body.

As for gameplay, it’s a 2.5D cinematic action platformer. “Chain precise melee strikes with satisfying ranged attacks to take down enemies in high-intensity encounters while keeping the flow of exploration,” the description reads. Expect plenty of running, climbing and kicking ass.

You can see some of the dazzling art direction, fluid movement, and smooth combat in the new trailer below. You can wishlist Replaced now through Steam or Xbox.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/pixel-art-cyberpunk-game-replaced-arrives-in-march-170253220.html?src=rss 

‘Owning Manhattan’ Season 2: Release Date, Cast & How to Watch the Serhant Series

The second season of the hit luxury real estate series will premiere in late 2025. Here’s everything to know about ‘Owning Manhattan.’

The second season of the hit luxury real estate series will premiere in late 2025. Here’s everything to know about ‘Owning Manhattan.’ 

Amazon reportedly considering ending ties with the US Postal Service

Amazon is reportedly considering discontinuing use of the US Postal Service and building out its own shipping network to rival it, according to The Washington Post. The e-commerce behemoth spends more than $6 billion a year on the public mail carrier, representing just shy of 8 percent of the service’s total revenues. That’s up from just shy of $4 billion in 2019, and Amazon continues to grow.

Over the past decade, Amazon has invested heavily in shipping logistics, buying its own Boeing planes, debuting electric delivery vans and slowly building out a drone delivery network. Last year, Amazon handled over 6.3 billion parcels, a 7 percent increase over the previous year, according to the Pitney Bowes parcel shipping index. USPS, for its part, handled roughly 6.9 billion, just a 3 percent increase over 2023. That is to say that Amazon’s shipping network can already handle over 90 percent of the volume of the US Postal Service (at least by sheer numbers).

The USPS has been in dire financial condition for some time, losing billions of dollars a year. Negotiations between Amazon and the public carrier have reportedly stalled, which, together with the agency’s need to keep raising its prices, may create more urgency for the company to eliminate its reliance on the service altogether.

The Postal Service has struggled to modernize and adapt (its attempt to electrify the truck fleet was a bust) in a market where the likes of Amazon and Walmart are investing billions in delivering packages around the country at lightning speed. The ever-accelerating digitization of communication and heavy investment in privately owned shipping operations threatens the very existence of one of the country’s greatest public goods.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/amazon-reportedly-considering-ending-ties-with-the-us-postal-service-144555021.html?src=rss 

PlayStation teams up with Bad Robot and the creator of Left 4 Dead for a co-op shooter

Sony Interactive Entertainment has signed a deal to produce and publish a game from Bad Robot, JJ Abrams’ production company. The two sides are keeping most of the details close to their chest for now, but the game is a four-player co-op shooter for PlayStation 5 and PC directed by someone who knows a thing or two about that genre: Left 4 Dead creator Mike Booth.

Bad Robot Games — which is a fully remote studio — was formed in 2018 with the help of Tencent. It has lent a hand on games including Weird West (as an investor and creative consultant) as well as interactive streaming series Silent Hill: Ascension. This new game is the first one that Bad Robot Games is developing in-house.

A few months back, Booth dropped into the Left 4 Dead subreddit to say that he was working on a new co-op game “built on the foundations of what made L4D special. If you enjoyed the teamwork, tension and replayability of my past games, you’ll probably find this one interesting. It expands on the co-op formula in ways I’ve wanted to explore for a long time.” He added that, while the game was still in early development, Bad Robot was opening up a waitlist for access to playtests.

According to a press release, “Bad Robot Games is a dedicated game studio working on new and existing transmedia franchises.” So, this project could well be part of an entirely new franchise, but the prospect of co-op shooter from the designer of Left 4 Dead that’s set in the Cloverfield universe is pretty darn intriguing.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/playstation/playstation-teams-up-with-bad-robot-and-the-creator-of-left-4-dead-for-a-co-op-shooter-144637802.html?src=rss 

A shaky year for American EVs could set the tone for 2026

If you like both electric vehicles and emotional roller coasters, 2025 was an excellent year. However, for those of us whose nerves are already sufficiently frazzled, the highs and lows of the last 12 months were a bit hard to stomach.

In 2025, we saw the introduction of new, compelling models like the Lucid Gravity and refreshed Nissan Leaf, the latter available at a price on par with its internally combusted competition. From a product availability standpoint, 2025 was the year the EV market started feeling more mature and less manic.

But 2025 also saw new heights of anti-EV vitriol stirred up during a particularly traumatic election cycle. The means of propulsion or badge on the hood of your commuter machine suddenly became an indicator of your political affiliations. Put simply, the car you drive is now a political statement, and it’s the latest unprecedented situation in an exhaustingly long and dire string of unprecedented situations. Yes, it’s been a long year, and the pessimism of 2025 will surely carry us well into 2026, but not all hope is lost for EVs.

Tesla and the DOGE effect

Elon Musk flashes his T-shirt that reads “DOGE” to the media as he walks on South Lawn of the White House, in Washington, March 9, 2025.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

We’ve certainly seen some civic-minded CEOs in the past as auto executives have a long history of mixing their corporate interests with their political panderings. Chrysler CEO Lee Iacocca was even considered a potential presidential candidate once upon a time. However, we have never seen the kind of ass kissing and cronyism we were privy to in this year’s fickle friendship between Elon Musk and President Trump.

Musk was (hyper) active on the Trump campaign trail, and wasted no time digging into what he described as government overspending. While the Department of Government Efficiency’s efficacy is debatable, it certainly proved quite effective at decimating the accounts of Tesla investors. Between January and March, Tesla’s stock price dropped by nearly half. Things didn’t turn around until Musk left DOGE in May

Since then, Tesla’s price has returned to its highs before the DOGE debacle. Its sales, however, have not. Q1 deliveries declined by 13 percent, then 14 percent in Q2. Deliveries bounced back 7 percent in Q3 as everyone scrambled to buy before the EV credits expired, but profits plunged 37 percent. Tesla’s market share in the US electric vehicle space has halved, leading perennial pitchman Musk to start hawking everything from AI agents to spandex-clad robots — anything to distract from the numbers.

And it’s apparently working. Musk’s $1 trillion pay package was approved by Tesla’s shareholders without much worry. This could make him the world’s first trillionaire, but only if he meets a series of aggressive targets and deadlines for sales, an area where the man has struggled in the past.

The big, beautiful sales spike

A Tesla with a sticker referring to the car’s purchase is shown on Sunday, Dec. 15, 2024 in Concord, Mass.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Elon Musk and Donald Trump’s bromance wasn’t the only fallout from the latter’s second term. So, too, died the $7,500 federal EV incentive, which expired in September as part of President Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill.” That actually spurred a short-term sales spike ahead of the deadline. Many manufacturers even set new EV sales records riding that wave, but there’s a disconcerting trough to come.

We still need to wait a bit to see just how bad Q4 EV sales are going to be, but early indications are not looking good. J.D. Power’s October report says that EV sales in September were a record high, making up 12.9 percent of new vehicle sales in the US. In October, after the credit expired, they fell to a mere 5.2 percent. 

That’s a worrying drop, and it’s already affecting product planning. 

Cuts in EV production

Honda’s Super-One Prototype isn’t coming to the US.

Tim Stevens for Engadget

When I was in Japan last month, getting an early look at some next-gen hybrids from Honda, I wasn’t expecting to hear talk of midterm American elections from the company’s executives. But that’s what was on CEO Toshihiro Mibe’s mind. He’s watching American voting trends closely to determine the nature of the company’s upcoming releases.

Mibe said that Honda has already canceled plans for some EVs here in America, instead focusing on a broader selection of hybrid models. It’s not the only company to do so. Ram also canceled its 1500 EV truck, but the hybrid version is still supposedly on the way. 

Scout Motors, too, has been focusing more on its extended-range hybrid offerings. The company’s initial pitch was purely electric trucks and SUVs. Lately, it’s been prioritizing its extended-range EV options based on the feedback from its 130,000 pre-orderers. 80 percent of them want the onboard generator, an add-on that may prove a saving grace for this EV startup.

There is reason for optimism

Some manufacturers may be throttling back on their EV aspirations, but others are forging ahead. There’s a delightful collection of battery-powered machines coming next year, and that’s worth getting excited about.

Again, the 2026 Nissan Leaf should be a hugely popular choice as its production ramps up. It’s already hitting dealerships now, and with a starting price under $30,000, it’ll be hard to beat. But, Chevrolet is going to try with a refreshed Bolt EV for similar money.

If you’ve got more to spend, you’ve got more options. BMW’s stellar iX3 crossover SUV is due soon, as are both the electric CLA sedan and GLC SUV

The most anticipated EV of the year, though, might just be the Rivian R2. This electric SUV will join the stellar R1S and R1T, expanding Rivian’s segment footprint while also hopefully expanding its market reach. A $45,000 starting price makes it far more attainable than any of the company’s previous offerings. 

A photograph of the Rivian factory producing the company’s R1 SUV variant.

Nathan Heleine / Rivian

If the prospect of a fun, affordable SUV from Rivian doesn’t have you excited for the upcoming year in EVs, maybe some promising news from Europe will. After cutting its own EV incentive program in 2023, Germany’s EV sales fell off a cliff, dropping 28 percent in 2024. Cue the predictions of the demise of EVs by many local pundits.

Since then, though, EV sales slowly climbed back up, and lately they’ve been booming, with German road traffic agency KBA saying the total number of newly registered electric vehicles increased by nearly 50 percent in October (year over year). Electric cars now make up 19 percent of the market there, and that’s despite Tesla’s sales cratering.

There’s no guarantee that the American market will follow a similar rebound, especially if the anti-EV political messaging continues. Me, though, I’ve decided I’m staying optimistic, as exhausting as that can be these days.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/evs/a-shaky-year-for-american-evs-could-set-the-tone-for-2026-153000210.html?src=rss 

Matthew Perry’s Doctor: All About Salvador Plasencia & His Involvement in the Actor’s Death

Doctor Salvador Plasencia has now been sentenced in connection with the death of Matthew Perry. Learn more about him and his role in the incident.

Doctor Salvador Plasencia has now been sentenced in connection with the death of Matthew Perry. Learn more about him and his role in the incident. 

Apple’s AirPods 4 with ANC are back on sale for $99

If you missed the Black Friday sale on Apple’s AirPods 4 with ANC, you’re in luck — they’re back on sale at the same $99 price for a substantial $80 savings (45 percent). What’s more, if you’re one who frets about damaging your gear, you can grab them with AppleCare+ for $118, saving 43 percent from the normal price. 

We think that the AirPods Pro 2 are the best AirPods overall, but the ANC-enabled AirPods 4 are also a solid choice, especially at this price. We gave them a score of 86 in our review.

Apple’s AirPods 4 come in two variants, with and without ANC. Though the base model is solid, the version on sale here with ANC offers a number of advantages like Conversation Awareness, Adaptive Audio and Transparency mode. They also have a charging case that supports MagSafe and Qi-compatible wireless charging, along with a built-in speaker that emits beeps when you activate Find My. And as Apple recently announced, AirPods 4 with ANC supports the company’s Live Translation feature. 

Our main reservation with the AirPods 4 with ANC is that the Airpods Pro 2 are a better noise-cancellation option when they go on sale. At this price, though, the AirPods 4 with ANC are a real bargain if you’re looking for new buds — especially if you prefer the open-ears type. As mentioned, for extra peace of mind you can also get the Airpods 4 with ANC plus AppleCare+ protection for $118, or 43 percent off. 

Check out our coverage of the best Apple deals for more discounts, and follow @EngadgetDeals on X for the latest tech deals and buying advice.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/audio/apples-airpods-4-with-anc-are-back-on-sale-for-99-140903670.html?src=rss 

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