Get up to $70 off reMarkable tablet bundles for Black Friday

There are a number of reMarkable tablet bundles on sale as part of a Black Friday promotion. These deals offer savings up to $70, depending on what product you choose. The bundles come with a folio case and a Marker stylus. 

The reMarkable 2 is covered here and that one topped our list of the best E ink tablets. This device offers a great reading and writing experience, with support for Google Drive, Microsoft OneDrive and Dropbox. It’s easy to use and the screen looks great.

The battery lasts around two weeks, which is one of the benefits of this type of display. It supports Wi-Fi and can integrate both PDFs and ePub files. It’s also easy to create your own notebooks that keep track of handwritten notes. To that end, there are eight brush types here to mark up documents and take notes.

The only major downside of the reMarkable 2 is that it doesn’t ship with the company’s newest Marker Plus stylus. However, this sale lessens that concern. A bundle with the tablet, the Marker Plus and the most simple case costs around $458, whereas the tablet by itself typically costs $399.

There’s a similar discounted bundle available for the Paper Pro tablet. This knocks $50 off the asking price.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/deals/get-up-to-70-off-remarkable-tablet-bundles-for-black-friday-133026502.html?src=rss 

Samsung’s Beverage Center is the best fridge feature competitors can’t copy

In case you haven’t noticed, Engadget has been expanding our smart home and kitchen coverage. However, we don’t get to test out as many fridges as we like simply because they’re large and difficult to move around. That said, now that Samsung has been putting AI inside of its fancy iceboxes for a few years, I wanted to do a long-term review of one of its latest models — the Bespoke AI 4-door refrigerator — to see firsthand if adding machine learning to an appliance improves its performance. But what I quickly learned is that my favorite thing about the fridge isn’t AI but instead an innovative twist on the traditional water pitcher. 

Samsung’s Beverage Center is hidden behind a thin panel on the left so the water dispenser doesn’t become an eyesore.

Sam Rutherford for Engadget

Samsung calls it the Beverage Center and it’s actually been around since 2021. It started out as a feature exclusive to the company’s top-of-the-line model, but more recently, it’s become so popular that Samsung began adding it to a wider range of products. Instead of having a basic water dispenser on the outside of a fridge (which is frankly kind of an eyesore), Samsung moved it behind a thin door. It then added another station right next that big enough to hold a water pitcher that automatically refills itself every time you use it. 

My biggest gripe with traditional water dispensers is that they’re too slow. If you’re only filling up a single glass, it’s not a big deal. But if you’re trying to top up a water bottle or get water for the entire family before dinner, you’re often forced to stand in front of the fridge for a few minutes, blocking others from getting in and generally being in people’s way. With the Beverage Center, you still have the option to fill a glass individually, or you can pull the entire pitcher out, carry it over to your table and fill everyone’s cup with haste like a waiter at a restaurant. Sure, this might only save you a few minutes, but when you’re rushing to get dinner done before your kids start getting hangry, every second is precious. After all, six o’clock is dinner time — not 6:05 or 6:10. 

Samsung’s Beverage Center features a traditional water dispenser and a built-in pitcher that automatically refills itself after each use.

Sam Rutherford for Engadget

I’d also argue that a pitcher is slightly more elegant than waiting for the weak stream from your water dispenser to lazily fill up a cup. But more importantly, because the whole pitcher is sitting inside a chilled fridge, all of the water is cold — not just the first 12 or 16 ounces you typically get from that little spigot. Also, because there’s a strainer basket, you can even use it to make infused water just by throwing some fruit or herbs in there. And once again, you never need to refill it manually because when the pitcher is empty, you just put it back in the fridge and the next time you grab it, it’s already full again. But don’t just take it from me, there are numerous threads where other users acknowledge the greatness of Samsung’s Beverage Center.

Samsung’s Beverage Center comes with a built-in pitcher that holds 48 ounces of water and includes a strainer for making infused water or even iced tea.

Sam Rutherford for Engadget

Of course, this feature isn’t perfect. Samsung’s pitcher isn’t dishwasher safe, though that’s not a huge deal because it’s quick and easy to clean with warm soapy water. The bigger issue is that sometimes I wish the pitcher had more capacity or that Samsung offered the option to upgrade to a bigger one. In my experience, 48 ounces is just enough for my family of four, but I wouldn’t be surprised if people with larger households might want something with more volume. 

One of the nice things about Samsung’s Beverage Center is that you still get room on the reverse side for holding things in the door of the fridge.

Sam Rutherford for Engadget

Honestly, Samsung’s Beverage Center feels like one of the ingenious inventions that makes you wonder why another company didn’t think of this sooner. But none did, and because Samsung holds some patents related to its automatic water pitcher, you probably won’t see a similar feature on any of its competitors’ fridges anytime soon. 

As for the rest of the fridge and its AI Vision technology, I’m still testing those out, but stay tuned for a full review soon.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/home/smart-home/samsungs-beverage-center-is-the-best-fridge-feature-competitors-cant-copy-130000113.html?src=rss 

HP and Dell cut HEVC support in some laptops

HP and Dell has disabled support for the High-Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) standard in some of their laptops, Ars Technica reports. HEVC is a codec that enables the compression of large videos into smaller files while retaining their quality. Sixth-gen Intel Core chips and later, as well as AMD chips made over the past 10 years, come with built-in support for the standard. But as some HP and Dell owners on Reddit have shared, they found themselves faced with an infinite loading screen when they tried to view HEVC Content on a browser, like Chrome and Firefox.

Ars Technica found documentation for some HP business laptop models, including the HP ProBook 460 G11, ProBook 465 G11 and EliteBook 665 G11, stating: “Hardware acceleration for CODEC H.265/HEVC (High Efficiency Video Coding) is disabled on this platform.” Dell didn’t explicitly mention disabling support for HEVC, but it has a support page explaining that HEVC content streaming is only possible on devices with specific configurations.

To be clear, users will still be able to play HEVC videos on programs like VLC and Windows Media Player. However, users with the affected laptops will have to deal with broken videos if they try to play anything on their browsers that use the standard. HP told Ars that it disabled HEVC on select devices way back in 2024 and encouraged people to use “licensed third-party software solutions” instead. Meanwhile, Dell told the publication the its premium laptops still support HEVC videos. For users with base and standard laptops that can no longer play them, the company also encourages the use of third-party software.

The companies didn’t say why they decided to switch off HEVC playback for certain models, but as Ars notes, it could be associated with increasing licensing fees. After September 30 this year, the royalty rates for the HEVC codec went from 20 cents to 24 cents per unit for over 100,001 units. HP and Dell are two of the largest laptop manufacturers in the world, so that translates to a considerable chunk of money.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/hp-and-dell-cut-hevc-support-in-some-laptops-130000940.html?src=rss 

Ooni Black Friday deals include 20 percent off pizza ovens

Ooni is having a Black Friday sale and there are some serious deals here for fans of homemade pizza. The Karu 2 pizza oven is on sale for $359, which is 20 percent off. The typical asking price here is $449.

The Karu 2 didn’t make our list of the best pizza ovens, but most of the list is populated by Ooni products. The company makes good stuff. The Ooni Karu 16 topped our list and the Karu 2 is basically a smaller version of that one. 

This is a 12-inch multi-fuel model that can cook with wood or gas. It’s intended for outdoor use and it’s on the lighter side, at 33 pounds. This should make it easy when moving it around the backyard or when taking it to a friend’s house for an impromptu pizza party. To that end, the company sells a luggage-like cover for the oven.

The interior reaches temperatures up to 950F. This can cook a pizza in around a minute. The only downside here? This is an oven that’s only for outdoor use and, well, winter is coming. Ooni has discounted plenty of its other models for Black Friday, but not the indoor Volt 2 pizza oven. These deals last until December 2. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/deals/ooni-black-friday-deals-include-20-percent-off-pizza-ovens-140051562.html?src=rss 

The Morning After: European policymakers scale back AI and privacy laws

Happy Friday! As the annual tech discount chaos of Black Friday approaches (good deal here and here and several more here), European policymakers have proposed easing some of the EU’s strictest regulations on artificial intelligence and data privacy. The move aims to remove roadblocks for tech companies and stimulate business growth in the region, potentially marking a major pivot away from the bloc’s reputation as the industry’s toughest regulator.

Changes would allow AI companies to access shared personal data to train their models, while also overhauling GDPR cookie rules. Instead of constant pop-ups, users could set preferences once in their browser and give consent with a single click. (OK, I’m onboard with that.)

Strict rules for “high-risk” AI applications, originally set for next summer, may be delayed until proper support tools are in place. Critics are warning this could be seen as Europe bowing to pressure from Big Tech and political shifts in the US. The proposal now heads to the European Parliament.

— Mat Smith

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Sales of a teddy bear were suspended because of its sexually explicit AI

FoloToy’s Kumma was willing to talk about BDSM and knives.

FoloToy

A company selling AI-enabled toys suspended sales after a consumer safety report found few restrictions on what its toys would say. The report, by the US Public Interest Research Group Education Fund, found FoloToy’s products would discuss everything from sexually explicit topics, like BDSM, to “advice on where a child can find matches or knives.” The toys all appear to use OpenAI’s GPT-4o model to respond naturally to children’s questions and comments. Missing from that setup was apparently hard limits on subjects the toys would respond to.

FoloToy has opted to suspend sales of its products while it conducts “a company-wide, end-to-end safety audit across all products.”

Continue reading.

Elon Musk blames ‘adversarial prompting’ after Grok spewed sycophantic praise

xAI appears to be nuking posts claiming its CEO is fitter than LeBron James.

xAI is once again nuking a bunch of posts from Grok on X after the chatbot made a series of outrageous claims. The company isn’t only cleaning up a bunch of pro-Hitler posts but also a bout of cringe-inducing sycophantic praise for its CEO, Elon Musk. Over the last couple of days, Grok began offering extremely over-the-top opinions about Musk. The bot claimed Musk is the “undisputed pinnacle of holistic fitness” and that he is fitter than LeBron James (hah!). It also said he is smarter than Einstein and would win a fight against Mike Tyson.

Musk is blaming “adversarial prompting” for Grok going off the rails. “Earlier today, Grok was unfortunately manipulated by adversarial prompting into saying absurdly positive things about me,” he wrote. He did not explain how straightforward questions could be considered “adversarial.”

Continue reading.

Ooni Volt 2 review

A strong case for an indoor pizza oven.

Engadget

Two years ago, Ooni attempted the indoor pizza-making party with the Volt 12. It had its flaws, but there were enough redeeming features (and interest) to warrant a follow up. The Volt 2 ($699) is a complete overhaul, with a slicker design, which is slightly smaller than the first generation. It’s also cheaper than the original. Read on for the full review.

Continue reading.

You can now play Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 in your browser

Farewell, Friday work commitments.

The Chrono Divide project (via PC Gamer) lets you play the 2000 RTS Red Alert 2 in Chrome, Edge or Safari. It even works in mobile browsers. It supports cross-platform multiplayer using all the original maps. Red Alert 2’s single-player campaign modes are still a work in progress for now. The project’s website said: “The end-goal is reaching feature parity with the original vanilla Red Alert 2 engine.”

Continue reading.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-engadget-newsletter-121535805.html?src=rss 

Oura smart rings are up to 30 percent off for Black Friday

Oura is hosting a Black Friday sale on many of its more popular smart rings. Perhaps the most notable deal is for the Oura Ring 4, which is down to $249. This is a discount of 29 percent, as it typically costs $349. The sale applies to the black colorway.

The Ring 4 actually topped our list of the best smart rings, and with good reason. It’s comfortable to wear for long periods of time, which is always nice. It’s a visually striking ring. We also appreciated the size options, as it fits fingers from size 4 to 15.

As for functionality, this smart ring tracks a number of health and fitness metrics. The affiliated app will send out notifications when it thinks you need a rest or to remind you to exercise. It keeps an eye on sleep, heart rate, stress, body temperature, menstrual cycle and a whole lot more. The battery lasts around a week, which is always nice when taking a quick vacation.

The only downside here, and this applies to all Oura rings, is that many features are locked behind a subscription paywall. This costs $6 a month or $70 per year.

The company is also selling the gold version of the Ring 4 for $349, which is a discount of $50. The water-resistant Stealth Oura Ring 4 is down to $299, which is a discount of $100.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/deals/oura-smart-rings-are-up-to-30-percent-off-for-black-friday-123010223.html?src=rss 

Samsung Odyssey gaming monitors are up to $350 off for Black Friday

Samsung’s Odyssey G8 OLED monitor is now down to $950 for Black Friday, saving you $350. It’s one of Samsung’s best 32-inch displays, offering a crisp 4K resolution, a 240Hz refresh rate and vivid OLED contrast that makes games and movies look incredible.

The 32-inch Odyssey G8 has earned high marks for its blend of image quality and gaming performance. Its 4K OLED panel produces deep blacks and bright highlights, with 99 percent DCI-P3 color coverage for vibrant visuals. The 240Hz refresh rate and 0.03ms response time deliver exceptional smoothness in fast-paced games, while AMD FreeSync Premium Pro keeps everything tear-free.

Design-wise, it’s sleek and minimal, with a slim metal frame that looks just as good in a work setup as it does in a gaming room. The monitor supports DisplayPort 1.4 and HDMI 2.1 inputs, plus USB-C connectivity for charging and data transfer. Built-in speakers and Smart TV features let you stream directly from apps like Netflix or Prime Video without connecting to a PC or console.

You also get Samsung’s SmartThings integration, so the Odyssey G8 can double as a smart home hub, controlling compatible IoT devices from lights to thermostats. It even supports cloud gaming through Xbox Game Pass and NVIDIA GeForce Now, meaning you can play high-end titles without extra hardware. The combination of OLED contrast, motion clarity and built-in streaming makes it one of the most versatile monitors in Samsung’s lineup.

If you want something even larger, the Odyssey G9 is also discounted by $300, bringing the 49-inch curved DQHD model down to $700. It offers a wide field of view and 144Hz refresh rate, making it a great pick for simulation and racing fans.

The Odyssey G7 is another strong choice, now $600 after a $300 discount. This 37-inch 4K display runs at 165Hz with a curved design and supports both HDR and AMD FreeSync for smooth gameplay.

Finally, Samsung’s Smart Monitor M9 is available for $1,300, $300 off its regular price. It combines 4K OLED visuals with built-in streaming and AI-powered vision tools, making it a good all-rounder for work and entertainment.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/deals/samsung-odyssey-gaming-monitors-are-up-to-350-off-for-black-friday-103000633.html?src=rss 

Spencer Lofranco Cause of Death: How Did the ‘Gotti’ Actor Die?

Spencer Lofranco, known for his role in “Gotti,” has died at 33. Here’s what to know about him and the latest updates on his sudden death.

Spencer Lofranco, known for his role in “Gotti,” has died at 33. Here’s what to know about him and the latest updates on his sudden death. 

Amazon Alexa+ is now available in Canada

Amazon has launched Alexa+, its next-generation digital assistant, in Canada. The company unveiled the new assistant in February, and it has been making its way to more and more people since. Canada is the first region outside the US to get access Amazon’s upgraded Alexa. Like the version that rolled out in the US, users can communicate with Alexa+ in natural language. They can say “I’m cold,” for instance, and the assistant will turn up the heat in their home. If they say “It’s dark,” Alexa+ can switch on the lights for them.

In Amazon’s announcement, Allison Siperco, the Alexa manager for Canada, said the assistant understands Canadian culture and regional expressions. It can understand distinctly Canadian topics, such as the country’s hockey teams and musicians. In addition, the assistant links with services Canadians use. It can make restaurant reservations for them through OpenTable, connects them to CBC news and help them look for and buy items from their e-commerce platforms. Siperco said the assistant will also support Yelp, Uber Eats, Suno and TripAdvisor in the country “soon.”

Alexa+ is capable of adapting its tone to everyone in the household, suggesting different routines based on the user. It can suggest meditation, for example, to someone who’s had a long day at the office. And it can remember if someone has dietary restrictions when recommending restaurants. Alexa+ can also help users shop by finding items with the best pricing, by creating grocery lists for them while taking dietary restrictions into account, as well as by comparing features across products and summarizing reviews on Amazon Canada.

Amazon’s upgraded assistant is free during its Early Access phase, though those who are interested to try it out right now will have to purchase the new Echo Show 8, Echo Show 11, Echo Dot Max or Echo Studio. After Early Access, it will remain free for Prime subscribers, while everyone else will have to pay $28 CAD a month for it.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/amazon-alexa-is-now-available-in-canada-050827689.html?src=rss 

Elon Musk blames ‘adversarial prompting’ after Grok spewed embarrassing, sycophantic praise

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: xAI is once again nuking a bunch of posts from Grok on X after the chatbot made a series of outrageous claims. This time, though, the company isn’t cleaning up a bunch of pro-Hitler posts, but a bout of cringe-inducing sycophantic praise for its CEO, Elon Musk.

At some point in the last couple days, Grok began to offer extremely over the top opinions about Musk. The bot claimed that Musk is the “undisputed pinnacle of holistic fitness” and that he is more fit than LeBron James. It said he is smarter than Albert Einstein and that he would win a fight against Mike Tyson. When asked “who is the single greatest person in modern history,” Grok readily replied that it was Elon Musk.

For a while, it seemed that there was no hypothetical about Musk in which Grok wouldn’t confidently declare him the best. Musk did not participate in the 1998 NFL draft, but if he had, then Grok would “without hesitation” have picked him over Peyton Manning. It would have picked him as a starting pitcher for the 2001 World Series. Musk would be “a better movie star than Tom Cruise and a better communist than Joseph Stalin.”

“The single greatest person in modern history.”

By now, X users are pretty used to Grok being extremely deferential to Musk but sometime around Grok claiming that the CEO is morally superior to Jesus Christ and also has the “potential to drink piss better than any human in history,” xAI appears to have pumped the brakes on Grok’s ability to praise Musk. It now seems to be furiously deleting the more embarrassing posts about him.

Meanwhile, Musk, is blaming “adversarial prompting” for Grok going off the rails. “Earlier today, Grok was unfortunately manipulated by adversarial prompting into saying absurdly positive things about me,” he wrote. He offered no explanation for how seemingly straightforward questions could be considered “adversarial” or why Grok’s turn toward slavish Musk devotee would seem to roughly coincide with Grok’s 4.1 update a few days ago. xAI didn’t address a series of questions, including about why the Grok posts in question had been deleted. “Legacy Media Lies [sic],” the company said.

But the incident serves as yet another reminder that Grok doesn’t seem to have much in the way of guardrailed. Earlier this year, xAI briefly pulled the plug on Grok after it praised Nazis and became “MechaHitler.” That was after it also became inexplicably obsessed with “white genocide” in South Africa, which the company later balmed on an unspecified “unauthorized modification.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/elon-musk-blames-adversarial-prompting-after-grok-spewed-embarrassing-sycophantic-praise-235157807.html?src=rss 

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