Hutchins was 29 when she was killed in an ATV accident in Malibu, California, reportedly near Caitlyn’s home.
Hutchins was 29 when she was killed in an ATV accident in Malibu, California, reportedly near Caitlyn’s home.
Hutchins was 29 when she was killed in an ATV accident in Malibu, California, reportedly near Caitlyn’s home.
Hutchins was 29 when she was killed in an ATV accident in Malibu, California, reportedly near Caitlyn’s home.
The latest Amazon Kindle Scribe ereader is on sale for just $260 as part of the upcoming Prime Day festivities. This is a record-low price and a discount of $140. The sale applies to the 16GB model, which is enough storage for thousands of books and notes.
The Kindle Scribe is Amazon’s answer to devices like the reMarkable E ink tablet. It’s both a standard ereader and a tablet for taking notes, as it ships with a pen for scribbling. This makes it handy for writing down thoughts or for mindlessly drawing pizza slices. Users can jot notes over books, but not every title supports this feature.
The Scribe made our list of the best E Ink tablets for a number of reasons. We appreciated the low latency when writing. In most cases, users won’t notice any latency at all. The latest software update also brings in new brush types, which now include a fountain pen, a marker and a pencil. This device makes it easy to create multiple notebooks for different purposes. There are even some AI tools for summarization and the like.
Of course, it’s also a standard ereader. I have a Scribe and, to be honest, I use it primarily for reading. The giant 10.2-inch screen is just so luxe and offers a superior reading experience to standard-sized Kindles. It’s a bit heavier and cumbersome to hold for long periods, but that tradeoff is worth it to me.
The only major downside here is the price. It’s tough to recommend a $400 ereader, even with all of the handwriting bells and whistles. However, this sale certainly takes the edge off a bit.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/deals/the-latest-kindle-scribe-is-140-off-in-this-prime-day-deal-131544290.html?src=rss
By: Jon Stojan
By: Jon Stojan
The so-called “Big, Beautiful Bill” has passed with plenty of nasty treats for the US technology and manufacturing industries. As well as swinging the sword at basic environmental protection measures, the bill sticks its thumb in the eye of the EV industry. Tim Stevens takes you on a tour of the most salient changes, like the imminent end of the EV tax credit. Joining that on the bonfire is the used EV incentive, as well as the rebates for the purchase of commercial EVs.
Similarly, for all of this administration’s talk of bringing manufacturing back to the US, the bill is a middle finger for domestic solar companies. The US is the only credible manufacturing rival to China in solar panels, but the bill cuts these businesses off at the knees. I spoke to people inside the US solar industry who know that, despite whatever tariffs are implemented, this bill opens the door to a flood of cheap, Chinese-made solar panels to usurp their US rivals.
An earlier version of the bill also contained moves that could only be described as weirdly vindictive. It previously proposed an annual EV tax of $250 (and $100 for hybrid owners) as well as a general levy on all wind and solar projects. Why? A cynic might suggest it was due to the bill being drafted to benefit fossil fuel companies at the expense of literally everyone else.
Anyway, hopefully you can enjoy the holiday and won’t need to spend it panic-buying an EV and US-made solar panels. Although that’s not actually a bad way to spend a long weekend.
— Dan Cooper
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Here are the letters that let Apple and Google ignore the TikTok ban
AG Pam Bondi offered a written guarantee they would incur no legal liability.
Xbox was funding Romero Games’ new game, but layoffs have left the project in crisis
Turns out Microsoft was backing John Romero’s new studio.
Uber drivers in British Columbia, Canada have unionized
This will be interesting.
You can snag two months of Paramount+ for just $2, allowing you to take advantage of the new season of Star Trek: Strange New Worlds. The deal applies to both the Essential and Premium plan, so you can easily have a little run of ad-free Star Trek as a treat. And, if you don’t like the idea of binging Strange New Worlds, you can always watch Star Trek: Lower Decks instead.
Microsoft has announced it will cut 9,000 jobs from its global workforce, with much of that focus on its gaming division. Engadget’s Jessica Conditt got the inside scoop from employees at Halo Studios, who reveal all is not well at what should be one of Microsoft’s crown jewels. Sadly, the company was already gutted back in 2023, and the lukewarm reception of its work since then is a sign of how badly things are going.
Translating a work of art is a delicate task requiring nuanced knowledge of both the culture and the languages you’re translating from and to. Unless you’re Anime-favoring streaming service Crunchyroll, which just dumped subtitle files into ChatGPT and hoped for the best. As well as a general sloppiness, Engadget’s Igor Bonifacic found instances of lines beginning with “ChatGPT said:” at the start of a line. Crunchyroll said the subtitles were the result of the unauthorized action of a “third-party vendor,” and it is working to rectify the error right now.
Neil Druckmann, head of Naughty Dog and co-creator of The Last of US and its TV adaptation, is stepping down from the HBO series. He said he’s shifting his focus back to video games full time to work on the studio’s next big title, Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet. The Last of Us Part II co-writer Halley Gross is also stepping down at the same time, and that got our staff TLoU superfan Nathan Ingraham’s antennae twitching. He feels the video game industry, currently suffering body blow after body blow, needs Druckmann (and Gross) far more than the TV world does.
Nothing has launched its third-generation flagship, the $799 Nothing Phone 3, complete with a new eye-catching gimmick. Whereas previous models had the Glyph Interface, a series of flashing lights on the rear cover, the 3 gets a tiny dot-matrix display called the Glyph Matrix. Wanna find out if it’s going to be worth your cash? Check out Mat Smith’s detailed hands-on.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-engadget-newsletter-111523433.html?src=rss
More than six months after TikTok was briefly banned, we still don’t know exactly what its fate in the US will be. But we do have new insight into the legal wrangling that has allowed Apple, Google and other platforms to continue to support the app.
If you remember, TikTok was only “banned” for a matter of hours shortly before President Donald Trump took office in January and delayed enforcement of the law. The app’s service was promptly restored January 19, 2025, but the app didn’t return to Apple and Google’s app stores until February 13. Reporting at the time suggested the companies had lingering concerns about potential liability for running afoul of the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act.
Back in February, Axios and others reported that the Justice Department had given “assurances” to tech platforms that they wouldn’t be penalized for violating the law. Now, we know exactly what Attorney General Pam Bondi told the companied as letters sent to Apple, Google, Amazon, Oracle and other firms have been made public. The letters were disclosed in a Freedom of Information Act Request made by Tony Tan, a software engineer and Google shareholder suing the search giant for not complying with the TikTok ban.
In a letter dated January 30, 2025, Bondi tells Apple and Google that “the President has determined that an abrupt shutdown of the TikTok platform would interfere with the execution of the President’s constitutional duties to take care of the national security and foreign affairs of the United States.” It goes on to state that Apple and Google “may continue to provide services to TikTok … without incurring any legal liability.”
A followup later dated April 5, 2025 (the day after Trump gave TikTok another 75-day reprieve), Bondi told the companies that “the Department of Justice is also irrevocably relinquishing any claims the United States might have had against” them “for the conduct proscribed in the Act during the Covered Period and Extended Covered Period, with respect to TikTok and the larger family of ByteDance Ltd. and TikTok, Inc. applications covered under the Act.”
The letters can be read in full below.
The law has now been paused three times since Trump took office. Earlier this week, he said that details about TikTok’s new ownership could be made public in “about two weeks.”
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/here-are-the-letters-that-let-apple-and-google-ignore-the-tiktok-ban-220630588.html?src=rss
Between back-to-back meetings, after-school pickups, and meals squeezed between errands, finding time for family wellness can feel impossible. That’s precisely what FED Fitness is hoping to change with the help of one of the internet’s most recognizable animated characters. This July, the global home fitness brand is set to launch a co-branded marketing campaign with…
Between back-to-back meetings, after-school pickups, and meals squeezed between errands, finding time for family wellness can feel impossible. That’s precisely what FED Fitness is hoping to change with the help of one of the internet’s most recognizable animated characters. This July, the global home fitness brand is set to launch a co-branded marketing campaign with…
The best value in security cameras is back. This early Prime Day deal has two Blink Mini 2 cameras for only $35. That’s half off — and $5 less than you’d usually pay for only one of them. This matches a Black Friday record low for the pair.
The Blink Mini 2 is a recent offering, arriving in 2024. The compact camera has a built-in LED spotlight, a low-light sensor and color night vision capabilities. It supports 1080p live view, which should be plenty sharp enough for regular use. Its field of view is wider than that of the original model. (It’s 143 degrees diagonally vs. 110 in its predecessor.)
Being an Amazon product, it’s no surprise that it works with Alexa. The camera has two-way audio, so you can chat with your pooch while you’re out. It also supports person detection, but you’ll need a subscription for that. (They start at $3 per month or $30 per year for one device.)
Although it’s primarily an indoor camera, you can also use the Blink Mini 2 outdoors. However, that requires a $10 weather-resistant power adapter. The camera is available in black and white. Both colors are available for the $35 deal.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/deals/get-two-blink-mini-2-security-cameras-for-only-35-in-this-prime-day-deal-201819623.html?src=rss
E Ink, the company behind the highly readable displays you’ll find in ereaders the world over, has created a new touchscreen trackpad for some reason. And rather than act as an extension of your laptop’s screen, E Ink thinks it should be a dedicated home for AI interactions.
The new touchscreen trackpad appears to use a color E Ink display, not unlike what you’ll find on the Kobo Libra Colour or the Kindle Colorsoft, and is supposed to offer the normal swiping, tapping, dragging and clicking functionality of a normal trackpad. When you’re not using it like that, E Ink imagines the trackpad offering “second-screen capabilities,” like quick access to “frequently used shortcuts and system notifications and GenAI contents like text/image summaries, gaming tactics, or custom AI tasks.”
E Ink says it leveraged several different Intel technologies to prototype its AI tools, and it specifically designed the trackpad so it’s useable even if your laptop is off. Unfortunately, that doesn’t make the idea of cramming a touchscreen into a laptop trackpad any less whack.
Using an E Ink display is novel, sure, but plenty of attempts have been made to turn the seemingly untapped resource of the trackpad into another place for content, and none of them have caught on. ASUS in particular has taken multiple bites at the apple with its ScreenPad feature, which it first introduced on the ZenBook Pro 15. The ScreenPad could be an extension of your main display, but it also ran simple apps and widgets. E Ink believes one of the advantages of its trackpad is that it’ll consume less power than those previous versions, but was anyone worried about a laptop’s trackpad affecting its battery life before they also had to be screens?
Putting a display in a trackpad isn’t going to be the reason anyone upgrades to a premium laptop. Beyond that, it’s just not intuitive. You have to both learn to look down to see what’s on the trackpad and learn not to cover it, something hands naturally do while using a laptop.
If you’re not dissuaded, E Ink hasn’t actually shared when its trackpad will be available. Given the use of the Intel tech, though, odds are good it shows up in an expensive “AI PC” at some point in the future.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/neither-ai-nor-e-ink-can-make-touchscreen-trackpads-a-good-idea-202505733.html?src=rss
EA’s beleaguered online shooter Anthem is shutting down for good on January 12, 2026. The game will be removed from the company’s storefront ahead of that on August 15. It’ll be available for download after that date so long as it’s already in your library.
Some aspects of the game have already begun winding down. Players can no longer purchase premium in-game currency as of today, though they can still use existing balances to buy stuff. Anthem is a game that can only be played online, so once the servers shut down in January it will be bricked.
The game launched in 2019 to poor reviews that called out the reliance on grinding and an overall lack of polish. This wasn’t helped by a number of bugs that plagued early builds. Developer BioWare promised fixes, but those took a while to get implemented.
By then, the damage to the brand was too severe. BioWare ceased active development of Anthem in 2021, which was followed by the game’s director leaving the company. In other words, we all kind of knew this shutdown was coming.
EA says that no layoffs occurred at the company as a result of this decision. However, that’s likely because BioWare has already been through several steep staffing cuts. EA laid off 50 BioWare employees in 2023. This was followed by even more layoffs after Dragon Age: The Veilguard underperformed.
BioWare currently has an operating staff of less than 100 people. The company is currently focused on the development of Mass Effect 5.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/anthem-is-officially-shutting-down-on-january-12-185236926.html?src=rss
The late ‘Reservoir Dogs’ star died at the age of 67 on July 3, 2025, his publicist confirmed.
The late ‘Reservoir Dogs’ star died at the age of 67 on July 3, 2025, his publicist confirmed.