Carl Erik Rinsch, the director of 47 Ronin, has been charged for defrauding a streaming service out of $11 million, according to the Southern District of New York's US Attorney's Office. While the court documents didn't name the service, an old report from The New York Times made it obvious that it was none other than Netflix. In 2018, Rinsch pitched a sci-fi series called White Horse, referencing the first horseman of the apocalypse, to several services, namely Amazon, Apple, HBO, Hulu, Netflix and YouTube. The Times' report said that Amazon had already won the bidding war, but Netflix's former VP of Original Content, Cindy Holland, called Rinsch on a weekend and offered millions more, along with the privilege of making a director's cut.
In its announcement of the indictment, the US Attorney's Office explained that Netflix had paid $44 million for the development of White Horse, which had been renamed to Conquest, between 2018 and 2019. Some of that money went to paying off the project's earliest investors. (Keanu Reeves, the star of 47 Ronin, sank his own money into the project after Rinsch got in trouble with 30West, one of the project's first investors, for not reaching a deadline.) Between late 2019 and early 2020, Rinsch asked Netflix for more funding, and the company gave him $11 million more to complete the series. But Rinsch never finished the show, and Netflix accused him of using those funds to make "personal and speculative purchases of securities."
The director allegedly lost most of the $11 million to trading, but he made it back and earned more from investing the rest on cryptocurrency. Rinsch allegedly went on a shopping spree after that, spending almost $4 million on furniture and antiques, $2.4 million on five Rolls-Royces and one Ferrari, as well as $652,000 on luxury watches and clothing. The indictment also said that Rinsch spent over $1 million to sue Netflix for more money. According to The Times' report, Rinsch claimed in his lawsuit that Netflix broke its contract and owed him several more payments worth $14 million. In the midst of all of these, Rinsch reportedly displayed erratic behavior: He allegedly claimed to have discovered Covid-19’s secret transmission mechanism, treated the show's staff horribly and accused his wife of plotting his assassination.
Conquest was supposed to be about a genius who invented a human-like species called Organic Intelligent. These OIs are deployed to solve problems and provide humanitarian aid around the world, but they are, of course, not what they seem and are hiding a darker nature. Rinsch has been charged with one count of wire fraud and one count of money laundering, both of which carry a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. He was also charged with five counts of engaging in monetary transactions in property derived from specified unlawful activity, each count carrying a maximum sentence of 10 years.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/streaming/47-ronin-director-charged-with-11-million-fraud-over-doomed-netflix-sci-fi-series-123040218.html?src=rssPlaydate, the little yellow gaming machine with a crank, is getting a price increase in a few days. In a newsletter that Panic has sent out, the developer said that Playdates will cost $229 starting on March 25 but that you can still get the device for $199 until then. Apparently, Panic moved to a new factory, and it would "cost quite a bit more" to manufacture the devices there than at the company's old facility. Panic cited manufacturing costs, as well, when it raised the handheld's price from $179 to $199 last year.
On the day the Playdate is getting a price hike, Panic is also dropping "an (extremely) limited stock" of systems that are either fully refurbished at its factory or have "very minor cosmetic issues." The refurbished units will sell for $179, and Panic says that they "work great," can "play games perfectly" and come with a six-month warranty. "If price has kept you from buying a Playdate, we're hopeful these great systems might help," the company has written in its announcement.
The handheld gaming console came out in 2022. It has a black-and-white screen with over 150 games that you can download from its Catalog. While the device has the traditional arrow and gaming buttons, it also has a crank that developers incorporate into their games — in Chopter Copter, for instance, you'll have to turn the Playdate on its side to use the crank as a helicopter-style rotor. If you already have a Playdate, the company is having a Catalog Anniversary Sale right now until March 20, where you can stock up on more titles for the handheld. Panic also reconfirmed that it's working with developers to put together a Season 2 bundle, which will deliver a set number of games in a curated collection to buyers' devices over a certain period.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/the-diminutive-playdate-console-is-getting-a-price-increase-to-229-on-march-25-120004199.html?src=rssIf you’ve upgraded your phone recently, there’s a good chance it supports wireless charging. Battery life can be one of the first things to deteriorate as your phone ages, so you’ll need quick and easy ways to power up wherever you are. You may not always be able to have a cable on your person, but investing in a wireless phone charger (or a few) can make it more convenient to plop your phone down and know it’ll have more juice when you pick it back up again.
While you’re not going to get the same charging speed with a wireless charger that you would with a power cable, the convenience of a power source like this is undeniable. Stick a wireless charger on your bedside, on your desk at work, in your kitchen or wherever you spend a good chunk of your time and you’ll have a reliable way to power up your phone, sans bulky, messy cables. Needless to say, there are a ton of options out there with different charging capabilities and price ranges. Below, we’ve collected the best wireless chargers we’ve tested to make your search a little easier.
What to look for in a wireless charger
While it’s tempting to buy a wireless charging pad optimized for the specific phone you have now, resist that urge. Instead, think about the types of devices (phones included) that you could see yourself using in the near future. If you’re sure you’ll use iPhones for a long time, an Apple MagSafe-compatible charger will be faster and more convenient. If you use Android phones or think you might switch sides, however, you’ll want a more universal design. If you have other accessories like wireless earbuds or a smartwatch that supports wireless charging, maybe you’d be better off with a multi-device wireless charger.
Where and how will you use your charger?Odds are that you have a specific use case in mind for your charger. You may want it by your bedside for a quick charge in the morning, or on your desk for at-a-glance notifications. You might even keep it in your bag for convenient travel charging instead of bulky power banks. Think about where you want to use this accessory and what you want to do with the device(s) it charges while it’s powering up. For example, a wireless charging pad might be better for bedside use if you just want to be able to drop your phone down at the end of a long day and know it’ll be powered up in the morning. However, a stand will be better if you have an iPhone and want to make use of the Standby feature during the nighttime hours.
For a desk wireless charger, a stand lets you more easily glance at phone notifications throughout the day. For travelling, undoubtedly, a puck-style charging pad is best since it will take up much less space in your bag than a stand would. Many power banks also include wireless charging pads built in, so one of those might make even more sense for those who are always on the go.
Wireless charging performanceAlthough wireless charging is usually slower than its wired equivalent, speed and wattage are still important considerations. A fast charger can supply enough power for a long night out in the time it takes to change outfits.
In general, a 15W charger is more than quick enough for most situations, and you’ll need a MagSafe-compatible charger to extract that level of performance from an iPhone. With that said, even the slower 7.5W and 10W chargers are fast enough for an overnight power-up. If anything, you’ll want to worry more about support for cases. While many models can deliver power through a reasonably thick case (typically 3mm to 5mm), you’ll occasionally run into examples that only work with naked phones.
There are some proprietary chargers that smash the 15W barrier if you have the right phone. Apple’s latest MagSafe charging pad can provide up to 25W of wireless power to compatible iPhones when paired with a 30W or 35W adapter — the latter being another component you’ll have to get right to make sure the whole equation works as fast as it possibly can.
Quality and box contentsPay attention to what’s included in the box. Some wireless chargers don’t include power adapters, and others may even ask you to reuse your phone’s USB-C charging cable. What may seem to be a bargain may prove expensive if you have to buy extras just to use it properly. As mentioned above, you’ll want to make sure all of the components needed to use the wireless charger can provide the level of power you need — you’re only as strong (or in this case, fast) as your weakest link.
Fit and finish is also worth considering. You’re likely going to use your wireless charger every day, so even small differences in quality could make the difference between joy and frustration. If your charger doesn’t use MagSafe-compatible tech, textured surfaces like fabric or rubberized plastic are more likely to keep your phone in place. The base should be grippy or weighty enough that the charger won’t slide around. Also double check that the wireless charger you’re considering can support phones outfitted with cases — the specifications are usually listed in the charger’s description or specs.
You’ll also want to think about the minor conveniences. Status lights are useful for indicating correct phone placement, but an overly bright light can be distracting. Ideally, the light dims or shuts off after a certain period of time. And while we caution against lips and trays that limit compatibility, you may still want some barriers to prevent your device falling off its perch on the charging station.
Wireless chargers FAQs Do wireless chargers work if you have a phone case?Many wireless chargers do work if you leave the case on your phone. Generally, a case up to 3mm thick should be compatible with most wireless chargers. However, you should check the manufacturer’s guide to ensure a case is supported.
How do I know if my phone supports wireless charging?Checking the phone’s specification should tell you if your phone is compatible with wireless charging. You might see words like “Qi wireless charging” or “wireless charging compatible.”
Do cords charge your phone faster?Most often, wired charging will be faster than wireless charging. However, wired charging also depends on what the charging cable’s speed is and how much power it’s designed to carry. A quick-charging cable that can transmit up to 120W of power is going to be faster than a wireless charger.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/accessories/best-wireless-charger-140036359.html?src=rssAt any given time, there are about 400,000 people up to age 17 in foster care in the United States, according to The Annie E. Casey Foundation.
Many will never be adopted or permanently reunited with their families of origin. That means they’ll “age out” of the system into adulthood on their own, with all the challenges of getting a job, paying rent and pursuing an education.
There are state and federal programs to help with the transition: extended foster care up to age 21, financial assistance for college, Medicaid coverage up to age 26. There are also rights and benefits kids are entitled to while in foster care.
But a lot of foster youth don’t know about the help that’s available. By age 21, only about 70% have earned a high school diploma, and fewer than half have a job. Fewer than 5% have an associate’s degree or vocational training.
In Florida, child welfare advocates are trying to get crucial information to foster youth about these rights and benefits to help them while they’re in the system and when they’re out.
Every year, 700 to 800 foster youth in the state reach the age of 18 or 21 with no permanent legal family, said Robin Rosenberg, deputy director of Florida’s Children First, citing state data on foster care.
Aheim King is one of them. He’s 21 and active in the Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity at Florida State University, and several college and community groups that advocate for foster youth.
“I’m on my own,” said King, who grew up in Tampa. “Once I graduated, I turned 18, I packed my bags.”
And against the odds, he earned an associate degree and is now two semesters away from a bachelor’s in nursing. His college education is supported by a federally backed tuition-and-fee waiver for foster youth, along with a $1,720-a-month stipend.
“When I first came here, I doubted myself, especially my intelligence,” King said. “‘Am I supposed to be here?’ And sometimes I definitely do struggle with it. But I just have to tell myself: ‘I’m confident. I got this.’”
King’s worked all along the way to support himself.
“As far as jobs,” he said, “I’ve worked at Taco Bell, a race-car place, Subway, I was a headhunter at a temp-to-perm agency, I was a CNA [certified nursing assistant] and I did DoorDash.”
King’s friend and fellow foster youth advocate, 20-year-old Quabiona Peeples, also from Tampa, has been bouncing between a series of foster family homes and group homes since she was 6. She’s just started working on a bachelor’s degree in criminology at Florida State.
As a teenager, she couldn’t work to earn her own money.
“I didn’t have the right papers to get a job — birth certificate, Social Security,” she said. “At my group homes, there were some times, if you was misbehaving, you didn’t even get the allowance,” typically around $30 a month.
Peeples has been lucky, getting advice from her foster mom and help from the Florida tuition waiver and stipend.
But, she said, “a lot of foster youth do not know about that. So they be like: ‘What’s the point of graduating if my college is not going to get paid for, who’s going to pay for this, who’s going to pay for this?’”
Fortunately for foster youth in Florida, there’s an app to help them find out about the rights and benefits they’re entitled to.
FosterPower is the brainchild of Taylor Sartor, an attorney at Bay Area Legal Services in Tampa. She got the idea while she was in law school and representing foster youth. Sartor said they had questions, and the answers weren’t in a guidebook.
“‘Am I supposed to get an allowance, I’m in a group home?’” Sartor said. “One teenager was aging out of foster care soon, wanted to know about extended foster care, what kind of benefits were going to be provided.”
FosterPower launched in 2023. The next year, Sartor’s team was awarded a $405,000 from the Legal Services Corp. to expand its reach in Florida and replicate it in other states.
King and Peeples helped test the app — foster youth who worked on the project have been paid advisers, Taylor said.
“If I’m having problems with dental, with medical insurance, with knowing my rights and that I don’t have to be kicked out with a garbage bag at age 18 — I have all that information in my phone,” said King.
The importance of mobile phone access was emphasized by the foster youth advisers.
“We had gotten a lot of feedback — kids lose things, kids in foster care lose things even more. So if kids could have this on their phones, it would be a total game changer,” Sartor said.
FosterPower addresses immigration, independent living, court, health, education, money.”
In addition to providing information and legal references, the app features videos seeded with questions from foster youth, covering topics like master trust accounts, reproductive health and allowance in foster care.
Other programs for foster youth in Florida offer more hands-on help for launching into financial adulthood.
Karen Bowen, 53, runs a foster home in a middle-class Tampa suburb and a house nearby where youth who have aged out of the system or who are in extended care can live more independently.
Bowen has launched Nekkts Step Hope Foundation, a nonprofit that assists foster youth and parents.
“We’re learning all the life skills, job preparation, financial aspects, and I’m walking this with you step by step.” Bowen said her work is guided by her foster kids, including Quabiona Peeples, who lived in Bowen’s foster home through her final years of high school.
Bowen said one day, Peeples called and said, “’Hey Miss Karen, can you come get me and go to with the bank with me? Because I’ve got this charge on here and I’m not understanding.’ And that’s what we do. We go with you, but we stand back and allow you to take charge.”
Building trust with foster youth is crucial, said Zach Laris, a child welfare expert and blogger who formerly served as a policy director at the American Academy of Pediatrics.
“Apps and other services like FosterPower play an important role in reaching young people,” Laris said. “Whether it’s education and training investments, or access to Medicaid up to age 26, young people are much more likely to pursue and follow up on those opportunities when they hear about them from a trusted resource.”
Laris pointed out that about 15% of federal tuition dollars earmarked for foster youth go unclaimed every year. Meanwhile, those who have aged out have lower education levels and earn about half what their peers do, on average, according to data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Looking forward, Laris said child welfare advocates nationwide are worried about Republican plans to cut the federal budget, which could reduce spending on health care, education, housing and food assistance for foster youth.
“Anything and everything could be on the table,” Laris said. For instance, cuts to Medicaid would impact the vast majority of foster youth, who get their health care through the program.
From the Oval Office to the internet, the question of a possible impending recession has been drawing more and more attention lately. President Donald Trump has declined to rule out an economic downturn in the year ahead. And the word “recession” has been peaking on Google Search.
This is all to say there’s a lot of nervous chatter in the air. But how nervous should we really be?
Before we get into what’s at play in the economy right now, let’s remind ourselves what’s been happening in the last few years — even the last few months.
“A lot of the risks to the economy were to the upside,” said Samuel Zief, a global macro strategist at J.P. Morgan Private Bank.
Upside because since the COVID recession, which lasted just two months, he said the economy’s been hot. Maybe a little too hot — with strong gross domestic product growth, a strong job market and strong consumer spending.
Those measures have continued to mostly hold up. So much so, that in this story about recession indicators, I couldn’t even run through the classic red flags like rising unemployment or an inverted yield curve in the bond market. The hard data actually point to a strong economy.
“Where we are seeing some signs of softening is in soft data. Sorry to use the word twice,” Zief said.
Soft data is more about you, the consumer — how you feel and how you respond to how you feel. Maybe up until recently, you were grumpy about all the inflation stuff. But now, it seems a different kind of anxiety has taken over. As in, Googling “Are we in a recession?” from bed at 2 a.m.
“The risk was there before, but it’s much bigger now because of the tariffs,” said Mark Gertler, an economist at New York University.
He said the risk is less about the tariffs themselves and more about the unpredictable trade policy coming out of the White House. “What’s happened is the craziest period of economic policy I’ve seen in my career,” Gertler said.
That has, as we’ve seen, sent the stock market tumbling — which alone is not enough to predict a recession. It is enough, though, to make the 60% of Americans who own stocks nervous. Because the stock market is not the economy, as we say, but it is real money.
Those losses can have serious impact. “You lost your down payment or your children lost their down payment for that home they really wanted,” said Beth Ann Bovino, chief economist at U.S. Bank.
Even if you’re not invested, the mood matters. Recent consumer confidence numbers show a sharp drop in expectations.
“Indeed, The Conference Board readings did drop into recession territory,” Bovino said.
Again, no one indicator signals a recession. There’s actually an organization that identifies them: The National Bureau of Economic Research defines a recession as a significant, widespread decline in economic activity lasting more than a few months.
But this so-called soft data is a warning that people are worried. Experts are looking for the signals beyond the hard data that usually has their focus.
Bovino’s version of this is taking a walk and keeping tabs on her town.
“If you start to see more signs of business closures or reduced hours. If you start to see a lot of ‘Sale’ signs,” she said.
It means people and businesses are hunkering down for whatever’s ahead.
President Donald Trump's efforts to remake the US government continued today with the firing of the two Democratic members of the Federal Trade Commission. This agency has historically had five members: three from the same party as the president and two from the opposing party. The New York Times reported that the president terminated the roles for FTC Commissioners Rebecca Kelly Slaughter and Alvaro Bedoya.
Both Slaughter and Bedoya said today that firing them is illegal. Commissioners' terms can only be ended early for good cause, such as "inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office." Also, no more than three commissioners can come from the same political party, meaning the pair also cannot be replaced by additional Republicans. It seems likely that Trump will face a legal challenge over the attempt to eliminate these positions.
"The law protects the independence of the Commission because the law serves the American people, not corporate power," Slaughter said in a statement. "The reason that the FTC can be so effective for the American people is because of its independence and because its commissioners serve across political parties and ideologies. Removing opposition voices may not change what the Trump majority can do, but it does change whether they will have accountability when they do it."
Bedoya also posted about the action on X, seconding Slaughter's statement that removing their posts is illegal. "Tomorrow I will testify before the Colorado Joint House and Senate Judiciary Committees, and will have more to say then," he wrote.
Trump signed an executive order in February attempting to exert more control over several agencies that were formed to intentionally remain outside the White House's purview. The order targeted agencies such as the FTC, the Federal Communications Commission, and the Securities and Exchange Commission. The FTC recently deleted all the posts on its business blog from President Biden's administration, leaving a four-year gap with no published compliance advice.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/president-trump-has-fired-the-ftcs-two-democrat-commissioners-225952614.html?src=rssBillions of cubic feet of additional natural gas is now moving under the ground, thanks to the completion of 10 major pipeline projects in 2024, according to new analysis by the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
Roughly half of that is natural gas that’s headed to Europe and other parts of the world through what’s called liquefied natural gas, which is slated to see export growth double over the next five years, according to S&P Global. So what is LNG — and why does the rest of the world want it from us?
This big new wave of U.S. LNG exports started in 2016. That’s after fracking revolutionized oil and gas production.
“With the introduction of that technology, the supply curve of natural gas that was available at cost effective prices really expanded significantly,” said Matthew Zaragoza-Watkins, an economist at the University of California, Davis.
Because natural gas plants run even when the sun doesn’t shine and wind doesn’t blow, natural gas pairs well with those renewables as a cleaner alternative to coal. And it’s cheap.
“The United States has a comparative advantage over many countries in terms of our abundant supplies of natural gas,” said Ed Hirs, an energy economist with University of Houston. “We sell LNG to the global market. It goes to China, it goes to Europe, it goes to Asia and Latin America.”
But to get it around the world, pipelines and LNG export terminals are critical. It’s at these terminals where natural gas is sent through an industrial refrigeration process, said Richard Meyer with the American Gas Association.
“That super-cools pipeline gas to minus 260 degrees Fahrenheit,” he said. “And that’s the temperature at which natural gas will turn into a liquid that really condenses the natural gas, makes it very energy dense.”
But the infrastructure necessary to grow the LNG export market does face red tape, which is costly and time-consuming. Though some of that burden should go away under Trump, said Zaragoza-Watkins at UC Davis.
“The willingness of the current administration to issue permits for new LNG export terminals is going to be a significant boon to the industry,” he said.
That will relieve some of the regulatory uncertainty around LNG’s future.
Gold recently crossed the $3,000 mark for the first time. One reason that’s notable — it’s a sign of economic anxiety.
Investors are unnerved over a renewed trade war and the prospects of a recession, and so they are seeking shelter from the storm. For some, gold is that shelter.
Gold doesn’t pay dividends. You can’t spend it at the grocery store.
But it’s considered a safer place to park your money when other investments in, say, the U.S. stock market, look like they’re going south.
“People are seeing a lot of commercials that are running. ‘Gold is at all time highs, buy gold.’ There’s sort of a mania,” said Lee Baker, president of Claris Financial Advisors in Atlanta. He has been fielding lots of client calls on this topic.
“You know, it feels like everything is falling down around us. Let’s go to something that’s tangible. It’s there,” said Baker.
For these clients, gold just feels more real than stocks and bonds.
It’s not just anxious investors running up the price. Central banks are stocking up, too, in hopes the investment will endure this moment of economic uncertainty.
“Gold has this very long track record of holding its value” over very long periods of time, said Campbell Harvey, a professor of finance at Duke. Millenia, even.
“For most investors, their horizon is more like five to ten years,” said Harvey.
And over those shorter time periods, the value of gold can be volatile, just like any other commodity.
Paolo Pasquariello, professor of finance at the University of Michigan, said gold is among several safe havens people flock to in times of turmoil. One of them is the U.S. Treasuries. But right now, he said they’re less appealing to some investors.
“Whether the money that you lend to the U.S. government is going to be returned,” he said. “All of these things that are typically assumed as granted are not anymore.”
So, Pasquariello said, some investors who would typically be flocking to U.S. bonds are buying up gold bars instead.
The Federal Trade Commission has removed all posts from President Joe Biden's term in office from its business blog. This online publication has historically provided advice about how companies could best comply with consumer-protection regulations, covering topics such as artificial intelligence and how big tech companies have collected and used customer data. Currently, it has no content published between December 21, 2020 and March 7, 2025.
Wired highlighted some of the notable content from the more than 300 blog posts that have been deleted. Several current and former FTC officials spoke to the publication about the change anonymously out of fear of retaliation.
“In terms of the message to industry on what our compliance expectations were, which is in some ways the most important part of enforcement action, they are trying to just erase those from history,” one source said.
The FTC is being led by President Donald Trump's nominee, Andrew Ferguson. At the time of his appointment, Ferguson said he would use the department to "end Big Tech's vendetta against competition and free speech." He and other Republicans have claimed that many platforms are censoring right-wing content, adding a heavy layer of irony to the FTC's latest actions.
"They are talking a big game on censorship," another source told Wired. "But at the end of the day, the thing that really hits these companies' bottom line is what data they can collect, how they can use that data, whether they can train their AI models on that data, and if this administration is planning to take the foot off the gas there while stepping up its work on censorship."
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/the-ftc-has-removed-all-business-blog-posts-from-the-biden-administration-214734633.html?src=rssAt the beginning of the second Trump administration, when Elon Musk was just beginning to slash federal programs and fire thousands of government workers, his electric vehicle company Tesla reported that its 2024 revenue from car sales fell by 8% in 2024, compared to the year before.
But another, smaller revenue stream rose by 54% — sales of regulatory credits. Those credits, issued by governments around the globe, have played a key role in the development of electric vehicles and in the growth of EV companies, especially Tesla.
Here’s why they exist: Some governments want people to eventually drive cars and trucks that don’t run on gasoline. These governments include California’s, which set a goal in 2020 that will require all new passenger cars and trucks sold by 2035 to be “zero-emission vehicles” or plug-in hybrids.
To meet that goal, California gives automakers credits for each zero-emission vehicle they sell in the state. Right now, apart from a small number of cars powered by hydrogen fuel cells, those are mostly electric vehicles. The farther a car can drive on a single charge, the more credits it gets.
Each company has a quota of credits it needs to hit every year. But not all of them sell enough EVs to meet their mark. So when a car company falls short, it has another option.
“It has to buy credits from another automaker that has exceeded its quota,” said Pavel Molchanov, an analyst at Raymond James. That means “traditional” car companies “are going to be paying for the credits from the pure electric companies.”
Those “pure electric companies” are primarily Tesla, and more recently, Rivian. They generate lots of surplus credits because they only make electric vehicles.
California is not the only place where carmakers get credits like this. About a dozen other states follow its emissions rules. The Environmental Protection Agency has a similar system for vehicle emissions and fuel efficiency, and so does the European Union.
Add up all the credits accumulated from those markets, and selling the excess to traditional car companies is a pretty easy way for Tesla and Rivian to make money. It’s a lot easier than building a car.
With all the material that goes into a car, the profit margin is “only like 15%, let’s say,” said Tom Narayan at RBC Capital Markets. “But with a regulatory credit, it is 100% profit.”
That’s because the overhead needed to generate and sell credits is extremely low, Narayan said.
So historically, credits have been one of Tesla’s biggest sources of profits, said Seth Goldstein, an equity strategist at Morningstar. Especially in its early years, regulatory credits helped the carmaker stay afloat.
“When Tesla’s underlying business was still unprofitable, it often used the credits as a way to bridge the gap to profitability,” Goldstein said.
Now Tesla’s profitable, so it’s using credit revenue to offset discounts on its cars, according to Narayan at RBC.
Rivian, meanwhile, is still losing money on its electric trucks and SUVs, so selling regulatory credits is helping keep it afloat.
Neither company responded to requests for comment.
But both could stand to gain in the years ahead, as California gets closer to its goal of phasing out gas cars by 2035.
“Credit prices are going to start going up if these regulations stay in place,” said Daniel Sperling, director of the Institute for Transportation Studies at University of California, Davis. He helped create the current regulatory credit system when he was a member of the California Air Resources Board.
The future of these regulations is an “if,” because the Trump administration is pushing to revoke a federal waiver that allows California to set its own vehicle emissions rules.
But car companies will keep moving toward electric vehicles anyway, Sperling said.
“Even if you gutted the requirements in California, these companies can’t afford to sit on the sideline with EV technology,” he said. “They’ve all acknowledged this is the future.”
Because, he said, battery technology, vehicle range and charging infrastructure are all improving. That’s thanks in large part to innovations made by Tesla. And Tesla has been able to innovate, Sperling said, because it’s had financial support from selling regulatory credits.
“Tesla would’ve gone bankrupt without these regulatory credits,” he said.
And that, he said, would’ve slowed down the automotive industry’s transition to EVs.
Another indicator that economists pay attention to when looking out for a recession? Housing starts.
When new residential construction is down and stays down, that can signal a slowdown.
Now that’s not a guaranteed predictor. But new building permits last month declined 6.8% compared to February of 2024. And builder confidence for new single-family homes is the lowest it’s been in seven months.
That’s partly an interest rate problem, as we’ve talked about on this show before. But increasingly, it’s also a tariff problem.
And here in Southern California, where there are a lot of people looking for building permits after the recent wildfires, that problem is hitting even more people than it normally would.
The tariffs are just piling onto a bigger, longer-lasting problem: homeowners don’t have good reasons to sell.
“Why do that? You know, I’ve got a nice low interest rate. I got nice monthly payments, that’s mainly the force behind that,” said Michael Bellaman, CEO of Associated Builders and Contractors.
Bellaman said the tariffs themselves haven’t had a major impact yet. It’s the price uncertainty that’s mucking with the industry.
“Developers or construction project owners that are thinking about pulling the trigger for a project are saying, ‘You know what, let’s wait until this settles down,’” said Bellaman.
Just the fear of increasing prices has already started to cause problems for architect Dan Brunn, who’s working on rebuilding homes after LA’s wildfires.
On a renovation job he’s got now, “The contractor has already basically announced that they will need to have the client buy all of these appliances today even though they won’t be brought to the site in six months,” Brunn said, because suppliers are trying to lock in prices before they go up.
Fine, except now that stove is sitting in a warehouse, gathering dust, waiting to go in a home that isn’t built yet.
“You can’t have products just sitting around and not being utilized and hooked up, and your warranty starts from that day, too,” said Brunn.
A lot of construction basics could see new price pressures, said Chief Economist Ken Simonson with the Associated General Contractors of America.
“The industry relies on a lot of Canadian lumber, on imported steel, aluminum and copper,” which Simonson said is in the appliances, the electronics, the furniture, the lighting fixtures. And then there’s specialty products.
“Decorative tile comes in part from Italy and from Spain,” said Simonson. “And so if we see tariffs on the EU, those might hit those particular products.”
Architect Dan Brunn also said the alternative he keeps hearing — to buy American instead — won’t help much. Because even if, say, a stove is assembled here, he said the components inside come from overseas and face the same tariffs anyway.
Starting Tuesday, Disney+ has a 24/7 streaming channel for The Simpsons that broadcasts seasons one through 35 (all but the currently airing one) chronologically.
To be clear, this announcement isn't about any new content, as you can already watch each of those 767 episodes on-demand on Disney+. All that's different here is a single stream that runs through each of them in order around the clock. If episodes average 22 minutes long, that would have the stream taking nearly 12 days to refresh.
The advantage for those who like this format (I can only guess) is you don't have to think about where to pick up; just turn on the stream and imagine you're popping in on The Cartoon Network's longest marathon ever.
"The Simpsons Stream will deliver a Simpsons marathon all day, every day — no matter when you tune in, this ultimate Simpsons binge will be there," current show-runner Matt Selman wrote in a press release.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/streaming/disney-adds-a-247-stream-of-the-simpsons-203929882.html?src=rss
NVIDIA is building a desktop supercomputer. At the company's GTC conference today, CEO Jensen Huang announced DGX Spark and DGX Station. We got a first look at the former during CES earlier this year when Huang and company revealed Project Digits. Now known as DGX Spark, NVIDIA is billing the $3,000 device as the world's smallest AI supercomputer.
It features a GB10 Grace Blackwell Superchip NVIDIA has shrunk down to fit inside an enclosure about the size of the previous generation Mac mini. NVIDIA says the GB10 can run up to 1,000 trillion operations per second of AI compute, making it ideal for fine-tuning the latest AI reasoning models, including the GR00T N1 robot system Huang announced at the end of his GTC keynote. The DGX Spark is available to preorder today.
NVIDIAFor researchers and data scientists who need even more AI processing power, the DGX Station features a GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip. The GB300 offers 20 petaflops of performance and 784GB of unified system memory. NVIDIA has yet to announce a price for the DGX Station, though the company says the computer will arrive later this year, with ASUS, BOXX, Dell, HP, Lambda and Supermicro all making their own versions of the system.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/nvidias-spark-desktop-ai-supercomputer-arrives-this-summer-200351998.html?src=rssHP is launching a thinner and lighter version of its Omen 16 gaming laptop. The Omen 16 Slim is 16 percent thinner than the standard model, ranging from 0.78 to 0.89 inches (19.9 to 22.7 mm) thick when closed. It weighs 5.35 lbs.
The HP Omen 16 Slim includes up to NVIDIA RTX 5070 graphics (no word yet on the cheaper configurations). It uses Intel Arrow Lake processors, ranging from the entry-level Core Ultra 5 225H to the Core Ultra 9 285H. You can fit it with 16GB, 24GB or 32GB of RAM and choose between 512GB and 1TB storage tiers.
As its name suggests, it has a 16-inch display with up to 2,560 x 1,600 resolution. (Cheaper configs are limited to 1,920 x 1,200.) The machine includes a 10Gbps USB-C port, along with a 10Gbps Type-A, two 5Gbps Type-A ports, an RJ-45 ethernet connector, a 3.5mm headphone / mic combo jack and a single HDMI 2.1 port.
There's no official word yet on pricing or a release date, but The Verge reports that HP is targeting a May launch.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/hp-has-a-thinner-and-lighter-version-of-the-omen-16-gaming-laptop-190717824.html?src=rssHyperX just introduced a new wireless headset that can keep rocking for up to 200 hours on a single charge. That’s over a week of constant music. The Cloud III S is a followup to 2023’s original wireless headset, but brings Bluetooth audio into the mix. The robust battery allows for the aforementioned 200 hours of listening when using Bluetooth.
That metric drops to around 120 hours when streaming audio via a 2.4GHz wireless connection. Just like the original, the headphones ship with a USB dongle for 2.4GHz. However, it can connect without a dongle when using certain newer HP Omen gaming laptops.
HyperXA long-lasting battery isn’t the only innovation the Cloud III S brings to the table. It’s also fully customizable, via magnetic ear plates. These are 3D-printed on demand, which is something HyperX has been experimenting with for a while. Users can create and buy these customized 3D-printed ear plates directly from HyperX, but only in select countries.
There’s also a removable boom mic for traveling, but that won’t impede the ability to take calls or trash talk other gamers. The headphones feature a backup omni-directional mic, which is a nice touch.
The HyperX Cloud III S is expected to hit store shelves in May, but pricing hasn’t been solidified yet. For reference, the original Cloud III launched for $170. The new headset will be available in an all-back or black and red.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/hyperxs-new-cloud-iii-s-wireless-headset-streams-bluetooth-audio-for-200-hours-on-a-single-charge-184838572.html?src=rssSarah Wynn-Williams joined Facebook in 2011 when it was very much in its “move fast and break things” era. A former United Nations diplomat, she had aspirations of helping Facebook boost its standing on the global stage.
Over nearly seven years at the company, she had a front-row seat to some of Facebook’s most consequential (and controversial) moments. Last week, she published Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism, a memoir about her time at the company and how she slowly became disillusioned about Facebook’s role in the world.
Since it was announced, Meta has thrown the full weight of its PR machine against the book. The company initiated arbitration proceedings, which resulted in a ruling that now prevents Wynn-Williams from promoting her own book. Meta spokesperson Andy Stone said the arbitrator’s decision “affirms that Sarah Wynn Williams’ false and defamatory book should never have been published.” He said that “urgent legal action was made necessary by Williams, who more than eight years after being terminated by the company, deliberately concealed the existence of her book project and avoided the industry’s standard fact-checking process in order to rush it to shelves after waiting for eight years.”
Her publisher, Flatiron Books, said in a statement it was “appalled” by Meta’s actions, noting that “the arbitrator's order makes no reference to the claims” in the book, which “went through a thorough editing and vetting process.”
After reading the book, it’s easy to see why Meta PR has made such a fuss. Wynn-Williams worked closely with the company’s top executives, traveling around the world with Mark Zuckerberg and former COO Sheryl Sandberg as they met with foreign leaders and shaped the policies that would define Facebook. She also delivers many firsthand accounts of what Zuckerberg, Sandberg and current Chief of Global Affairs Joel Kaplan did and said behind closed doors. Much of it isn’t pretty.
Here are some of her most shocking claims:
Zuckerberg requested to be “gently mobbed” during a visit to AsiaWynn-Williams was often tasked with organizing the meetings various Facebook executives took with heads of state and other government officials. One of the more bizarre details is Zuckerberg’s request ahead of a three-week long trip to Asia. According to Wynn-Williams, Zuckerberg requested that she arrange either a “peace rally” or a “riot” during his visit. Facebook’s CEO never explains the request, but Wynn-Williams speculates he wanted "to test out how effective his product is in turning Facebook’s online tools into offline power.”
At first, I think he's joking. Peace rallies are not my area of expertise, and-to be frank-I've never been asked to organize a riot before. Especially one for a tech CEO. I assume something has been lost in his communication-that it's some sort of mix-up. "Riot" and "peace rally" are such completely different things. Then Debbie emails to say that she ran into Mark and he told her that he wants a peace rally or a riot and we need to come up with some ideas that will enable him to be surrounded by people or be "gently mobbed."
Zuckerberg refused to take meetings before noon, even with heads of stateZuckerberg apparently had a “strict” policy about not taking any meetings before noon. This policy applied not only to internal meetings with others at Facebook, but heads of state. Wynn-Williams recounts how Zuckerberg’s “refusal” to take morning meetings almost derailed a planned meeting with the president of Colombia. That same year, she said she was forced to reschedule Zuckerberg’s address at the UN to a later time slot because, according to Wynn-Williams, “the United Nations isn’t important enough for Mark to do an event before noon.”
Meta built Zuckerberg a special room to protect him from ZikaFacebook took “extreme measures” to protect Zuckerberg from Zika during a visit to Peru for the APEC conference. To protect the CEO, who was apparently hoping to soon conceive his second child, the company opted "to build a ‘controlled structure’ on the site of the APEC conference center where ventilation, exposure to others, and bug mitigation can be overseen by Facebook.” Wynn-Williams dubbed it “operation perfect sperm.”
Zuckerberg’s “desperate” attempts to talk to Xi JinpingWynn-Williams spends a lot of time delving into Facebook’s plans to bring the social network to China. She also details Zuckerberg’s attempts to get face time with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
In 2015, Zuckerberg flew to Seattle for a “longer than normal” handshake with Xi (who was in the city for a tech summit Zuckerberg was not invited to). He later caused a “diplomatic crisis” when he posted a photo of that handshake, which only shows the back of Xi’s head.
The following year, Zuckerberg and his team hoped to surreptitiously get the CEO in front of Xi at APEC in Peru. Facebook arranged for Zuckerberg to give a speech directly before an appearance by Xi, which meant the two men would be in adjacent dressing rooms. The goal, according to Wynn-Williams, was to engineer a “spontaneous encounter” during which Zuckerberg could make his pitch to get Facebook into China.
But when Xi arrived, he was flanked by “dozens and dozens” of men in military uniforms who created a barrier such that, according to Wynn-Williams, Xi didn't even have to “risk making eye contact with Mark.” She says that Zuckerberg was “hurt” by the demonstration.
Sheryl Sandberg wanted Facebook to promote organ donationNot long after starting at Facebook, Wynn-Williams says she was told that “Facebook’s first proactive initiative to build relationships with governments around the world will be organ donation.” The idea was apparently Sandberg’s, who ran into a former Harvard friend and transplant surgeon and “offered to help him source donors.”
But when Wynn-Williams brought up the logistical and legal issues that generally make it difficult to transport organs between countries, she says Sandberg was “indignant.”
“Do you mean to tell me that if my four-year-old was dying and the only thing that would save her was a new kidney, that I couldn’t fly to Mexico and get one and put it in my handbag?”
Facebook would later add organ donation to the “life events” users could add to their profiles.
Sheryl Sandberg and the plane crash that wasn'tIn 2013, an Asiana flight from Seoul to San Francisco crash-landed on a runway, killing two people and injuring more than 100 passengers. Sandberg, who was promoting her book Lean In at the time, was also traveling from Seoul to San Francisco that day. Following the crash, she posted on Facebook that she and several Facebook colleagues were originally meant to be on that flight but had “switched to United so we could use miles for my family's tickets.”
Sandberg’s supposed near-miss generated multiple headlines, which isn’t surprising, as Wynn-Williams claims Sandberg was personally briefing reporters about the incident. Wynn-Williams was baffled by these reports. She writes that the Facebook COO “always flies United” and “never considered Asiana.” In her recollection, she and another colleague remarked to each other how “weird” it was for Sandberg to do this.
Why Zuckerberg and Sandberg’s Facebook posts get so much engagementWynn-Williams heavily implies that there may be some behind-the-scenes manipulation of Zuckerberg and Sandberg’s Facebook posts. She doesn’t offer any proof that this has happened, but says that a meeting attended by “someone from Mark’s personal communications team” raises the possibility.
According to Wynn-Williams, “Sheryl’s assistant describes his job as managing ‘engagement for Mark and Sheryl's social media using all of Facebook's tools.’” When Wynn-Williams asks directly if they are “gaming” the site’s algorithm, she says the assistant replies that “you don’t want to know.”
Joel Kaplan needed a geography lessonSome of the most telling anecdotes in Careless People involve Kaplan, who joined Facebook’s policy team in 2011 and was promoted to Chief Global Affairs Officer earlier this year. She writes that Kaplan, who was a deputy chief of staff in the George W. Bush White House, was “surprised to learn Taiwan is an island” and that “often when we start to talk about pressing issues in some country in Latin America or Asia, he stops and asks me to explain where the country is.”
Kaplan slow-rolled Facebook’s response to problems in MyanmarBy now, Meta’s failures in Myanmar, where hate speech and misinformation on Facebook helped incite a genocide, are well documented. Wynn-Williams, who early in her tenure flew to Myanmar to try to sell officials there on the company’s connectivity projects, describes her futile attempts to get more resources for content moderation in the country.
She blames Kaplan in particular. She says she “started this long process of trying to hire someone for Myanmar in 2015” and found a human rights expert who fit the bill in May 2016, but Kaplan blocked her from making the hire in February of 2017. He allegedly told her to “move on and get over it.” She later concludes that “when it came to Myanmar, those people just didn’t matter to him.”
(Meta had broadly labeled Wynn-Williams’ claims about Facebook’s actions in Myanmar as “old news,” saying in a statement that “the facts here have been public record since 2018, and we have said publicly we know we were too slow to act on abuse on our services in Myanmar.”)
Kaplan’s alleged harassmentWynn-Williams also accuses Kaplan of harassment and other inappropriate behavior. After complications while giving birth left her in a literal coma, she writes that Kaplan asked her over one of their “regular” calls during her maternity leave “where are you bleeding from” and got angry when she didn't answer. Later, when she returned to work, he gave her an unofficial performance review on her first day back, saying that she wasn’t “responsive enough.”
Wynn-Williams eventually reports Kaplan’s behavior and an investigation is opened, but that “very quickly it seems to switch from an investigation of Joel, or the facts, to an investigation of me.” She’s fired at her next performance review.
Meta has disputed Wynn-Williams' allegations. “This book is a mix of out-of-date and previously reported claims about the company and false accusations about our executives," a spokesperson said in a statement. "Eight years ago, Sarah Wynn-Williams was fired for poor performance and toxic behavior, and an investigation at the time determined she made misleading and unfounded allegations of harassment."
Update, March 18, 2025, 1:57 PM PT: Wynn-Williams describes her tenure at Facebook as lasting seven years, beginning in 2011. But, according to a Meta spokesperson, she was fired in "late 2017." This story has been updated to reflect that she worked at Facebook for "nearly" seven years.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/the-wildest-details-in-the-facebook-memoir-meta-is-trying-to-bury-183310491.html?src=rssThe brackets are set and the teams are en route to their respective arenas. The 2025 NCAA Tournaments, affectionately known to many as March Madness, begin this week. The men’s tournament begins first on March 18 with the women’s version tipping off on March 19. Both will begin with First Four or “play-in” games (depending on who you ask) before providing action on the court through the first weekend in April. Different broadcasters own the rights to each tournament, so streaming them both can be confusing. I’ve broken down the best, most affordable way to access each one so that you'll be ready when the games begin.
When does March Madness start?The men’s NCAA Basketball Tournament begins on Tuesday, March 18 with two of the so-called First Four matchups. These are the four games that are used to determine the final four teams in the main 64-team bracket. To some, they’re known as the “play-in games” although they’ve officially been part of the men's tournament since 2011. The first game on March 18 begins at 6:40PM ET with another to follow at 9:10PM ET. The same schedule is expected for the second slate of games on Wednesday, March 19.
On the women’s side, March Madness is offset from the men’s tournament by a day. The first two of the First Four games are Wednesday, March 19 at 7PM ET and 9PM ET. The second pair of matchups follows on Thursday, March 20 in the same two time slots.
The 64-team bracket kicks off in earnest for the men at 12:15PM ET on Thursday, March 20. For the women, the main action begins at 11:30AM ET on Friday, March 21st. Here’s the full schedule for each tournament:
2025 Men’s NCAA Basketball TournamentFirst Four: March 18-19
First round: March 20-21
Second round: March 22-23
Sweet 16: March 27-28
Elite Eight: March 29-30
Final Four: April 5
Championship game: April 7
First Four: March 19-20
First round: March 21-22
Second round: March 23-24
Sweet 16: March 28-29
Elite Eight: March 30-31
Final Four: April 4
Championship game: April 6
CBS and Warner Bros. Discovery share the broadcast rights to the men’s tournament, and as they have in years past, TV coverage will be spread across four networks. During the course of March Madness, games will air on CBS, TNT, TBS and truTV, with the final rounds and championship game landing on CBS.
If you already have a paid TV plan (such as traditional cable), the best way to watch the men’s tournament is with the March Madness Live app or website. Once you log in with your TV provider credentials, you can watch every game in one spot with features like multiview (up to four games at once) and “excitement alerts” that let you know when there’s a close game. The app also offers ways to follow your bracket, if you filled it out on MarchMadness.com. And when you’re watching on desktop, the crucial Boss Button will throw up a fake work screen when you need it. March Madness Live is also available on Amazon, Fire TV, Apple TV, iOS, macOS, Google Play, LG smart TVs, Roku and Xbox devices.
If you don’t have a compatible TV provider already, your best option is to actually use two services. It’s not ideal, I know, but it will save you a lot of money. Max’s Standard plan is $17/month and gives you access to live games from TNT, TBS and truTV. While you can watch NCAA Tournament games with the Basic with Ads tier, B/R Sports, which powers all of the live coverage on Max, will only be available on Standard and Premium levels starting March 30. Yes, Warner Bros. Discovery set its policy to change in the middle of the tournament to make more money. For the CBS games, you’ll need a Paramount+ with Showtime subscription that costs $13/month. So, in total, your best option to stream all of the men’s tournament is $30 spread across two apps.
A live TV service like YouTube TV or Hulu plus Live TV is over $50 more per month at full price, but they would offer you “one-stop shopping” for all the games in the men’s tournament. YouTube TV is currently on sale for $70/month for the first six months you use it.
How to stream the 2025 Women’s NCAA Tournament ASSOCIATED PRESS
While Warner Brothers Discovery owns the rights to the men’s NCAA Tournament, ESPN has the women’s bracket locked down. Every game of the women’s tournament will be spread across ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU and ESPNEWS, including the First Four matchups. The Final Four will be on ESPN, but the championship game will air on ABC. All three of those culminating games will stream on ESPN+.
Since ESPN+ won’t get every game, it’s not an option if you want to watch the entire tournament. You will be able to watch “select matchups” on both ESPN+ and Disney+, but ESPN hasn’t announced what those will be. So, unfortunately, your best bet is a live-TV streaming service like Sling, YouTube TV or Hulu + Live TV for a comprehensive experience. Sling is the cheapest avenue here, with the requisite Orange and Sports Extra plans costing $34 (Sling is currently offering a discount on the first month of Orange). YouTube and Hulu live TV options are both the same price at $83/month (YouTube TV currently discounted to $70 for the first six months), so it’s a matter of which set of content and features you like best. YouTube TV offers a handy multiview tool so you can watch up to four games at once, but Hulu + Live TV comes with Disney+ and ESPN+ (both with ads) for that cost. (Opting for Hulu + Live TV only saves you one whole dollar per month if you don’t include the Disney+, ESPN+ and Hulu bundling.)
If you’re a more casual fan who can afford to roll the dice on the “select” options on ESPN+, you can save some money. That service only costs $12/month. And if you already have a TV plan that includes the ESPN family of networks, the ESPN app is the best place to watch the tournament. The mix of scores and info, along with multiview streaming for up to four games at a time on Apple TV and Xbox, make the app a well-equipped conduit for the women’s tournament.
The March Madness website only shows scores and news for the women’s tournament. There are no live games available on the website.
What if I want to stream both the men’s and women’s tournaments? ASSOCIATED PRESS
If you’re hoping to stream all of both the men’s and women’s NCAA tournaments, I hope you ordered Samsung’s eight-TV bundle. In terms of streaming services, just jump straight to a live-TV option like YouTube TV or Hulu + Live TV. I prefer the former because of its multiview feature – a tool that Hulu doesn’t offer. At times when there are multiple games that you want to watch, especially during the first two rounds, you’ll want multiview in order to keep tabs on all of the action.
Are any of the March Madness games available to stream for free?
You can watch all of the games broadcast on CBS on the March Madness website and mobile apps without a TV provider. Sure, it’s a small sample of the tournament, but it’s completely free and a good option for casual fans who don’t have a paid TV plan they can exploit for more of the action. It’s also a good option for watching the first round at work, if your company hasn’t blocked streaming sites, or if you can discreetly watch on your phone.
For the women’s tournament, there aren’t any games available for free. Unless you have an old-school OTA antenna, in which case you can watch men’s games on CBS and women’s games on ABC without any kind of streaming plan. Of course, this is a streaming guide so I’d consider an antenna an extraordinary move in 2025.
If you were hoping to use a free trial period to watch March Madness, I’ve got bad news. None of them will be long enough to watch an entire tournament. Some of them don’t offer them at all, but the longest is YouTube TV at 10 days which wouldn’t get you through the second weekend.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/streaming/how-to-stream-every-march-madness-2025-game-181552865.html?src=rssMicrosoft just announced that its Xbox Adaptive Joystick is now available for purchase directly from the company. This news comes during the annual Ability Summit. The Adaptive Joystick is designed for people with limited mobility, so it has four customizable button inputs on the front and two more mappable bumper and trigger-style buttons. It also comes with a standard thumbstick. It costs $30, which is cheaper than the official wireless Xbox controller.
That’s just one accessibility-minded announcement that Microsoft made today. The company is bringing AI tools to the screen-reader Narrator for Windows. This will allow the software to offer “rich image descriptions.” It’ll be available to Windows Insider members sometime this spring.
Microsoft Teams is also getting an update for those who are hard of hearing. The software will soon be able to automatically recognize when someone is using sign language, placing them prominently as a speaker during the meeting. This is what Sign Language View already does, but it’s an opt-in service. The update streamlines the process. It’ll be available later this year.
The company has long been at the forefront of accessibility-related tech. It made a nifty Adaptive Mouse that allows for near-endless customization options. Microsoft also created technology that pairs game controllers without forcing users to touch the console and a kit to make Surface laptops more accessible. The brand first introduced the original Adaptive Controller around six years ago.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/xbox/microsofts-xbox-adaptive-joystick-is-now-available-183009651.html?src=rss
BYD has introduced new technology for charging electric vehicles at vastly quicker speeds. Founder Wang Chuanfu said this "super e-platform" tech offers a peak charging speed of 1,000 kilowatts, twice that of the 500 kw charging currently offered by Tesla's superchargers. That would mean a car can travel 249 miles (400 kilometers) from a five-minute charge on a BYD station. This charging architecture will initially be available in two of BYD's vehicle models: the Han L sedan and Tang L SUV.
"In order to completely solve our user's charging anxiety, we have been pursuing a goal to make the charging time of electric vehicles as short as the refuelling time of petrol vehicles," said Wang.
The company is also bringing its quick-charging tech to Chinese drivers for the first time. BYD plans to construct 4,000 ultra-fast charging units across the country, although it did not provide a timeline or budget for the endeavor. To date, owners of BYD vehicles have needed to use charging stations from third-party operators or different EV manufacturers such as Tesla.
BYD has been putting more and more EVs on the road around the world. Last year, its second-quarter shipment figures jumped 21 percent to draw very close to Tesla's numbers.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/evs/byd-unveils-new-tech-for-twice-as-fast-ev-charging-175729412.html?src=rssIf you've ever seen Dyson's Hot+Cool Jet Focus in a store and wished the ultra-sleek appliance was more affordable, today's your lucky day. Amazon has the product, which usually costs $470, on sale for $300. That's nearly a record low.
As its name suggests, the Dyson Hot+Cool AM09 Jet Focus can heat your room in the winter and cool it off in the summer. Its fan mode includes Air Multiplier tech, which creates a smooth and uninterrupted airstream thanks to its lack of traditional fan blades. When you need some warmth, its ceramic plates heat up quickly.
The appliance has two modes: focused and diffused. Focused mode warms or cools one person, while diffused mode heats your entire room or provides a gentle breeze during the summer. It oscillates at a 70-degree angle. Dyson's fan has a sleep timer with a shutoff range between 15 minutes and nine hours, and you can store its curved and magnetized remote control inside the appliance to help prevent it from being lost.
The lowest we've ever seen this product's price drop is $280, so being able to snag it for $300 in the middle of March, when we're nowhere near Black Friday or Prime Day, is about as good a deal as you can hope for.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/home/this-dyson-heater-and-fan-is-36-percent-off-in-the-amazon-spring-sale-173031934.html?src=rss