The Current + Foldable phones, MLB robo umpires, PC flaws, Elonâs GPU compound, and a cargo ship powered by the sun - In partnership with NordProtect | Happy Thursday, friend. Ever been so committed to your creative vision that you said, âYeah, letâs record a literal monkey screamingâ? Because thatâs exactly what one classic video game team did. Spoiler: It worked out pretty well for them. đ Pop quiz: Which retro game used actual monkey screeches in its sound library: A) Donkey Kong, B) Sonic the Hedgehog, C) Pitfall!, or D) Space Invaders? Find the answer at the end! Every five seconds, someoneâs identity is stolen. Yours could be next. I use NordProtect because it actually stops identity theft. Real protection, real alerts, not false promises and tons of upsells. Grab 65% off now before itâs too late. â Kim đŤ First-time reader? Sign up here. (Itâs free!) | TODAY'S DEEP DIVE Hinge, hype, heartbreak Image: ChatGPT I would love a foldable phone. Itâs fun to imagine strutting into a coffee shop, flipping open your phone like youâre Batman calling Alfred. But now Samsungâs dropped the seventh-gen Galaxy Z Fold and Flip, Google threw in the Pixel Fold, Motorola whipped out retro with the modern Razr+, and Iâve got questions. It all sounds exciting until you start looking closer. đ ď¸ How they work Foldable phones use ultrathin flexible glass over OLED displays, combined with a mechanical hinge system. The tech allows the phone to physically bend while still displaying a full-resolution screen. The hinges are engineered to survive hundreds of thousands of folds, which maths out to up to a decade of opening and closing more than a few times a day. đą Big screens, big prices The Galaxy Z Fold 7 opens like a book, giving you a tablet-size 7.6-inch screen inside and a 6.2-inch screen outside. The Flip 7 folds vertically like a compact mirror thatâs a 6.7-inch screen when open and a 3.4-inch mini display on the outside. Perfect for glancing at texts and ignoring people in real life. Googleâs Pixel Fold offers a wider front screen and a slightly smaller inside display. Theyâre eye-catching, no doubt. But hereâs the part that usually gets glossed over: The Fold 7 starts at $1,899 and the Pixel Fold at $1,799. The Flip 7 and Motorolaâs Razr+ are slightly more âaffordableâ at around $999, but still a serious chunk of change. These phones are bulkier, more fragile and harder to protect than the slab you already own. đ¤ Fun to try, not own Foldables are like marriages based on chemistry: thrilling at first, full of cracks later. Theyâre cool for early adopters, tech collectors and people who like showing off gadgets. Thereâs nothing wrong with that, just donât confuse a flashy fold with long-term value. Battery life still lags behind traditional phones. Foldable displays, while tougher than before, are still more prone to damage. And the software? Think beta, not breakthrough. You donât get more phone, you just get more surface area and more things that can go wrong. đ And yes, Apple is coming You heard it here: Apple is testing foldable iPhones behind closed doors. The rumors say 2026 for a release. One model folds like a book, the other like a flip phone. Appleâs waiting until the tech is truly seamless, no half-baked experiments. My advice? Sit this trend out. The wow factor fades fast, but the price tag doesnât. |
| If your identity were stolen, would you even know the signs? A strange charge here, a missing bill there⌠or worse, debt collectors chasing you for accounts you never opened. These arenât just red flags, theyâre loud sirens warning that your identity may have been stolen. Thatâs why I use NordProtect. Theyâve got my back 24/7. The moment my data shows up where it shouldn't, I get an alert. It monitors my credit, tracks my finances, and if something goes wrong, I've got real support plus up to $1 million in identity theft coverage. And here's the kicker: I was paying $239.88 a year with Lifelock. Now I get even more protection with NordProtect, for just $62.64 a year. That's a 74% savings! Act today so you're not a victim tomorrow. Lock in my exclusive 65% off deal today! â Please support our sponsors! |
Digital Life Hack How to get around Googleâs AI Overviews Have you tried swearing at it? It might solve all your problems. Listen on Komando.com â |
WEB WATERCOOLER đ¨ Donât trust every AI summary in Gmail: Heads up! Scammers are getting smarter and sneakier. Some are now hiding dangerous messages in white text on a white background, like âYour password was compromised, call this number.â You wonât see it with your eyes, but Gmailâs Gemini AI does and it might include that hidden message in the emailâs summary, making it sound like a real warning from Google. The takeaway? Always double-check emails yourself before clicking or calling anything. AI is helpful, but itâs not perfect, and hackers know how to work around it. âž Robo-umps at bat: MLBâs All-Star Game is testing robo-umps, and pitchers are having an existential crisis. Itâs not Câ3PO calling the game. Thereâs still a human ump, just with an earpiece feeding real-time calls. Each team gets two ball/strike challenges. Basically a high-tech cheat sheet with zero patience for bad takes. Copilot can see you: Microsoft just gave Copilot Vision full desktop eyes. Now, instead of peeking at one app, the AI can see everything youâve got open. Yes, your billion tabs. Just hit the glasses icon and start chatting. You can also trigger it with your voice. Itâs like Clippy evolved and learned surveillance tactics. đť I think he might be right: Wazeâs cofounder thinks Gen Beta (those born from 2025 to around 2039) wonât ever touch a steering wheel. With Tesla and Waymo pushing robotaxis, Uri Levine says the future is all self-driving, and maybe mobile shoe stores. So yeah, traffic might just be a bunch of vans selling Crocs. đž Old PCs, new problems: If youâre using an older Intel PC with a Gigabyte motherboard, heads up: Thereâs a new vulnerability that could mess with your system memory. Gigabyteâs pushing out BIOS updates to fix it, but only for certain models. If your boardâs too old, their advice is basically âcall someone.â Start backing up. And updating. Immediately. |
Daily Tech Update The Mamona ransomware threat A new ransomware called Mamona hits fast, encrypts your files, then deletes itself. Hereâs how to protect yourself. Listen on Komando.com â |
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DEVICE ADVICE âĄď¸ 3-second tech genius: Middle-click a link with your mouse wheel to open it in a new tab. Or middle-click an open tab to close it instantly. Youâll never right-click again. đł Custom buzz, who dis? On iPhone, you can make a personal vibration pattern for any contact. Go to Contacts, select someone, tap Edit, then choose Ringtone or Text Tone. Under Haptics, select Create New Vibration. Use your finger to tap out a pattern, then hit Stop and Save. đş Your TV isnât a tablet: Hereâs a simple rule. Take your TVâs size in inches and multiply it by 1.2 to get the best viewing distance. For example, if youâve got a 50-inch screen, sit about 60 inches (or 5 feet) back. Now you can binge without straining your eyes. đ§ Take back that email: In Gmail, you can undo a sent message if you move fast. Click the Settings icon > See all settings > General, then find Undo Send. Set the cancellation period to 30 seconds, scroll down, and click Save Changes. Next time you regret an email, just hit Undo. Free money waiting for you: You put money in and you should get money out. The National Registry of Unclaimed Retirement Benefits helps you find money being held by prior employers. đ Small-business owner? Download NetSuiteâs free guide, âNavigating Global Trade: Three Insights for Leaders,â and find out how to stay ahead, even when the rules keep changing.* đ Rename multiple files on Mac: Got a folder full of random file names like IMG_2348? Select them all with Cmd + A, right-click and choose Rename. In the drop-downs, pick Format, then Name and Index and type something like âHawaiiâ under Custom Format. Set Start numbers at 1, and hit Rename. |
BY THE NUMBERS 1 million The number of AI GPUs Elonâs stuffing into one building. Thatâs not a typo. Itâs a silicon army so power-hungry, xAI is shipping in a literal power plant to feed it. The data center will suck up 2 gigawatts. Thatâs enough juice to keep the lights on in nearly 2 million households. Forget cloud computing, this is thunderstorm computing. 46% How much of all U.S. TV use went to streaming in June, topping both cable and broadcast combined. Streaming is eating TVâs lunch, breakfast and dinner. And yes, Netflix is back in its hot girl summer era with 13.5% growth. Traditional TV? Itâs giving âlandline.â 17 How many tasks a robot nailed, solo, during a gallbladder surgery. Johns Hopkinsâ new AI-powered bot followed instructions, learned from voice commands, adapted mid-op and even corrected itself like a good surgical intern. Only it never gets tired, flustered, needs snacks or even requests a student loan deferment. |
WHAT THE TECH? | | The Blue Marlin just became the worldâs first inland vessel powered directly by solar panels, 192 of them, to be exact. Built by HGK Shipping and Wattlab, the 282-foot cargo ship can generate 37,500 kWh a year, slashing COâ emissions by nearly 80,000 pounds. Itâs part barge, part aquatic Batmobile, with remote controls and diesel backup for cloudy days. Unlike earlier ships with solar add-ons, this one moves on sunlight. Basically, itâs the Prius of the river, if the Prius were 282 feet long and carried steel instead of stress. |
LOGGING OUT ... đŚ Answer: A) Donkey Kong. Nintendo used actual monkey sounds in the original arcade game in 1981. Talk about bananas! Legend has it, the famous âoohâoohâ and grunt sounds came from a real gibbon. And if that sounds oddly specific, itâs because the dev team wanted DK to sound âplayful, but unhinged.â Mission accomplished. Speaking of ⌠What do you call two monkeys that share an Amazon account? Prime mates. (I hear that groan!) Hackers donât need your permission, just one weak link, and your identity is theirs. I donât take chances. I use NordProtect to stay one step ahead. Full protection, 65% off right now. Donât wait. đŹ If todayâs edition of the #1 tech newsletter in the United States brought you joy (or just screamed into your inbox like an â80s monkey), forward it to your favorite human. Reward their curiosity. Tomorrow: Millennials are next on the scam chopping block. Yes, even the âtech-savvyâ ones. Actually, especially the tech-smart ones are losing big money to scams that look way too real. Youâre crushing this whole âbeing a humanâ thing. đ â Kim đŁ Donât keep me a secret: Share this email with friends (or copy URL here) | |
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