• Signalgate explained: what is Signal, and how secure is the messaging app?
    www.techradar.com
    Signal is the most secure messaging app for your smartphone, but a recent leak from a US government chat group has raised questions. So how safe is Signal and how do you use it properly?
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  • Asus's more affordable version of Nvidia's uber-popular Project Digits snapped at GTC 2025
    www.techradar.com
    Ascent GX10 is Asus' version of Nvidia's DGX Spark, a compact AI supercomputer powered by Grace Blackwell GB10 Superchip.
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  • Silicon Valley bubble risks heighten as investors pile into funds that bet on a single buzzy startup
    www.cnbc.com
    Special purpose vehicles, or SPVs, have gotten so popular in Silicon Valley that some experts worry it's the latest sign of a new bubble.
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  • Meta debuts Friends tab, Mark Zuckerberg pushes 'throwback to OG Facebook'
    www.cnbc.com
    Meta debuts Friends tab, which Mark Zuckerberg calls a 'throwback to OG Facebook'
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  • The slim phone era is (finally) back
    www.fastcompany.com
    Smartphones have been around long enough that, to the casual observer, their designs seem to have hit a plateau. And on a functional level, thats more or less true were all essentially holding the same six-inch-ish rectangle, aside from the occasional foldable exception.But the maturity and ubiquity of smartphones have sparked a new phenomenon: the return of trends in cycles, much like fashion. For example, most phones released in the past few years have flat sides, like the iPhone 4 from 2010. Five years ago, almost all those sides would have been curved. Flat edges arent a new invention theyre just whats trending again.But this year brings a surprising twist, something many thought unlikely to return: for the first time in a while, major phone makers are prioritizing thinness.Samsung kicked off the year by announcing its Galaxy S25 lineup, which includes a slimline model, the Galaxy S25 Edge. Bloombergs Mark Gurman has reported that Apple is planning a thinner 2025 iPhone said to feature a single camera. And smaller brands like Tecno showed off unusually thin phones at last months Mobile World Congress.So, why now?Around a decade ago, it was common for companies to boast about how thin their phones were. Heres the real magic, said Apples Phil Schiller when introducing the larger screens in 2014s 6.9mm-thick iPhone 6. Thinner than any phones weve ever made that took an incredible amount of engineering. A few months later, Oppo announced its R5 phone, which came in at a record-breaking 4.85mm.A Samsung Galaxy Edge smartphone next to the Samsung Galaxy 23 and Samsung Galaxy 24 smartphones at the Galaxy Unpacked event in San Jose, California, US, on Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2025. [Photo: Michaela Vatcheva/Bloomberg via Getty Images]Back then, it seemed inevitable that phones would just keep getting thinner. But then something curious happened: The iPhone 6S got thicker, bumping up to 7.1mm and switching to a stronger aluminum alloy. It was an unofficial but obvious response to the iPhone 6s tendency to bend. (It happened to me.)No one complained much about the iPhone 6S structural integrity, but iPhones kept getting thicker, topping out at the 8.3mm we see with the current iPhone 16 Pro. By and large, people havent seemed to mind. Battery life is much less of a concern than it used to be, and todays increasingly large camera hardware simply wouldnt fit in thinner devices.The 2025 flurry of deliberately thin phones, then, is a clear break from recent trends. So why are manufacturers converging on the same idea?The primary answer may be technical. While we dont yet know what Samsung or Apple are using in their upcoming devices, silicon-carbon batteries have become increasingly common in Chinese Android phones over the past year. Infusing silicon into the battery chemistry can provide a meaningful increase in capacity within the same volume.Oppos latest Find N5 folding phone, for example, is just 4.2mm thick when unfolded barely thick enough to accommodate a USB-C port. But its 5,600mAh silicon-carbide battery represents a 17% increase in capacity over its predecessor, the Find N3, even though that phone was 38% thicker. Other companies like Xiaomi and Vivo have used the tech to similar ends.The other reason thinner phones might take off is more subjective. When was the last time a new phone truly wowed you? There will clearly be tradeoffs in battery life and performance with a significantly thinner device. But if you finish each day with more than half a charge, or if you rarely use your telephoto lens, its plausible you might prefer a slimmer, more attractive handset.Combine better battery technology with the fact that most people dont need flagship-level performance, and suddenly a slim phone with few compromises seems pretty reasonable. It makes sense for companies to carve out space for design-forward devices in their lineups. Samsung has always been willing to experiment, and while Apple tends to be more conservative, its reportedly unimpressed with sales of its mid-tier Plus-not-Pro iPhones. Why not try something more distinctive between the entry-level and the high end?If anything, the question is whether these designs will go far enough. Samsung has yet to announce the Galaxy S25 Edges specs or let anyone in the media handle it, but I saw it suspended in the air at Mobile World Congress and wasnt particularly blown away by its dimensions. Bloombergs Gurman has suggested the upcoming slim iPhone will be about 2mm thinner than an iPhone 16 Pro, putting it around 6.3mm more in line with the iPhone 6 than todays thicker models.Maybe thats the right tradeoff. The goal here should be to create something like the MacBook Air of phones: impressive design with unspectacular specs that are good enough for most use cases. The Pro models can continue to be for people who really need them.Plenty of people will always want the most performant phone with the biggest battery and best cameras, of course. But when a phones selling point is its physical form, it cant really be judged until you pick it up for yourself and then find out how long its battery lasts.
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  • Why California Pizza Kitchen just faked an insane rebrand
    www.fastcompany.com
    Beverly Hills hottest club is California Pizza Kitchen.At least, thats what someone unfamiliar with the brand might have taken away from its new rebrand, which debuted on Monday. On its website, California Pizza Kitchen replaced its friendly yellow logo and wordmark with a silver chrome logo and the shortened name CPK. [Photo: courtesy California Pizza Kitchen]Meanwhile, on socials, the brand posted several videos of its new identity that looked more fit for promoting a rave than a family friendly pizza restaurant. Shots of flashing lights, serious models, and slogans like DEVOUR THE DOUBTERS and Fresh. To. Death were cut with clips of harshly-lit pizzas and interspersed with the brands new all-caps wordmark.At first glance, one might have assumed these were assets for a new Liquid Death campaign or MSCHF launch. Many commenters on CPKs socials were quick to question what was going on with the brand, including the official Little Caesers account, which commented, Bestie whats happening on a particularly odd video. But, as it turns out, the whole edgelord rebrand was just a temporary marketing play to promote California Pizza Kitchens 40th anniversary. The restaurant just revealed the hoax through a partnership with actress Busy Phillips and restored its platforms to its original branding.The campaign shows that, amidst an influx of purposefully shocking brand moves like Jaguars totally unrecognizable rebrand or Duolingos decision to briefly kill off its mascot, weve reached a new stage of the trend cycle: full brand-on-brand parody.CPKs midlife crisisDawn Keller joined California Pizza Kitchens as its CMO about a year ago. Since then, she says, shes learned that sentiment around the brand is overwhelmingly positive, given that many customers associate it with years of childhood dinners. The issue, though, is that many fans just dont think about CPK that often, Keller says.Part of the problem is that the restaurant hasnt made much of an investment in its marketing efforts to keep CPK top of mind. On socials, it has a staid strategy of essentially reposting traditional ad materialsan approach thats less than ideal in a social media landscape that rewards brands who embrace big personalities and brain rot content. So, CPK decided to use the four decade milestone as an opportunity to shake things up by staging a midlife crisis.[Photo: courtesy California Pizza Kitchen]Leading up to the campaign, CPK conducted extensive brand research with its creative agency, Iris Worldwide, to decide how the company might grab consumers attention. That work led them to the conclusion that their existing brand positioning and visual identity was strong enough to exclude the possibility of an actual rebrand. Instead, Keller says, the 40-year anniversary campaign riffs on the tendency of other mature brands to go into panic mode and debut a rebrand that loses touch with their original purpose.We were never of the opinion that we had to upend the apple cart and totally rebrand, Keller says. It was really more about, How do we rejuvenate this brand, amplify it, but do it in a fresher way than weve done? [. . .] There was a bit of parody that we were doing, knowing that some brands evolve, and its great, but some, you feel like they jump the shark.[Photo: courtesy California Pizza Kitchen]While CPKs hypebeast look only lasted for a week, Keller says the intention of the move was to usher the brand into a more adventurous, culturally relevant marketing era on social media. For CPK, the marketing stunt surfaces an interesting tension between embracing a decades-old existing brand identity and parodying shock-value rebrands, while, at the same time, essentially benefitting from the shock-value strategy itself. Today, even brands who dont actively embody what Fast Company has termed DGAF branding might still have to play into it to succeed online. [Photo: courtesy California Pizza Kitchen]So far, the campaign has resulted in a mixed bag of responses. Keller says her team was expecting some confusion and backlash, both of which have been proven out. Whats surprised them, though, is that many fans actually liked the new look.Youve got literally people who were giving it a thumbs up and supported it, Keller says. Maybe thats the minority, but even to see people with positive reactions to the fake brand really made us laugh. I think it goes back to that brand equity that CPK has, which is, people want CPK to win. They really do. They love it. A lot of people grew up with it. Even when we do something that iscome onobjectively preposterous, theyre still celebrating it.
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  • Hyundai Just Built a Video Game-Inspired EV and Its Pure Madness
    www.yankodesign.com
    First, it was the trend for real-life cars to be showcased in the video game world to elevate the realism of gaming titles, and now a new inclination is setting the industry ablaze. Car designs inspired by video game elements, bringing the nostalgic feel of the arcade world to real life, are here to stay, and we love them. The recently launched Turbo 3E electric hatchback has traces of the digital realms and now Hyundai has revealed the teaser of their upcoming electric car, ported straight out of a digital speedway.Meet the Hyundai INTEROID EV, which the South Korean giant is pitching quite transparently as a video game-inspired vehicle that combines pixelated aesthetics with the power-packed performance to make it a winning prospect. Hyundai has released the vehicles teaser video and some images touting it as a dream car designed to make you smile, with a full reveal promised next month at the Seoul Mobility Show. Of course, we will be having a detailed review at that time, but for now, this seems an exciting prospect in the making.Designer: HyundaiThe sporty concept electric vehicle is based on the low-cost INSTER electric sub-compact, and its on steroids to put it simply. For people living in Europe and South Korea, INSTER is a popular name ever since its debut in June 2024. According to Hyundai, the car has a funky, youthful, and muscular nature. On the outside as well as inside, the vehicle has loads of fun details to make it stand out from the rest. The flared wheel arches have air vents, pixel LED headlights, roof scoop, a very aggressive rear spoiler, and the oversized 21-inch wheels portray an arcadeish character. They describe INSTEROID as a glitch in the automotive matrix, which hints that it might only be a concept vehicle not meant for production lines. The point here is to display Hyundais creative design ambitions for the future.There are no official specifications for the EV yet, but it is safe to assume the car will better a 49kWh battery that delivers a range of 370 km. Preumably, the car looks to have more muscle and is wider than the original one, thanks to the arch body kit. More on the lines of rally cars -Group B vehicles. Hyundai has intentionally masked any visual details more than anyone should know, and the same goes for the interior. The rear seats get some scaffolding, a rollcage is in place for speedy driving adventures, a fun instrument cluster, and other dashboard elements should also be spicier than anyone can imagine. Hyundai has confirmed that the car will surprise everyone with what it has on the inside, and we are looking forward to the full revelation.The post Hyundai Just Built a Video Game-Inspired EV and Its Pure Madness first appeared on Yanko Design.
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  • How to draw hands: master gesture sketching with this professional process
    www.creativebloq.com
    Portrait painter Kate Oleska reveals how to get started with drawing hand motion.
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  • Super Bowl Halftime Show Complaints Focused on Lack of DEI for White People
    www.wired.com
    The FCC received 125 complaints about Kendrick Lamars concert, according to public records obtained by WIRED, with many focusing on the lack of white performers.
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