• We Need to play Art Table
    www.behance.net
    We need to play.That's the message behind this ping pong table we designed in collaboration with The Art of Ping Pong.The idea was simple: bring a bit of playfulness back into our everyday lives.We're all busy being adults, but that doesn't mean we should stop playing.The table features a bold geometric pattern and a big, unapologetic reminder in the center: We need to play.Because play isn't a waste of time?it's a way to reconnect, to move, to breathe.Designed to be fun, functional, and a little bit loud.Just like any good game.
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  • NYTs Strands Hints, Tips, and Answers for Today, April 3, 2025
    gamerant.com
    Today's Strands puzzle presents another difficult challenge from the New York Times Games. The objective remains clear: identify all theme-related words in the letter grid while utilizing each letter exactly once, guided only by a single cryptic clue.
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  • Bleach: Every Main Character's Age, Height, And Birthday
    gamerant.com
    When it comes to shonen anime, Bleach is a fan favorite. The hit series is full of everything fans of the genre could want, from over-the-top sword fights to the power of friendship. Bleach's original run spans over 366 episodes for a total of sixteen seasons, meaning there are plenty of binge-worthy moments to enjoy. If that's not enough, the final arc from the manga is finally being adapted after the longest time, which serves as a huge treat for long-time fans of the series.
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  • Hyundai reveals wild Insteroid concept EV with Pac-Man interior and its the exciting hot hatch that electric vehicles need right now
    www.techradar.com
    Hyundai's sub-compact SUV gets the racy treatment. Let's hope this one makes it past concept stage.
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  • Annoyed by YouTube autoplaying videos on Android? Sorry, its not a bug, its another experimental feature
    www.techradar.com
    YouTube is yet again exploring with new features, as Android users have noticed this strange auto-play function in their mobile apps.
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  • Retailers are tweaking products to cut costs and offset Trumps tariffs
    www.fastcompany.com
    Gadgets sold without batteries. Toys sold in slimmed-down boxes or no packaging at all. More household goods that shoppers need to assemble themselves.These are some of the ways consumer product companies are retooling their wares to reduce costs and avoid raising pricesas President Donald Trump leviesnew import taxes on key trading partners as well as some materials used by American manufacturers.The economic environment in which the president has imposed, threatened and occasionally postponed repeated rounds of tariffs is more precarious than during his first term. U.S. consumers arefeeling tapped outafter several years of inflation. Businesses say tariffsadd to their expensesand eat into their profits, but they are wary of losing sales if they try to pass all of the increase on to customers.Instead, some companies are exploring cost-cutting options, both ones that consumers likely would notice in time remembershrinkflation? and ones that exist too far down the supply chain for them to see. The changes may help minimize price increases, yet wont be enough in every case to offset them completely.These are some of the strategies retailers and brands have in mind:A kink in the supply chainAfter putting an extra 20% tariff on all goods from China, as well as a 25% tariff on imported steel, aluminum andautomobiles, Trump said he would announce on Wednesday the targets ofreciprocal tariffsthat mirror the taxes all other nations apply to certain U.S. exports.He argues the tariffs will spur domestic manufacturing, among other goals.Also on the horizon: twice-delayed tariffs on most goodsfrom Canadaand Mexico, and duties on copper,lumberand pharmaceutical drugs.Kimberly Kirkendall, president of supply-chain consulting firm International Resource Development, has told clients U.S. makers of shelving, home goods and food products that given all the uncertainty, this is not the time for long-term moves like seeking factories outside of China.She encouraged them to focus on the short term, particularly the need to scrutinize product lines from every angle for possible savings.Youve got to collaborate and work together with your suppliers in this situation to be able to bring costs down, Kirkendall said.Sourcing concerns are not only a worry for big companies that rely on Chinese manufacturers. Sasha Iglehart, founder of a small online clothing company called Shirt Story, has a collection of upcycled mens shirts that sell for around $235. She said she typically gets her vintage buttons from an Austrian supplier and knows Trump has talked about taxing goods from the European Union.I will continue to look for local vendors and collectors here in the States as back up, said Iglehart, whose company is based in Connecticut.Reworking a productFor many companies, evaluating which components or details they can remove from their products or replace with less expensive ones is the go-to move for absorbing the potential financial hit from tariffs.Los Angeles-based toy company Abacus Brands Inc., which designs science kits and other educational toys, has most of its products made in China. By using slightly thinner paper in an 80-page project book that comes with two of its kits, the company expects to avert a $10 retail price increase, President Steve Rad said.Three or 4 cents here, Rad said. Seven or 6 cents there. Two more pennies over there. All of a sudden, youve made up the difference.Aurora World Inc., known for its plush pets and toy vehicles, is looking at using fewer paint colors as a way to counteract tariff costs, according to Gabe Higa, managing director of the California companys toy division. All of Aurora Worlds toys come from factories in China.This is something that makes it a little bit simpler so that theres less manual labor involved or less material cost, Higa said. (It) doesnt have a lot of incremental value so its easy to take away.The company still may have to raise prices as long as the new tariffs are in effect, he said.Economy packagingTweaking or reducingproduct packagingis another area where importers may cut back and carries the advantage of possibly appealing toeco-conscious customers.Basic Fun CEO Jay Foreman, whose company markets classic toys like Tonka trucks, Lincoln Logs and Care Bears, said he is presenting retailers with three different packaging options and asking them to decide which ones they prefer for the trucks and some other products that will be in stores next spring.The first is the current packaging, which consists of a box with a big open window that lets customers see whats inside. The second option: no box, just a tray attached to the bottom of toys to hold them in place on shelves. The third: unwrapped but affixed with a simple paper price tag that features brand information.The second-tier packaging would reduce the toy companys cost per item by $1.25, and the package-free version would yield savings of $1.75, Foreman said. Both would diminish the appeal of the products and would not come close to canceling out the tariff on goods made in China, Foreman said.He said he would make pricing decisions later this week after Trump provides details about his planned reciprocal tariffs.To further reduce its production costs, Abacus Brands is thinking of switching from plastic to cardboard for the package inserts that keep toy parts in place. Cardboard trays cost 7 cents per unit compared to 30 cents for the plastic version, according to Rad.The change requires finding a new factory to make the inserts, a move that did not make financial sense before now, he said. The various tariff-related modifications should be effective for fall and holiday deliveries to stores, Rad said.The compromises were making are things that do not matter to the consumer, he said.Forget the extrasShoppers will likely have to assemble more of their products at home as companies look to reduce shipping costs, according to Kirkendall of International Resource Development.One of her clients manufactures self-watering planters that are made in China. The product is undergoing a redesign so it can be shipped as separate nesting components instead of fully assembled.Companies also are reevaluating the pieces of their products that are essential or extra. Chris Bajda, managing partner at online wedding gift retailer Groomsday, said accessories like batteries and decorative gift boxes may end up in the latter category.We now carefully assess whats truly necessary and avoid including items that dont serve a functional purpose for the customer, Bajda said.The return of shrinkflation?Reducing the size or weight of products without lowering prices proliferated as a business practice from 2021 through 2024 as companies grappled with rising costs for ingredients, packaging, labor and transportation.Edgar Dworsky, a consumer advocate and former assistant attorney general in Massachusetts, suspects the makers of consumer goods will embrace shrinkflation again to hide costs given the blast of new tariffs. The additional import tax on Canadian soft lumber, for example, might show up in smaller toilet paper rolls, he said.Shrinkflation has been a little quiet in the last few months, Dworksy said. But I would expect to see both price increases and product shrinkage.Anne DInnocenzio, AP retail writer
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  • Newsmax IPO draws comparisons to GameStop meme stock mania, as NMAX price surges another 160% today
    www.fastcompany.com
    Shares of Newsmax continued to rise on Tuesday following a massive public debut on Monday, in which shares shot up more than 700% for the best-performing first day since 2022.Investors who bought in at the $10 IPO price are reaping a massive potential return. When trading opened on Monday morning, Newsmax shares, trading under the NMAX ticker, rose from $10 to close at nearly $78. After hours, values continued to rise, and when trading opened on Tuesday, the stock saw another surge.As of roughly 2 p.m. ET, shares were trading at around $215, an increase of almost 160%.The trading has been intense, and was even halted numerous times on Monday due to volatility. That volatility has evidently caught the attention of retail investors, some of whom, on social media and trader forums, are comparing it to the GameStop meme stock mania from a few years ago.Newsmax may also have some other similarities to GameStopnotably, that its a company thats been losing money (it lost $55.5 million during the first six months of 2024); and as a cable news network, is competing in a field that is losing steam, similarly to GameStops physical video game retail model.Also, Newsmax is a competitor to Fox News, which has been able to beat its chief competitors MSNBC and CNN in recent years and recently had its best February on record, averaging 3.1 million primetime viewers for the entire month. Newsmaxwhich tends to offer programming that is often even further to the right than Foxis hoping to tap into that audience and pilfer some of those viewers for itself.As for whats playing out in the markets? Its something of a cherry on top for Newsmax. The company was founded by Christopher Ruddy in 1998; its cable news network launched in 2014 and now, with Trump back in the White House, appears to be flying high.
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