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WWW.TECHRADAR.COMAfter Bluetooth, China wants to replace HDMI connectors with a faster, more powerful port that could even support 16KChina is looking to consolidate data and power transmission into one super cable with GPMI.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 65 Views
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WWW.CNBC.COMTrump tariffs mean higher prices, big losses for Amazon sellers that source from ChinaTrump's tariffs are poised to raise prices on Amazon and devastate small businesses that source products from China, sellers told CNBC.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 100 Views
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WWW.FASTCOMPANY.COMButter recall: Cabot Creamery issues recall for possible fecal contaminationAnother day, another recall. It if seems like there have been a number of recalls recently, you’re not imagining it. In the last month alone, there has been a recall for particular brands of soup, sparkling water, and vegetables. This time, it’s for butter. What’s happened? Agri-Mark, the maker of Cabot Creamery dairy products, conducted a voluntary recall for a single lot of its Extra Creamy Premium Butter, Sea Salted, totaling 1,700 pounds in 189 cases. Testing revealed an elevated level of coliform bacteria. The recall was initiated on March 26. Coliform bacteria often are considered indicators of fecal contamination. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has classified this as a Class III recall, which means the products are not likely to cause adverse health consequences. There have been no reported complaints or illnesses related to this product. “Agri-Mark successfully recovered 99.5% of the lot of the recalled product before it was sold to consumers,” the company said in a statement Wednesday. “A small amount—17 retail packages (8.5 lbs.)—was sold to consumers in Vermont,” where the company is based. Agri-Mark added that it has identified the cause and taken the appropriate internal actions to address it. No other products were affected. What states are affected? The recalled butter was distributed in seven states: Arkansas, Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, and Vermont. What product is being recalled? Cabot Creamery 8 oz. Extra Creamy Premium Butter, Sea Salted Best by date: Sept. 9, 2025 UPC: 0 78354 62038 0 Impacted lot code: 090925-055 Item Number: 2038 What should I do if I have the recalled product? First, do not eat a recalled food—even when the product in question is being recalled as a precaution, according to Foodsafety.gov. The company stated that “there have been a variety of news reports that are incomplete and have dramatically misrepresented this recall with respect to the risk it posed to consumers.” Consumers who have any concerns or questions about this product can contact Cabot Creamery, 888-792-2268 (weekdays, 9:30 a.m.– 5 p.m. ET) or via email here.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 57 Views
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WWW.CORE77.COMYeti Coolers and Products at a DiscountIn terms of branding and quality, Yeti remains the cooler company to beat. Rivals like Igloo will continue to woo consumers by focusing on design features, but the perception of Yeti as the market leader is a tough one to dent.For consumers put off by Yeti's high prices, there is a way to get them on the cheap(er). The company's Rescues program offers refurbished models at a discount. The company takes returned or damaged models, refurbishes them, and rates them in three categories. "Peak condition. Unboxed with minimal or no marks. Still in near-perfect shape.""Like new. Marks you might notice, but you'll have to get close to see 'em. Could be missing a few non-essential items like straps, dividers, dry baskets, packing cubes or cupholders.""Good to go. A few visible marks to get your adventure started. Could be missing a few non-essential items like straps, dividers, dry baskets, packing cubes or cupholders."The savings can be substantial. Yeti's Tundra 65, which retails for $350, is on offer for $265. Their wheeled $425 Tundra Haul is a full $100 off. The $300 Hondo Base Camp Chair is going for $220. The $250 Crossroads 60L Duffel is being offered for $185. Sales are as-is, meaning no returns are possible.You can peruse the Rescue inventory here.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 60 Views
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WWW.YANKODESIGN.COMAurzen’s Flagship-Killer $199 Projector casts a Whopping 95-inch screen and has 4 Built-in SpeakersRemember the Tri-fold Projector from CES this year? While that might have been mainly designed to be great PR (everyone loves talking about exciting tech), the tri-fold was simply a trailer to the bigger picture – Aurzen’s catalog of low-budget-great-spec projectors. The BOOM 3, which won the Design Intelligence Award last year, packs a punch with 1080p output (with 4K support), 500 ANSI lumens, and a 4-speaker layout, all bundled into a cool $199 projector. I really don’t get why people still own televisions. They’re bulky, immovable, and funnily, the bigger they are, the better they are, but also the more un-portable they are. You can’t carry a 50-inch TV from room to room, and you certainly can’t use it outdoors, or even mount it to your ceiling. A projector, however, can do all those things while still remaining fairly portable. The same projector can create a display anywhere between 50-120 inches, while still being the same size – the only thing that held projectors back all these years was the price factor – but with a surprisingly low $199 tag, the Aurzen BOOM 3 should be the death-knell most televisions need. Designer: Aurzen Click Here to Buy Now At first glance, the Boom 3 looks like a gorgeous mini monolith. It’s clean, sturdy, and refreshingly analog in the ways that count. A physical volume knob – yes, a knob – makes the simple act of adjusting sound feel oddly satisfying. Weighing 7.8 pounds, the Boom 3 is technically portable – maybe not as much as their tri-fold projector, but definitely more than a massive television. But what you get in exchange for its heft is a projector that wants to be your TV, your sound system, and your streaming box – all while politely asking for dim lighting and about 13 feet of throw distance to stretch its legs to a 95-inch image. For perspective, that’s roughly 4x the size of your average television, but the Boom 3 can scale even larger, provided your space allows. That kind of flexibility makes it easier to reimagine where movie night happens: basement, bedroom, backyard – anywhere you’ve got a flat wall and a power outlet. Brightness clocks in at 500 ANSI lumens, which means it plays well in a darkened room, but you’ll lose some contrast under strong ambient light. Still, it holds its own during casual daylight viewing. The native 1080p resolution projects crisply up to 120 inches, and thanks to laser projection, it maintains sharpness with minimal effort. Setup is straightforward, with autofocus and keystone correction doing most of the heavy lifting. Within minutes, you’re watching – not troubleshooting. The Boom 3’s speaker setup is where it stores the metaphorical big guns. With two full-range drivers, two tweeters, and dual diaphragms pushing out 36W, it delivers sound that feels full and room-filling. At lower volumes, things can skew a little tinny, but push it just a bit, and it finds its rhythm. Pop open the magnetic back and you can actually see how decked out the speaker system is, with multiple drivers and passive radiators to pump out powerful audio – much more than most current single-speaker projectors do, by the way. Audio modes tailored for movies, music, or sports help customize the experience, though you can easily skip them if you just want to hit play and chill. Netflix, YouTube, and Prime Video come preloaded, and the remote includes shortcut buttons to jump right in. Other apps, like Disney+, are accessible through the onboard browser, though this can feel like taking the scenic route. While the interface isn’t as polished as a dedicated streamer, it’s competent enough for most casual viewing. Plugging in an Apple TV or game console via HDMI kicks the whole thing up a notch. Connections are generous: two USB-A ports, two HDMI inputs, aux output, and Bluetooth 5.2 support. Whether you’re mirroring from a MacBook or queueing up a Spotify playlist from your iPhone, it all works smoothly. And if you’re only using it as a Bluetooth speaker? Not a bad idea, especially in “Music” mode, where the diaphragms breathe better and low-end presence improves. All this sits in a package that just costs $199 on Amazon – that’s incredibly affordable given that even budget smartphones can cost nearly double the amount. For that price, you do get a 1080p projector (not a 4K one), but then again, it does pack Dolby Audio, advanced image adjustments, a smart TV interface with all popular apps, and those punchy speakers that double as Bluetooth audio devices when you don’t have the projector running. That sounds like value for money, if you ask me. Click Here to Buy NowThe post Aurzen’s Flagship-Killer $199 Projector casts a Whopping 95-inch screen and has 4 Built-in Speakers first appeared on Yanko Design.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 54 Views
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WWW.CREATIVEBLOQ.COMAdobe says we'll soon be able to chat with PhotoshopAgentic AI will allow image editing without all the clicks.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 47 Views
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WWW.WIRED.COMHundreds of Video Game Workers Join New Union as Trump Attacks Labor RightsThe United Videogame Workers union is open to any gaming worker in the US and Canada and will focus on industry-wide job loss.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 52 Views
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMNintendo Switch Game Console Release Is Whipsawed by Tariff ThreatsThe company moved most of its manufacturing to Vietnam from China to avoid tariffs. But the unpredictability of President Trump’s plans have thrown Nintendo for a loop.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 57 Views
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WWW.MACWORLD.COMTariff panic? Buying an iPhone right now is a terrible ideaMacworld Because it’s so big and its supply chain is so dependent on Chinese factories, Apple is almost uniquely vulnerable to the effects of President Trump’s 125 percent tariff on goods coming out of that nation. For all of Tim Cook’s attempts to conciliate the new regime, this development is very bad news indeed for Apple Park, which will be braced for tough times ahead. Thanks to those levies (here’s a detailed breakdown of how they affect Apple), pundits have speculated that the price of an iPhone could rise by as much as 43 percent, taking the entry-level model from $799 to $1,142 and a top-end iPhone 16 Pro Max to a whopping $2,300. that’s enough to induce a panic and many regular customers are either rushing or considering rushing out to buy a new iPhone before the price hikes kick in… but we think this is a terrible idea. Here’s why. 1. Buying too early is a waste (of money and electronics) There’s a reason why most of us don’t buy a new iPhone on an annual basis: parting with upwards of $1,000 every year (before you factor in a case, a data plan, subscriptions, new apps and IAPs, and repairs if you’re unlucky), is simply too expensive. Most people upgrade their smartphone every two or three years, and plenty hold on to a handset longer than that. For all the talk of planned obsolescence, Apple builds phones that happily last three years or more without a hitch. So let’s think about how panic-buying an iPhone now will affect that cycle. The question is this: When were you planning to upgrade? Soon? In September? Next year? If it’s just a couple of weeks, then defintely make the decision ASAP. (Though it is an odd time of year to get an iPhone, as I’ll discuss below.) But if you were planning on waiting until the new models come out in September then a panic purchase now may save you a few bucks but you’ve just thrown away five months of perfectly good iPhone performance in order to buy a handset that will be a generation less advanced than if you had waited. It’ll last a year less before you notice performance difficulties, so this single act of panic-buying means all future upgrades will need to happen a year earlier. Given the cost of an iPhone, you’ve probably wasted just as much money as you’re likely to save. Besides, regular smartphone upgrades aren’t just bad for your pocket. They’re terrible for the environment, too. So you’ll add some unneeded e-waste into the mix. The iPhone 16 Pro is a great phone—but there’s no reason to rush to buy one now.Anyron Copeman / Foundry 2. The situation could and probably will change I’m no political commentator and absolutely do not want to get into the rights and wrongs of President Trump’s plan. But if there’s one adjective we can apply to the way things have played out so far, it’s unpredictable. At first, Trump threatened to apply tariffs to more than 180 countries, at least one of which has no human inhabitants. Then nearly all of those countries had the tariffs paused (except China), even though the president had previously insisted that wouldn’t happen. At one stage he claimed the idea of individual exemptions was not under consideration, but later he indicated that it is. The point I’m making is that a lot of this appears to be brinkmanship: bluffs and grand gestures intended to secure a negotiational advantage. These moves seemingly aren’t measured long-term plans with a detailed schedule. Things are liable to change with zero notice. Things may get worse, or Apple may get an exemption. Either way, it would be foolhardy to make a high-cost purchase because it seems like a good idea today. 3. The iPhone 17 isn’t far off We’re more than halfway through the lifecycle of the iPhone 16; the iPhone 17 will be here in September. Fewer people tend to buy new iPhones between late spring and summer as it becomes increasingly worth waiting until the new models are announced, at which point you’ll get access to newer hardware with better features, and the then-new models you were considering will get a price cut. Also, there are plenty of unknowns. We don’t know if prices will increase. We don’t know how the iPhone 17 Air will fit in the lineup. We don’t even know whether the iPhone 17 will be an especially exciting update. A panic purchase would take all the fun out of waiting. The iPhone 16e might be a great bargain next year.Eugen Wegmann 4. There are cheaper phones you can buy from Time for some hard truths: Apple isn’t the only smartphone maker in the world. Here at Macworld, we think the iPhone is the best option, but it would be absurd to claim that the Android market has nothing to offer, whether that’s lower prices, more adventurous features and design choices, or a more customizable operating system. Check out this cross-platform rundown of the best smartphones from our colleagues at Tech Advisor for a glimpse of what’s out there. Many of those Android manufacturers will be facing the same issues as Apple right now, but not all. If things get really bad and the iPhone’s price balloons to insane levels (which I think is unlikely), there will certainly be alternatives out there that are more affordable without suffering too much on the quality front. There’s also the iPhone 16e. We don’t know yet how Apple plans to update its newest “budget” handset in 2026. If tariffs affect the price of the iPhone 17 flagship lineup and impact sales, Apple could use its “e” line as a way to tempt buyers back into the fold. So again, wait. 5. You might need that money for other things I don’t want to get all pessimistic or anything. But you might want to save your cash for essentials in the new economy. We all want a shiny new iPhone, but your current model is probably fine. So you can spend the money on something else, such as a leather jacket, a shotgun, and a car with spikes all over it.0 Σχόλια 0 Μοιράστηκε 68 Views