• WWW.ENGADGET.COM
    Google is trying to get college students hooked on AI with a free year of Gemini Advanced
    Under no circumstances should you let AI do your schoolwork for you, but Google has decided to make that option a little bit easier for the next year. The company is offering a free year of it's Google One AI Premium plan, which includes Gemini Advanced, access to the AI assistant in the Google Workspace and things like Gemini Live, to any college student willing to sign up. The offer gives you a sample platter of Google's latest AI features, which normally costs $20 per month, and is primarily focused on things you can do with Gemini. That includes experimental products like NotebookLM for analyzing documents, and Whisk for remixing images and videos. Because this is a Google One plan, you'll also get 2TB of Google Drive storage for the parade of PDFs that make up college life. You can sign-up for the free offer on Google's website. You need to be 18 years or older, have a ".edu" email address and join before June 30, 2025, but once you do, you'll have the Google One AI Premium plan through July 2026. Google says you'll need to verify you're still a student in 2026, but otherwise, the whole thing is a light lift. Even if you don't care about AI, signing up is worth it for the free extra storage. Google's intentions here obviously aren't pure. Free storage is nice, but If the company can normalize using AI for a generation of young minds, it can change what's an occasionally useful novelty into an essential. That's not likely to be good for critical thinking or test scores, even if it justifies the money the company is spending on AI research and development.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/google-is-trying-to-get-college-students-hooked-on-ai-with-a-free-year-of-gemini-advanced-195706467.html?src=rss
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  • WWW.TECHRADAR.COM
    Samsung's latest smartphone has a very simple feature that no other Samsung phone offers right now
    Samsung brings back the removable battery with the rugged Galaxy XCover7 Pro, offering reliability and endurance in challenging work environments.
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  • WWW.FASTCOMPANY.COM
    Judge pauses Trump’s mass layoffs at CFPB
    President Donald Trump’s attempt to fire nearly everyone at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was paused on Friday by a federal judge, who said she was “deeply concerned” about the plan. The decision leaves in limbo a bureau created after the Great Recession to safeguard against fraud, abuse and deceptive practices. Trump administration officials argue that it has overstepped its authority and should have a more limited mission. On Thursday, the administration officials moved to fire roughly 1,500 people, leaving around 200 employees, through a reduction in force that would dramatically downsize the bureau. U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson said she was worried the layoffs would violate her earlier order stopping the Republican administration from shutting down the CFPB. She’s been considering a lawsuit filed by an employee union that wants to preserve the bureau. Jackson scheduled a hearing on April 28 to hear testimony from officials who worked on the reduction in force, or RIF. “I’m willing to resolve it quickly, but I’m not going to let this RIF go forward until I have,” she said. It’s the latest example of how Trump’s plans have faced legal hurdles as he works to reshape the federal government, saying it’s rife with fraud, waste and abuse. Other layoffs and policies have been subjected to stop-and-go litigation and court orders. The CFPB has long frustrated businesses with its oversight and investigations, and Trump adviser Elon Musk made it a top target of his Department of Government Efficiency. Mark Paoletta, the CFPB’s chief legal officer, wrote in a court declaration that “the bureau’s activities have pushed well beyond the limits of the law,” including what he described as “intrusive and wasteful fishing expeditions.” He said officials have spent weeks developing “a much more limited vision for enforcement and supervision activities” with a “smaller, more efficient operation.” Some of the CFPB’s responsibilities are required by law but would have only one person assigned to them under the Trump administration’s plan. The enforcement division is slated to be cut from 248 to 50 employees. The supervision division faces an even deeper reduction, from 487 to 50, plus a relocation from Washington to the Southeastern region. Before Friday’s hearing, attorneys for the National Treasury Employees Union filed a sworn statement from a CFPB employee identified only by the pseudonym Alex Doe. The employee said Gavin Kliger, a member of DOGE, was managing the agency’s RIF team charged with sending layoff notices. “He kept the team up for 36 hours straight to ensure that the notices would go out yesterday,” the employee said. “Gavin was screaming at people he did not believe were working fast enough to ensure they could go out on this compressed timeline, calling them incompetent.” The bureau’s chief operating officer, Adam Martinez, told the judge that he believes Kliger is an Office of Personnel Management employee detailed to the CFPB and doesn’t work directly for DOGE. Jackson said she will require Kliger to attend and possibly testify at the April 28 hearing. She said she wants to know why he was there “and what we was doing.” “We’re not going to decide what happened until we know what happened,” Jackson said. The pseudonymous employee said team members raised concerns that the bureau had to conduct a “particularized assessment” before it could implement an RIF. Paoletta told them to ignore those concerns and move forward with mass firings, adding that “leadership would assume the risk,” the employee stated. White House officials did not immediately respond to questions about the judge’s decision or the employee’s court declaration. —Michael Kunzelman and Chris Megerian, Associated Press
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  • WWW.CORE77.COM
    This Gizmo Cuts Plastic Bottles Into Neat Strips
    This intriguing BottleLoom invention, by Chinese manufacturer New Creativity, cuts plastic bottles into clean strips of material. While you need to cut the bottom of the bottle off manually to begin the strip, you can then essentially unravel the bottle. The tiny device can be used handheld, or mounted to a table. The adjustable device can be set to cut 2mm-, 4.2mm- or 7mm-wide strips. To give you an idea of yield, the company says a 1-liter plastic bottle can yield two to six feet of material, depending on the width you choose.The fact that none of the demonstrations show you the beginning of the process, where you first cut the bottom off of the bottle to get the strip started, suggests it isn't easy.So what the heck are you going to do with a bunch of plastic strips? The tool is aimed at crafters who want to make everything from cable tie alternatives to brooms. They've put together this supercut of applications:The BottleLoom has been successfully Kickstarted, with 19 days left to pledge at press time. The $70 object is supposed to ship in June.
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  • WWW.YANKODESIGN.COM
    This reverse charging cable for AirPods Pro is useful when buds and case battery runs out
    Wireless earphones have come a long way in terms of battery life while maintaining a compact form factor. A good pair of buds can last almost six to seven hours on average with ANC on. The charging case provides another two to three charge cycles before you need to plug in your case for a refill. Under normal circumstances, that should be enough for a day or even a day and a half, if you keep the ANC and transparency mode turned off for the duration. If you are a power user always on the go, chances are you might drain out all the battery in your charging case. The solution in that scenario is to keep a wired pair handy, or is it? This concept believes otherwise, and the idea seems novel, just like the Streamline hybrid earbuds that can be used both in wireless and wired modes. Called the reverse charging earphones, these charge your buds when the juice runs out. Designer: Jinkyo Han Imagined for the Apple AirPods Pro, the concept proposes a reverse charging cable that connects to the phone and then charges the buds when they are low on battery power. Since each bud carries a battery capacity of 50 mAh each, every recharge cycle will only drain 100 mAh of the phone’s battery power, which is a bargain as current generation smartphones have a battery capacity of 5,000 mAh. It’s like you have a power bank for your AirPods Pro in case you’ve exhausted both the buds and the charging case battery. When the AirPods battery runs out, simply dock them into the charging cable slot and connect them to the phone with the USB-C cable. The buds attach securely to the cable dock without the fear of knocking them off as they dock magnetically into the deep hollow openings at the ends, Jinkyo refers to as the A terminals. If you wish to use the buds in this mode for a prolonged period, you can even skip carrying the charging case for the earbuds. The charging cable indicates the charge status with a blinking LED light on the Y-splitter section. The idea is very practical, probably the reason we are seeing such concept design pop up. In all likelihood, Apple won’t be tempted to go for such a design evolution or design an official accessory with such functionality. Third-party manufacturers and start-ups might be tempted to turn this ideation into reality, given its utilitarian aspect. The post This reverse charging cable for AirPods Pro is useful when buds and case battery runs out first appeared on Yanko Design.
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  • WWW.WIRED.COM
    Judge Blocks DOGE From Laying Off 90 Percent of CFPB
    The Trump administration and DOGE tried to cut more than 1,400 employees at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. An employee union and other groups are fighting to keep the regulator intact.
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  • APPLEINSIDER.COM
    Apple brings game card sharing to Apple Sports
    The steady additions to the Apple Sports app are continuing, with a new option for users to share dynamic game cards.Apple Sports users can now share game cards with friendsFollowing its launch in February 2024, Apple Sports was initially considered too basic, but it has been slowing adding features. Now a new addition is intended to get users sharing Apple Sports with friends.The new feature is called Game Card Sharing, and Apple says that fans "can now generate and share dynamic game cards across all supported leagues, whether the matchup is upcoming, live, or completed." It's a free addition to the iPhone-only Apple Sports app, which is itself free to download from the App Store. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
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  • ARCHINECT.COM
    DAAR's striving for human rights causes earns the RIBA Charles Jencks Award for 2025
    The RIBA Charles Jencks Award for 2025 has gone to the Sweden/Palestine-based artistic research practice DAAR and founders Sandi Hilal and Alessandro Petti for their multi-faceted channeling of human rights causes into the broader canon of architecture. DAAR (which stands for 'Decolonizing Architecture Art Residency') was established in the West Bank in 2007. Their work extends into the built environment to "[challenge] dominant collective narratives, [redefine] political concepts, and [foster] new forms of civic engagement."
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  • GAMINGBOLT.COM
    Nintendo Switch 2 Pre-Orders Begin on April 24th in the US and Canada, Console Price Unchanged
    After delaying the same due to tariffs, Nintendo has confirmed that Switch 2 pre-orders begin on April 24th in the United States and Canada. The console price will remain at $449.99/CAD$629.99, while the Mario Kart World bundle continues to retail for $499.99/CAD$699.99. Mario Kart World and Donkey Kong Bananza will also remain at the same prices physically and digitally – $79.99 and $69.99. Unfortunately, “changes in market conditions” have caused price increases for many accessories. Check out the full list of prices for everything, from the controller and Joy-Con 2 Pair to the games: Nintendo Switch 2 – $449.99/CAD$629.99 Nintendo Switch 2 + Mario Kart World Bundle – $499.99/CAD$699.99 Mario Kart World – $79.99/CAD$109.99 Donkey Kong Bananza – $69.99/CAD$99.99 Nintendo Switch 2 Pro Controller – $84.99/CAD$109.99 Joy-Con 2 Pair – $94.99/CAD$124.99 Joy-Con 2 Charging Grip – $39.99/CAD$49.99 Joy-Con 2 Strap – $13.99/CAD$19.99 Joy-Con 2 Wheel Set – $24.99/CAD$29.99 Nintendo Switch 2 Camera – $54.99/CAD$69.99 Nintendo Switch 2 Dock Set – $119.99/CAD$154.99 Nintendo Switch 2 Carrying Case & Screen Protector – $39.99/CAD$49.99 Nintendo Switch 2 All-In-One Carrying Case – $84.99/CAD$109.99 Nintendo Switch 2 AC Adapter – $34.99/CAD$39.99 Samsung microSD Express Card – 256GB for Nintendo Switch 2 – $59.99/CAD$84.99 It also clarifies that “other adjustments” to the pricing of “any Nintendo product” can occur later due to market conditions. Long story short, prices could increase further if more tariffs are announced. The Nintendo Switch 2 launches on June 5th worldwide alongside Mario Kart World. Check out the latest gameplay for the latter here. You can also learn about new features like Rewind, unlockable character outfits, Battle Mode, and more.
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