SwitchBot’s Original Smart Gadget Finally Goes Rechargeable

The original button-pusher just got a power boost. The SwitchBot Bot Rechargeable goes live, and could be the easiest way to make your dumb gadgets smart.

Mystery Tarkov-Marathon Extraction Blend, ‘Fragmentary Order,’ Raises Questions

Fragmentary Order, already being called “Starkov” by many, debuted a seven-minute cinematic trailer yesterday, dropping from new studio Rant Gaming and publisher Cor3,

‘Euphoria’ Premiere Review: One Bizarrely Bad Performance, One Good One

Euphoria is back four years later for season 3 which feels like an entirely different show, and not in a good way.

Trump Administration Is Favoring Medicare Advantage Plans For Seniors

Trump administration is considering auto-enrollment for Medicare enrollees in Medicare Advantage. This suggests a preference for the program over traditional Medicare.

Why Your Kindle Could Soon Be A Paperweight And Your Tesla Is Next

Amazon will cut Kindle Store access for older devices on May 20. A factory reset may turn your device into a brick.

Intel, IBM, And MythWorx Are Shrinking Neuromorphic AI To 20 Watts

Intel, IBM, and MythWorx are shrinking AI to run on 20 watts, the same power as the human brain. Inside the neuromorphic race to make enterprise AI lean again.

7 Beautiful Bird Moments From The 2025 Nature Photography Contest

These seven photos represent the very best of bird photography, celebrating the beauty and daily hustle of life in the air.

An AI System Passed Peer Review. The Scientific Community Isn’t Ready

An AI system automated the full arc of scientific research and passed peer review. Its creators say it could fix science’s worst habits — but the risks are just as real.

Prior Authorization Reform Is Here—And It Could Change How Millions Get Care

Prior authorization forces doctors to spend 13 hours a week fighting insurers. New federal rules are changing that—here’s what you need to know.

The More We Add To U.S. Healthcare, The Worse It Gets

Better healthcare outcomes and lower costs begin with subtraction, not addition. Here’s why less is more when it comes to American medicine.