Author: News Room

This PS3 emulator just got official PC requirements, and they’re easy to meet

RPCS3 now has official system specs, and the headline is simple. Most PCs from the past several years can already handle PlayStation 3 emulation without much trouble. The team broke things into four hardware tiers, from minimum up to max performance, giving a clearer picture of what’s actually needed. After years of steady optimization, the barrier to entry looks much lower than many expected. Even handheld PCs can reach recommended results in many titles, which says a lot about current efficiency. Most modern desktops should run a large portion of the PS3 library without major issues. Even entry-level hardware makes…

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Flight passengers will soon have to reduce how many chargers they can carry

Southwest Airlines is implementing a strict safety change, and you should be aware of it before your next flight. Starting April 20, passengers flying Southwest will only be allowed to bring one portable charger or power bank with them.  Not only that, but you also cannot place the charger in the overhead bin or checked luggage, and it must stay within sight at all times when in use. The rule is stricter than what the International Civil Aviation Organization recommended last month, which capped portable chargers at two per passenger.  Why is this suddenly a big deal? According to an…

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Pixel outperforms iPhone and Galaxy on repairability

Google’s Pixel phones now rank ahead of both iPhone and Galaxy devices on repairability, based on a 2026 scorecard that reshapes how smartphone durability gets measured. The update leans on stricter European grading that focuses on what happens during an actual fix, not just whether parts exist. Motorola leads with a B+, followed by Google at C-, while Samsung drops to a D and Apple lands at a D-. The spread comes down to how many steps it takes to reach key components and how complicated common repairs have become. This shift ties directly to ownership costs. A phone that’s…

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Netflix’s VOID AI removes objects while preserving real-world motion

Netflix is detailing an AI video tool that goes beyond simple cleanup. Its system, called VOID, cuts elements from footage while keeping everything else behaving in a way that still feels grounded. That marks a shift for AI video editing. Existing tools can erase unwanted elements, but they often leave behind movement that feels off, like objects floating or actions stopping without cause. VOID focuses on what happens after an edit, rebuilding the sequence so the outcome still follows believable cause and effect. The research shows the model can adjust interactions in response to changes, so if a supporting object…

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Stranger Things: Tales from ’85 – release date, episodes, new characters and timeline explained

The original Stranger Things series ended on December 31, 2025, after five seasons and nearly a decade of terrifying adventures in Hawkins. But Netflix was never going to let one of its biggest franchises simply fade into the Upside Down. Less than four months after the finale, the universe is expanding again with an animated spinoff called Stranger Things: Tales from ’85. The whole core gang is back, there’s a bold new character joining the mix, and a new monster lurking under the snow. So, here’s everything you need to know before the animated Stranger Things show arrives. What is…

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Stunning close-up footage shows NASA’s moon rocket roaring to space

As NASA’s Artemis II astronauts journey back to Earth following their breathtaking close encounter with the moon earlier this week, the space agency has just shared some stunning footage (below) of the rocket launch that sent the crew on its way on April 1. The close-up tracking shot shows the awesome power of the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket’s four core RS-25 engines together and its two solid rocket boosters as the 98-meter-tall vehicle roars away from the launchpad at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. @NASA has just released some EXTRAORDINARY tracking footage from Artemis II’s launch just one…

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3 reasons why I’m jealous of Apple’s macOS in 2026

I’ve never been a fan of Apple’s MacBook, but I have to admit that the platform is getting a lot of things right. Living with Windows has been a hassle recently, and Apple has been inching ahead for all the right reasons. While I still rely on Windows, familiarity alone isn’t the whole game anymore. In 2026, there are some macOS conveniences that feel less like luxury perks and more like basic computing features Microsoft should have figured out by now. And the annoying part is that Apple’s advantage is not always raw power or flashy AI. A lot of…

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MacBooks are still the hardest laptops to fix, consumer group says

Apple is leading the pack in one laptop category, but it’s not an award anyone would want to flaunt. The MacBooks have taken the throne as the worst in laptop repairability. The latest Failing the Fix report from the U.S PIRG Education Fund ranked these notebooks at the bottom. In the 2026 edition of the annual report, the group measured both major smartphones and laptop brands on how repairable their products were. What do the rankings reveal? The report used European repair data and additional adjustments tied to Right to Repair lobbying and support. In the laptop section, the PIRG…

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Aiper Scuba V3 Review: Finally, a pool robot with an actual brain

Aiper Scuba V3 MSRP $949.99 Released February 2026 “The Scuba V3 punches above its weight-class with both outstanding performance and value” Pros Lightweight Cleans well Intuitive app Cons Will not clean the water surface Mediocre battery life Instant Insight  I have always maintained that owning a pool is like owning a boat – you will spend 90% of your time maintaining and cleaning it and 10% of your time enjoying it, especially if you live in Oregon as I do. Over the years, we have seen robot cleaners evolve from erratic, cord-tangled wall-bumpers to reliable vacuums, and technology keeps getting better, especially in the age of AI. Priced at $1,199 MSRP (with…

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New ASUS Zenbook A14 and Zenbook A16 launched with Snapdragon X2 series chips and OLED displays

ASUS has officially released its new Zenbook A14 and Zenbook A16 in the US, expanding its latest Copilot+ PC lineup with two thin-and-light laptops built around Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 platform. The Zenbook A16 is the headline model in the latest A series lineup, with ASUS calling it the fastest Snapdragon-powered laptop on the market. Meanwhile, the A14 is the more portable notebook with similar specs and features to its larger sibling. Zenbook A16: Leading in size and performance The new Zenbook A16 is built around Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 Elite Extreme processor, with up to 80 TOPS of NNPU performance. ASUS…

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