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Author: News Room
Amazon’s AI shopping assistant Rufus can now show you a full 365 days of price history for a product. In other words, you now have access to a full year’s worth of pricing data, including when the product was available for a higher or lower price, and when the last price change took place, before buying anything. Previously, the maximum available price history was 90 days, enough to catch up on a recent sale, but not enough to know whether a limited-time offer is actually the best price a product has been available in the last year. How do you…
In this week’s episode of The Game Informer Show, returning guest Brenden Groom (Pass The Controller) joins us to discuss why Poncle’s Vampire Crawlers and Double Fine’s new sculpture battle game, Kiln, are both great. Additionally, we dive into Charles’ review of Tides of Tomorrow, a story-focused adventure game with asynchronous multiplayer elements. It’s a neat concept, but how’s the execution?The Game Informer Show is a weekly podcast covering the video game industry. Join us every Friday for chats about video game reviews, news, and exclusive reveals alongside Game Informer staff and special guests from around the industry. Support the show by…
Does the Intuit Enterprise Suite (IES) interface dramatically differ from QuickBooks Online?
This post is brought to you in paid partnership with QuickBooks The Intuit Enterprise Suite (IES) interface doesn’t dramatically differ from QuickBooks Online. Core navigation, workflows, and accounting functions remain familiar. The main difference is added functionality for managing multiple entities, user permissions, and consolidated reporting. This means most users can adapt quickly while gaining tools to handle more complex financial operations. Key takeaways IES keeps familiar workflows but adds multi-entity functionality. Navigation remains similar, with additional controls for managing entities. Users adapt quickly by learning reporting and entity-level differences. What is the difference between IES and QuickBooks Online? Intuit…
These solar fence lights offer 11 modes and 9 colors for $2.50 per light, and the IP65 rating means they stay out all year
This post is brought to you in paid partnership with ESUNYD Outdoor lighting that requires no wiring, runs entirely on solar power, and costs $2.50 per light is a straightforward upgrade for any deck, fence, or patio. The ESUNYD solar fence light 16-pack makes that case clearly at $39.99. That’s a $10 saving off the $49.99 list price for a set that covers 9 color options, 11 lighting modes, and IP65 waterproofing across every unit in the pack. What you’re getting The 11 modes are what give these solar lights their range. Fixed single-color modes cover warm white and eight…
ŌURA has announced a major update to its smart ring platform, introducing new features focused on hormonal health. The company is rolling out Hormonal Birth Control support and Menopause Insights globally starting May 6, marking a significant expansion of its women’s health capabilities. A Shift Toward More Personalized Health Tracking The update brings two key additions. First, Hormonal Birth Control support builds on Oura’s existing Cycle Insights feature. It allows users to log different types of contraception, including pills, patches, IUDs, and implants, and track how these methods affect metrics such as body temperature, sleep, and recovery. The goal is…
Virtual Reality headsets have spent years being marketed around video games, virtual cinemas, and fitness. Cornell researchers, however, are showing how these can also be used as a solid creative tool. A doctoral student at Cornell has helped develop an extended reality tool called “DanXeReflect”, which lets dancers use VR headsets to analyze and refine their movement in an immersive virtual studio. How DanXeReflect makes dance videos into a powerful rehearsal tool The cool thing about DanXeReflect is that it transforms regular 2D video into a virtual environment where movement appears through interactive avatars. So dancers don’t have to sit…
Norwegian-American robotics firm 1X Technologies has offered a glimpse into what scaled humanoid robot production looks like, and it’s surprisingly circular. In a newly released demo, its Neo robot is shown assisting humans on the factory floor, helping build more Neo units as the company moves toward full-scale manufacturing. Robots helping build more robots At the center of the demo is 1X’s Neo humanoid robot, a bipedal machine designed primarily for domestic environments that is now stepping into early manufacturing workflows. The footage shows Neo performing repetitive, assistive tasks alongside human workers, effectively becoming part of the assembly process. The…
History has shown that we humans like the movement of light – babies, children, teenagers, adults, and even the elderly are drawn to flashing colors with matching rhythmic sounds. It’s why slot machines, televisions, phones, and yes, video games, keep us glued to their presentation. Poncle’s latest game, a first-person dungeon crawler aptly titled Vampire Crawlers, uses these sensations to bring to life its simple but effective deckbuilding roguelite in a way as idiosyncratic as its parallel predecessor, Vampire Survivors. And though I find my enjoyment crossing back and forth between a TikTok-like compulsion (derogatory) and a genuine craving for…
AI has plenty of messy use cases, but emergency medicine may be one place where it can do some real good. A Harvard study comparing AI performance against doctors using patient data from emergency-room cases revealed that OpenAI’s o1 reasoning model outperformed human doctors in emergency triage diagnosis, especially in cases where decisions had to be made quickly with limited information. What did the test reveal? A part of the Harvard trial included 76 patients who arrived at the emergency room of a Boston hospital. The AI model and two human doctors were given the same electronic health record, including…
I held off on the MacBook Neo. I hope the next one fixes these 5 papercuts before I plonk cash
The MacBook Neo stopped me in my tracks, not because it’s a beautiful piece of tech that appeals to the enthusiast inside me. It’s the overall pitch that Apple puts on the table — aluminum build, efficient silicon, and great battery life — all at an implausible price tag of $599. I wanted to experience it, and I almost bought it a couple of weeks ago. But I didn’t. And it wasn’t because Neo is a bad machine. I got to experience the device for a couple of days (thanks to my friend who splurged his money on it), and…










