by Adam Speight, Julian Chokkattu on (#61B1G)
Samsung’s Galaxy S22 Ultra is more than $350 off, and the OnePlus 9 Pro is the lowest price we've ever seen. It’s a deals bonanza.
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Copyright | © Condé Nast 2024 |
Updated | 2024-11-25 11:16 |
by Matt Jancer on (#61AK8)
Get your beauty rest with these sales on sheets, pillows, and snooze-enhancing tech.
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by Eric Ravenscraft on (#61CH8)
Score a new gaming station and deck it out with a headset, peripherals … and maybe even a new TV.
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by Haley Sprankle, Gear Team on (#61CVV)
Make cleaning suck less with these discounted vacs from iRobot, Samsung, and Roborock.
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by Louryn Strampe, Gear Team on (#61A1P)
Amazon Prime Day isn't the only sale this week. From video games to household essentials, here are our favorite picks from Target’s big Deal Days sale of 2022.
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by Matt Jancer on (#61CSZ)
Live out your wilderness fantasies in comfort with these deals on camp chairs, hammocks, and tents.
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by Parker Hall, Gear Team on (#617VZ)
Need a new 4K screen? Some of our top picks are on sale right now for Amazon Prime Day.
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by Vittoria Elliott on (#61CH7)
A ruling against the company could allow the government to censor a wide swath of platforms, and set a global precedent.
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by Medea Giordano, Gear Team on (#614JE)
If you prefer Google Assistant and the Nest ecosystem, there's a discount here for you.
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by Dan Goodin, Ars Technica on (#61CC3)
The exploit can leak password information and other sensitive material, but the chipmakers are rolling out mitigations.
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by Brenda Stolyar on (#61486)
Stock up with these iHealth at-home antigen tests.
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by Swapna Krishna on (#61C3X)
Turns out mobile games are the perfect loophole for my lizard brain—and they could work for you, too.
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by Edna Bonhomme on (#61C1X)
Due to its history with the Holocaust, calling race by its name has often been contested. Black Germans say that this policy can ignore disparate impact.
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by Jason Kehe on (#61C08)
All ranked lists are lazy, lame, and lacking. Except this one.
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by Chris Baraniuk on (#61C07)
The deposits discovered reportedly contain enough resources to meet global demand for 1,000 years—surpassing even China’s reserves. But experts are skeptical.
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by Will Knight on (#61C06)
Fears that artificial intelligence tools could displace creatives such as illustrators, designers, and photographers seem unfounded—for now.
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by Maggie Chen on (#61C05)
Sea cucumbers are squishy and soft. They also employ lethal strategies to protect themselves.
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by Julian Chokkattu on (#61BKA)
Got an iPhone 12 or 13? These magnetic wireless chargers are discounted for Prime Day and do more than you think.
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by Matt Jancer on (#61BBC)
Stay entertained and sane during your next trip with these deals on travel adapters, noise-canceling earbuds, and more.
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by Varsha Bansal on (#61B4C)
Nonprofit donors had their information given to law enforcement without consent, highlighting limited data protections in the world’s largest democracy.
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by Louryn Strampe on (#61B1F)
If you don't mind a dented box or cosmetic flaw, these deals are worth checking out before they expire tomorrow.
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by Ramin Skibba on (#61AYC)
The cosmic probe’s long-awaited images will kick off astronomers’ science programs.
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by Kate Knibbs on (#61AQT)
Ever wish George Saunders tried his hand at crime fiction? Try David Musgrave’s imaginative debut novel, Lambda.
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by Reece Rogers on (#61ANE)
WIRED spoke with casting director Julia Bianco Schoeffling about breaking into the industry and how it’s more than just voice acting.
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by Gideon Lichfield on (#61AK7)
WIRED’s editor in chief reflects on how digital surveillance infrastructure could be used to prosecute abortion, plus more thoughts on this month’s headlines.
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by Parker Hall, Gear Team on (#60P1Q)
From TVs and fitness trackers to laptops, we found great discounts on some of our favorite products ahead of the retailer’s big sales event.
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by Chris Stokel-Walker, Tom Simonite on (#619XT)
Days after the deal to buy Twitter fell apart, fed up employees say they are being kept in the dark.
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by Garrett M. Graff on (#619SF)
The US House committee has already uncovered a more organized and sinister plot than many imagined. But history suggests the worst may be yet to come.
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by Pia Owens on (#619AH)
Without adequate consumer protections, social media companies can use any content you post, often without your knowledge or consent.
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by Grace Browne on (#6198R)
Marginalized groups often think about the mental impact of the climate crisis in different terms—meaning they end up crowded out of the conversation.
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by Sophia Chen on (#6198Q)
A series of recent experiments between quantum and classical computers shows the term’s ever-evolving meaning.
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by Matt Burgess on (#6198P)
The pro-Russian group Killnet is targeting countries supporting Ukraine. It has declared "war" against 10 nations.
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by Arielle Pardes on (#6198N)
The startup used regulatory loopholes and marketing to make nicotine cool. Now the FDA threatens to shut the company down, but new rivals are taking over.
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by Virginia Heffernan on (#6197A)
'The Dawn of Everything' fundamentally shifted my view of … everything. I had to meet one of the minds behind its world-tilting revelations.
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by Allison Whitten on (#618GS)
Neuroscientists uncovered an energy-saving mode in vision-system neurons that works at the cost of being able to see fine-grained details.
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by David Nield on (#618G4)
These free, simple tools for phone or web let you visualize urban sprawl or see what your street looked like before the turn of the millennium.
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by Sarah Lageson on (#618G3)
States are trying to automate criminal record clearance. But what if they end up amplifying racial disparities?
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by Louryn Strampe on (#618G2)
Most of these promotions require you to spend some money, but they’re a relatively easy way to redeem some extra cash.
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by Lily Hay Newman on (#617XT)
Plus: A duplicitous bug bounty scheme, the iPhone's new “lockdown mode,” and more of the week's top security news.
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by Boone Ashworth on (#617XS)
Apple gets a maximum security mode, Twitter tests two-person tweets, and TikTok slows down its Shop plans.
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by Sarah Durn on (#617WT)
Thought for decades to be extinct, the tiny animal has stayed hidden in a former subterranean speakeasy.
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by Reid McCarter on (#617WS)
The games take different approaches to the horror game genre, but both are informed by their love for slasher flicks.
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by Arielle Pardes on (#617W1)
The #GentleMinions and the #minionscult have overrun TikTok, taking the franchise’s impact to all-new levels.
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by Will Bedingfield on (#617W0)
Taika Waititi’s Ragnarok follow-up is full of inside jokes that make it almost impenetrable to outsiders. That’s not a bad thing, but it’s not great either.
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by Medea Giordano on (#617B8)
One of our favorite coffee subscriptions is on sale for new subscribers through July 14.
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by Geek's Guide to the Galaxy on (#6174C)
Adam-Troy Castro's short story remains one of the author's best, even years later.
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by Amit Katwala on (#6171K)
Quantum-proof encryption is here—decades before it can be put to the test.
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by Khari Johnson on (#616V5)
The company’s warehouses demand a fast pace of workers, and have higher injury rates than at competing firms.
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by Angela Watercutter on (#616X1)
The show’s fourth season is blessedly more compelling, and comprehensible, than its third—and signals a subtle shift in its genre.
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by Jon Brodkin, Ars Technica on (#616X0)
The US Federal Communications Commission says a man posing as a fake broadband service promised victims discounts on internet services and devices.
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