WIRED
Boroux Versus Rorra Countertop Water Filters, Tested Head to Head
In a world of plastic water filter pitchers, I tested two of the new generation of stainless-steel filter systems. I will admit that the popularity of those giant, stainless steel, gravity-fed water filters remained a mystery to me for some years--even as multi-gallon water filter systems from brands like British Berkefeld and Berkey seemed to proliferate equally among lovers of doomsday prepping and holistic wellness retreats. I have been testing much different breeds of water filters for more than a year now, including reverse osmosis filters and water pitchers. But often, the big water filter tanks have seemed as much like status symbols as functional items. If you see a big gravity-fed filter, you know the person in question is serious about wellness, survival, or both. What changed my mind about these big stainless steel filters was microplastics . Most water filter pitchers are made of BPA-free plastic. But as new research shows that bottled-water drinkers ingest tens of thousands of excess microplastic particles, wellness lovers have begun to look askance at water filters that are themselves made of plastic.
- North America > United States > Oregon > Multnomah County > Portland (0.04)
- North America > United States > California (0.04)
- Europe > United Kingdom > Scotland (0.04)
- (2 more...)
- Materials (1.00)
- Law (0.68)
- Health & Medicine (0.67)
- (2 more...)
The Best Monitor Arms in 2026 to Clear Up Your Desk Space
Your monitor needs a monitor arm, and I've been testing every single one I can get my hands on to see which is best. A monitor arm should be one of those simple products you buy once and never think about again. But I've seen horror stories of cheap, knock-off models that collapse, damaging both the desk and the monitor. Anything that mounts a very heavy piece of expensive tech like a high-end monitor should be high-quality, which is true of all the options below. Each of the monitor arms on our list have been hand-tested by us. Most are currently clamped down to a desk of one of our product reviewers.
- North America > United States > California (0.04)
- Europe > Slovakia (0.04)
- Europe > Czechia (0.04)
- Asia > Middle East > UAE (0.06)
- North America > United States > Minnesota (0.05)
- North America > United States > California (0.05)
- (7 more...)
- Government > Military (0.98)
- Government > Regional Government > North America Government > United States Government (0.73)
A Quantum Leap for the Turing Award
Charles Bennett and Gilles Brassard pioneered quantum information theory. Now they've been awarded the highest honor in computer science. Today it's widely acknowledged that the future of computing will involve the quantum realm . Companies like Google, Microsoft, IBM, and a few well-funded startups are frantically building quantum computers and routinely claiming advances that seem to bring this exotic, world-changing technology within reach. In 1979 all of this was unthinkable.
- Asia > Middle East > Iran (0.16)
- Asia > Middle East > UAE (0.15)
- North America > United States > California (0.05)
- (6 more...)
- Information Technology (0.71)
- Banking & Finance > Trading (0.71)
- Government > Regional Government > North America Government > United States Government (0.70)
- Education > Curriculum > Subject-Specific Education (0.48)
- Information Technology > Hardware (0.92)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Natural Language (0.48)
Justice Department Says Anthropic Can't Be Trusted With Warfighting Systems
Justice Department Says Anthropic Can't Be Trusted With Warfighting Systems In response to Anthropic's lawsuit, the government said it lawfully penalized the company for trying to limit how its Claude AI models could be used by the military. The Trump administration argued in a court filing on Tuesday that it did not violate Anthropic's First Amendment rights by designating the AI developer a supply-chain risk and predicted that the company's lawsuit against the government will fail. "The First Amendment is not a license to unilaterally impose contract terms on the government, and Anthropic cites nothing to support such a radical conclusion," US Department of Justice attorneys wrote. The response was filed in a federal court in San Francisco, one of two venues where Anthropic is challenging the Pentagon's decision to sanction the company with a label that can bar companies from defense contracts over concerns about potential security vulnerabilities. Anthropic argues the Trump administration overstepped its authority in applying the label and preventing the company's technologies from being used inside the department.
- North America > United States > California > San Francisco County > San Francisco (0.25)
- Asia > Middle East > Iran (0.05)
- North America > United States > California > Los Angeles County > Los Angeles (0.05)
- (3 more...)
- Law (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government > North America Government > United States Government (1.00)
Meta Is Shutting Down Horizon Worlds on Meta Quest
Meta's flailing virtual reality social experience is being discontinued in June. It's part of Meta's broader moves to slim down the business that became its namesake. Pour one out from your digital bottle, because Meta is shutting down the virtual reality experience of Horizon Worlds. Meta sent an email blast to Horizon Worlds users today stating that the social VR world will officially end on its Quest VR headsets; starting March 31, Horizon Worlds will no longer be in the Quest store. Some Horizon-specific perks, including Meta Credits, avatars, and some digital clothes and in-world purchases, will also be removed.
- Asia > Middle East > Iran (0.05)
- North America > United States > New York > New York County > New York City (0.05)
- North America > United States > California > San Francisco County > San Francisco (0.05)
- (3 more...)
- Information Technology (0.98)
- Leisure & Entertainment (0.70)
DoorDash Reservations Scored America's Most Exclusive Restaurants
After the rise (and fall) of reservation scalping, DoorDash and a host of apps are fighting to book you a seat at the country's most exclusive restaurants. At The Eighty-Six in Manhattan, exclusivity is the point. The luxe, 11-table steakhouse is the sort of place that lavishes caviar and aged mimolette cheese on its potatoes, and crows that your market-price duck was raised by one Dr. Taylor Swift has reportedly dined there in a Miu Miu skirt. Reservations are a scarce commodity that the restaurant, and New York law forbids you from selling one. "Access is the main asset," wrote food writer Helen Rosner in a recent New Yorker review of The Eighty-Six. "The product is the door, and what a door!
- North America > United States > Pennsylvania (0.05)
- North America > United States > New York > New York County > New York City (0.05)
- North America > United States > Nevada > Clark County > Las Vegas (0.05)
- (9 more...)
- Information Technology > Services (0.96)
- Consumer Products & Services > Restaurants (0.89)
- Consumer Products & Services > Food, Beverage, Tobacco & Cannabis (0.71)
- Banking & Finance > Trading (0.68)
- Information Technology > Communications > Mobile (0.96)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (0.72)
Dyson's New PencilWash Is Here
Dyson's Newest Wet Floor Cleaner Is Available as of Today The debut follows the release of Dyson's newest robot vacuum and larger wet cleaner last week. Welcome to a new world of mopping options from Dyson. After announcing several new models last year at IFA Berlin, Dyson has begun rolling out its latest suite of vacuums and wet floor cleaners to the public. Last week, Dyson's newest robot vacuum, the Spot+Scrub Ai ($1,200), became available for purchase online, along with the Clean+Wash Hygiene ($500), one of the brand's new wet floor cleaners. The recently announced Dyson PencilWash ($350) is available as of today.
- North America > United States > California (0.05)
- Europe > Slovakia (0.05)
- Europe > Czechia (0.05)
- Retail (0.36)
- Information Technology > Services (0.31)
How Invisalign Became the World's Biggest User of 3D Printers
Joe Hogan, Align Technology's plastics-nerd CEO, says you shouldn't eat with your aligners and that you don't need to wear your retainers every night. Joe Hogan sees a lot of smiles. When people ask him where he works, he responds with "Align Technology," which inevitably prompts the follow up, "What's that?" After months, sometimes years, the discrete rival to braces promises to give people smiles they will want to show off. Hogan gets a look at them all. And he's eager to see more. Align is embarking on its biggest manufacturing overhaul since it was founded by two Stanford Graduate School of Business classmates 29 years ago. The company is preparing to begin directly 3D printing the aligners at the core of its business, ditching what Hogan describes as a longer, more wasteful process that involves making molds. A successful transition could lower costs and make treatment more affordable in the long run, bringing Invisalign to more customers and boosting Align's profits. It also, according to Hogan, would entrench Align as the world's biggest user of 3D printers .
- North America > Mexico (0.14)
- Asia > Japan (0.05)
- Asia > China (0.04)
- (9 more...)
- Machinery > Industrial Machinery (1.00)
- Health & Medicine (1.00)
- Government > Regional Government > North America Government > United States Government (0.47)
- North America > United States > California (0.04)
- Europe > Slovakia (0.04)
- Europe > Czechia (0.04)
- (2 more...)
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (1.00)
- Media (0.98)
- Leisure & Entertainment (0.70)
- Information Technology > Security & Privacy (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence (1.00)
- Information Technology > Communications > Networks (0.31)