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Act fast: Get 50% off the Shark Matrix Robot Vacuum at Best Buy as part of its Deal of the Day

Mashable

SAVE 250: As of April 3, the Shark Matrix Self-Emptying Robot Vacuum is on sale at Best Buy for 249.99 as part of its Deal of the Day. This is 50% off its list price of 499.99. Best Buy has dropped a great discount on the Shark Matrix Self-Emptying Robot Vacuum as part of its Deal of the Day. For today only, you can pick it up for 50% off its list price, which is a great discount to jump on while it's still live. No better time than now to grab it and get ahead of spring cleaning, either.


Condemnation of anime-style images from Israeli military

Al Jazeera

The Israeli army has faced a backlash for joining an online trend of using AI to create anime-style images to portray its forces who have been accused of genocide and war crimes against Palestinians.


CHRISTOPHER RUFO: Tesla terror campaign is terrible and Trump needs to stop it

FOX News

Editor's note: The following column was first published in City Journal and on the author's Substack. Elon Musk finds himself at the fulcrum of American life. His companies are leading the field across the automotive, space, robotics, and AI industries. His ownership of the social platform X gives him significant influence over political discourse. And his DOGE initiative represents the single greatest threat to the permanent administrative state.


Gemini Pro 2.5 is one of only two AIs to crush all my coding tests - and it's free

ZDNet

As part of my AI coding evaluations, I run a standardized series of four programming tests against each AI. These tests are designed to determine how well a given AI can help you program. This is kind of useful, especially if you're counting on the AI to help you produce code. The last thing you want is for an AI helper to introduce more bugs into your work output, right? Some time ago, a reader reached out to me and asked why I keep using the same tests.


Want free AI training from Microsoft? You can sign up for its AI Skills Fest now

ZDNet

I know you've heard of gamification, but have you ever heard of festification? That's what Microsoft will be doing in April and May, with the Microsoft AI Skills Fest. It's a little odd, but it also looks like it might be a heck of a lot of fun. I've written a lot about Microsoft over the years. I've mocked its product naming.


The surprisingly easy way anyone can start a business

Popular Science

Branding, websites, marketing, invoices, and the headaches that come with it all are enough to make most people never even start. This all-in-one business platform eliminates the intimidation of starting a brand and makes it fun again. It can do anything from help you build a website or online shop to send marketing emails and handle CRM. And, instead of paying platforms like Shopify, Mailchimp, and others every month, Sellfull is 399 for life. While that initial payment seems like a lot upfront, it averages out to so little each month for all that it does.


Nikon's Z5 II is the cheapest full-frame camera yet with internal RAW video

Engadget

After years of lagging behind rivals when it comes to video capture (and then suddenly buying cinema camera manufacturer RED), Nikon is pushing new boundaries in that area. Its latest salvo is the 1,699 24-megapixel full-frame Z5 II, perhaps the cheapest mirrorless camera so far to support internal RAW video. It also offers improved autofocus with new AI powers, cleaner images and enhanced image stabilization. The Z5 II is a wholesale remake of the original Z5 and that starts with video. While still limited to 4K 30 fps and cropped 4K 60 fps, it can now capture those formats internally using the company's 12-bit N-RAW format with N-log, along with 10-bit H.265 and 8-bit H.264. Interestingly, it will record in N-RAW to SDXC UHS-II cards, since the camera lacks high-speed CFexpress slots.


I ditched Google Search. Now I'm saving the planet with Ecosia instead

PCWorld

Ecosia was founded in 2009 by Christian Kroll, who felt compelled to do something after he saw the effects of deforestation while on a trip around the world. And so Ecosia was born, a search engine that puts its advertising revenue towards tree-planting projects. Ecosia started off as a search engine, but has since expanded with a few other products that include Ecosia Browser (a Chromium-based web browser), Ecosia Chat (an AI chatbot powered by OpenAI's API), and Freetree (a browser extension that plants trees as you shop). Ecosia is a not-for-profit tech company based in Berlin, Germany, that dedicates all profits to the betterment of our planet. In addition to turning every web search into an opportunity to plant and protect trees, Ecosia invests in various initiatives that further regenerative agriculture, renewable energy, and fighting climate change.


Block-busted: why homemade Minecraft movies are the real hits

The Guardian

By any estimation, Minecraft is impossibly successful. The bestselling video game ever, as of last December it had 204 million monthly active players. Since it was first released in 2011, it has generated over 3bn ( 2.3bn) in revenue. What's more, its players have always been eager to demonstrate their fandom outside the boundaries of the game itself. In 2021, YouTube calculated that videos related to the game โ€“ tutorials, walk-throughs, homages, parodies โ€“ had collectively been viewed 1tn times. In short, it is a phenomenon.


Shenmue voted the most influential video game of all time in Bafta poll

The Guardian

It is a game about love and identity, but it also has forklift truck races. It is a game about bloody revenge, but while you're waiting to retaliate, you can buy lottery tickets and visit the arcade. When Bafta recently asked gamers to vote on the most influential game of all time, I'm not sure even the most ardent Sega fans would have gambled on the success of an idiosyncratic Dreamcast adventure from 1999. Yet the results, released on Thursday morning, show Shenmue at No 1, with perhaps more predictable contenders Doom and Super Mario Bros coming in second and third respectively. How has this happened, especially considering the game was considered a financial failure at the time of its release, falling short of recouping its then staggering development costs (a reported 70m, which would now get you about a third of Horizon Forbidden West or Star Wars Outlaws)?