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This Is the Best Razor I've Ever Used--Save Big With This Sale

WIRED

The Best Razor I've Ever Used Is on Sale Henson Razors are engineered to give a spectacular shave with dirt-cheap generic blades. Razors are one of the most heavily and competitively marketed products in American capitalism. Made with steel and plastic that costs a few pennies, but sold for a thousand percent profit, the razor market is the subject of vigorous academic study and debate. The founder of Gillette famously came up with a model of basically giving away the razor handle so he could sell the blades. Canadian startup Henson has the opposite model, charging $79 for a razor that can give you an excellent shave with dirt-cheap disposable blades that cost about 15 cents each .


Philips Norelco i9000 Shaver Review (2025): A Close Shave

WIRED

The new flagship Philips Norelco is a shaver that cleverly harnesses AI for a closer shave. Its phone app eats battery charge, though. All products featured on WIRED are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission. Closest shave I've seen from an electric shaver.


As the last vanguards of the Greatest Generation pass, 7 things to know when caring for a parent

FOX News

Fox News' Martha MacCallum has the latest on her new Fox Nation documentary on'The Story.' My father-in-law passed away last month, days away from his 99th birthday. He lived with us for 13 years. He was a great man, a World War II veteran who loved his wife and raised three children. As his vascular dementia worsened – unlike Alzheimer's, his long-term memory remained intact almost until the end – my wife would set him up with a familiar film. "The Godfather" played most frequently, followed by "Patton."


'Gutfeld!' on mainstream media and COVID-19 coverage

FOX News

'Gutfeld!' panel on how constant political correctness is hurting society This is a rush transcript of "Gutfeld!" on May 27, 2021. This copy may not be in its final form and may be updated. You did some fantastic and extensive reporting this weekend on Joe Biden, who he is. ASHLEY PARKER, MSNBC SENIOR POLITICAL ANALYST: Joe Biden, some of it, he has the taste of a five-year-old. It's PB&J chop salad with grilled chicken. He likes orange Gatorade, and he stacks the Oval Office with homemade chocolate chip cookies. That is some extensive reporting for the Food Network. You know in the old days, if you wanted an answer to something, you went to this. That's how I learned to play doctor. No worry it was with Raggedy Andy. But the one thing everybody had was a set of encyclopedias. Every time you had homework, you copy the answers word for word from their pages, what's now called the Biden method. Then as you got older, you discovered the library, a magical place filled with strange artifacts known as books. They were heavy, you turn the pages in order to read them. Of course, libraries are different now, they're not closed. You see -- you see a lot of massages going on in there. Hey, I don't make the rules. But that was really the first search engine, except there was no engine, just a librarian whose hair bun could stop a bullet. Now getting information seems easier. The whole world is in the palm of your hand. And yet for some reason, we still can't find the truth. Because even though we think we are in control, we aren't. We now have everything at our fingertips, but it's the tech giants who decide what we can and can't touch.


Parted Your Hair A Different Way? Your Device Might Not Unlock

WSJ.com: WSJD - Technology

"The computer was like: 'Oh my God, girl. You got to go back and fix yourself up. You're looking bad,' " recalls Ms. Cummings, 72 years old, of Fryeburg, Maine. "When I get up in the morning, I know I look bad, but I don't want the computer telling me that." The rise of facial-recognition technology such as Microsoft Corp.'s Windows Hello and Apple Inc.'s Face ID means computers now seem to be passing judgment on users' appearances.


Tesla Motors (TSLA) Model S P100D Easter Egg Update Will Make Self-Driving Car Even Faster

International Business Times

Two weeks ago, Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk teased on Twitter an upcoming "P100D Ludicrous Easter egg" update that would unlock the full performance of the Model S. And on Wednesday, he announced exactly what that Easter egg is. When the P100D was announced in August, it already broke records, not just for electric vehicles but for car speeds in general. It could accelerate from 0 to 60 miles an hour in 2.5 seconds, making it the fastest car in the world (excluding supercars). This update shaves an extra 0.1 second off that time.


The impossible barber and other bizarre thought experiments

New Scientist

If you imagined that thought experiments were mere mental gymnastics meant to bamboozle the uninitiated, think again. Take Schrödinger's cat, perhaps the most famous example, which involves a cat that is simultaneously alive and dead. It seems bizarre – and that's the point. It was designed as a slap on the wrist for quantum theorists, to show that a theory that predicts such nonsense must be missing something. Current thinking is that perhaps nothing is missing, and quantum theory really is as weird as it seems.


d i, iii 1°° 11

AI Classics

When working from of a small set of primitives and the statement of a such representations, lexical choice is often a nonissue program's knowledge as a set of expressions over these since each term can be uniquely associated with a natural primitives plus a set of constant terms for individuals.