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Technology News

7 Best Kids Bikes (2025): Mountain, Balance, Pedal, Coaster

Wired Top Stories - Wed, 2025-03-12 06:34
The WIRED Gear team has tested all types of kids’ bikes. Here are our top picks.
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8 Best Vacuums for Pet Hair (2025), Tested and Reviewed

Wired Top Stories - Wed, 2025-03-12 06:03
Cordless, handheld, robot, and traditional—we tested them all to find the vacuum that’s fantastic for fur.
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How to Switch iPhones or iPads and Transfer Data (2025)

Wired Top Stories - Wed, 2025-03-12 05:07
Everything you need to know to successfully transfer your contacts, music, photos, and apps from one iOS device to another.
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How to Watch March Madness 2025

Wired Top Stories - Wed, 2025-03-12 04:00
Here’s how you can tune in to watch the men’s and women’s teams fight to win the 2025 NCAA Division I Basketball championship.
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Chinese Companies Rush to Put DeepSeek in Everything

Wired TechBiz - Wed, 2025-03-12 03:00
From video game developers to a nuclear power plant, companies across China are adopting DeepSeek’s AI models to boost stock prices and flaunt their national pride.
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Chinese Companies Rush to Put DeepSeek in Everything

Wired Top Stories - Wed, 2025-03-12 03:00
From video game developers to a nuclear power plant, companies across China are adopting DeepSeek’s AI models to boost stock prices and flaunt their national pride.
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One Photographer’s Quest to Redefine the Shark

Wired Top Stories - Wed, 2025-03-12 02:00
With his magnificent underwater images, Gerardo del Villar wants to rehabilitate the reputation of the ocean's great predators, inspire conservation, and encourage responsible ecotourism.
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Introducing Gemma 3: The most capable model you can run on a single GPU or TPUIntroducing Gemma 3: The most capable model you can run on a single GPU or TPUVP of ResearchDirector

Google official blog - Wed, 2025-03-12 00:30
Today, we're introducing Gemma 3, our most capable, portable and responsible open model yet.Today, we're introducing Gemma 3, our most capable, portable and responsible open model yet.
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Despite everything, US EV sales are up 28% this year

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-11 17:01

With all the announcements from automakers planning for more gasoline and hybrid cars in their future lineups, you'd think that electric vehicles had stopped selling. While that might be increasingly true for Tesla, everyone else is more than picking up the slack. According to analysts at Rho Motion, global EV sales are up 30 percent this year already. Even here in the US, EV sales were still up 28 percent compared to 2024, despite particularly EV-unfriendly headwinds.

Getting ahead of those unfriendly winds may actually be driving the sales bump in the US, where EV sales only grew by less than 8 percent last year, for contrast. "American drivers bought 30 percent more electric vehicles than they had by this time last year, making use of the final months of IRA tax breaks before the incentives are expected to be pulled later this year," said Charles Lester, Rho Motion data manager.

With the expected loss of government incentives and the prospect of new tariffs that will add tens of thousands of dollars to new car prices, now is probably a good time to buy an EV if you think you're going to want or need one.

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15-inch MacBook Air (M4, 2025) Review: Bluer and Better

Wired Top Stories - Tue, 2025-03-11 16:42
The latest 15-inch MacBook Air is bluer and better than ever before—and it dropped in price.
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Pocket Casts makes its web player free, takes shots at Spotify and AI

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-11 14:51

"The future of podcasting shouldn't be locked behind walled gardens," writes the team at Pocket Casts. To push that point forward, Pocket Casts, owned by the company behind WordPress, Automattic Inc., has made its web player free to everyone.

Previously available only to logged-in Pocket Casts users paying $4 per month, Pocket Casts now offers nearly any public-facing podcast feed for streaming, along with controls like playback speed and playlist queueing. If you create an account, you can also sync your playback progress, manage your queue, bookmark episode moments, and save your subscription list and listening preferences. The free access also applies to its clients for Windows and Mac.

"Podcasting is one of the last open corners of the Internet, and we’re here to keep it that way," Pocket Casts' blog post reads. For those not fully tuned into the podcasting market, this and other statements in the post—like sharing "without needing a specific platform's approval" and "podcasts belong to the people, not corporations"—are largely shots at Spotify, and to a much lesser extent other streaming services, which have sought to wrap podcasting's originally open and RSS-based nature inside proprietary markets and formats.

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X’s globe-trotting defense of ads on Nazi posts violates TOS, Media Matters says

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-11 13:59

Media Matters for America (MMFA) has a plan to potentially defuse Elon Musk's "thermonuclear" lawsuits filed so far in three cities around the world, which accuse the nonprofit media watchdog organization of orchestrating a very costly X ad boycott.

On Monday, MMFA filed a complaint in a US district court in San Francisco, alleging that X violated its own terms of service by suing MMFA in Texas, Dublin, and Singapore. According to the TOS, MMFA alleged, X requires any litigation over use of its services to be "brought solely in the federal or state courts located in San Francisco County, California, United States."

"X Corp.’s decision to file in multiple jurisdictions across the globe is intended to chill Media Matters’ reporting and drive up costs—both of which it has achieved—and it is directly foreclosed by X’s own Terms of Service," MMFA's complaint said.

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OpenAI pushes AI agent capabilities with new developer API

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-11 13:42

The AI industry is doing its best to will "agents"—pieces of AI-driven software that can perform multistep actions on your behalf—into reality. Several tech companies, including Google, have emphasized agentic features recently, and in January, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman wrote that 2025 would be the year AI agents "join the workforce."

OpenAI is working to make that promise happen. On Tuesday, OpenAI unveiled a new "Responses API" designed to help software developers create AI agents that can perform tasks independently using the company's AI models. The Responses API will eventually replace the current Assistants API, which OpenAI plans to retire in the first half of 2026.

With the new offering, users can develop custom AI agents that scan company files with a file search utility that rapidly checks company databases (with OpenAI promising not to train its models on these files) and navigates websites—similar to functions available through OpenAI's Operator agent, whose underlying Computer-Using Agent (CUA) model developers can also access to enable automation of tasks like data entry and other operations.

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Apple patches 0-day exploited in “extremely sophisticated attack”

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-11 13:26

Apple on Tuesday patched a critical zero-day vulnerability in virtually all iPhones and iPad models it supports and said it may have been exploited in “an extremely sophisticated attack against specific targeted individuals” using older versions of iOS.

The vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2025-24201, resides in Webkit, the browser engine driving Safari and all other browsers developed for iPhones and iPads. Devices affected include the iPhone XS and later, iPad Pro 13-inch, iPad Pro 12.9-inch 3rd generation and later, iPad Pro 11-inch 1st generation and later, iPad Air 3rd generation and later, iPad 7th generation and later, and iPad mini 5th generation and later. The vulnerability stems from a bug that wrote to out-of-bounds memory locations.

Supplementary fix

“Impact: Maliciously crafted web content may be able to break out of Web Content sandbox,” Apple wrote in a bare-bones advisory. “This is a supplementary fix for an attack that was blocked in iOS 17.2. (Apple is aware of a report that this issue may have been exploited in an extremely sophisticated attack against specific targeted individuals on versions of iOS before iOS 17.2.)”

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Leaked GeForce RTX 5060 and 5050 specs suggest Nvidia will keep playing it safe

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-11 13:02

Nvidia has launched all of the GeForce RTX 50-series GPUs that it announced at CES, at least technically—whether you're buying from Nvidia, AMD, or Intel, it's nearly impossible to find any of these new cards at their advertised prices right now.

But hope springs eternal, and newly leaked specs for GeForce RTX 5060 and 5050-series cards suggest that Nvidia may be announcing these lower-end cards soon. These kinds of cards are rarely exciting, but Steam Hardware Survey data shows that these xx60 and xx50 cards are what the overwhelming majority of PC gamers are putting in their systems.

The specs, posted by a reliable leaker named Kopite and reported by Tom's Hardware and others, suggest a refresh that's in line with what Nvidia has done with most of the 50-series so far. Along with a move to the next-generation Blackwell architecture, the 5060 GPUs each come with a small increase to the number of CUDA cores, a jump from GDDR6 to GDDR7, and an increase in power consumption, but no changes to the amount of memory or the width of the memory bus. The 8GB versions, in particular, will probably continue to be marketed primarily as 1080p cards.

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How whale urine benefits the ocean ecosystem

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-11 12:49
A humpback whale urinating near Hawaii. Credit: Lars Bejder/NOAA A humpback whale urinating near Hawaii. Credit: Lars Bejder/NOAA

Scientists have long understood that microbes, zooplankton, and fish are vital sources of recycled nitrogen in coastal waters. But whales and other marine mammals like seals also help in this regard by releasing tons of nutrient-rich fecal matter into those waters. Now we can add whale urine to that list, according to a paper published in the journal Nature Communications.

“Lots of people think of plants as the lungs of the planet, taking in carbon dioxide, and expelling oxygen,” said co-author Joe Roman, a biologist at the University of Vermont. “For their part, animals play an important role in moving nutrients. Seabirds transport nitrogen and phosphorus from the ocean to the land in their poop, increasing the density of plants on islands. Animals form the circulatory system of the planet—and whales are the extreme example.”

Back in 2010, Roman co-authored a study in which they examined field measurements and population data to determine that whales and seals could be responsible for replenishing 2.3×104 metric tons of nitrogen per year in the Gulf of Maine alone. Specifically, they feed in deeper waters and then release "flocculent fecal plumes" (i.e., feces) at the surface, serving as a kind of "whale pump" that boosts plankton growth, among other tangible benefits.

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Texas measles outbreak spills into third state as cases reach 258

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-11 12:29

Two people in Oklahoma have likely contracted measles infections linked to a mushrooming outbreak that began in West Texas, which has now risen to at least 258 cases since late January.

On Tuesday, Oklahoma's health department reported that two people had "exposure associated with the Texas and New Mexico outbreak" and then reported symptoms consistent with measles. They're currently being reported as probable cases because testing hasn't confirmed the infections.

There was no information about the ages, vaccination status, or location of the two cases. The health department said that the people stayed home in quarantine after realizing they had been exposed. In response to local media, a health department spokesperson said it was withholding further information because "these cases don’t pose a public health risk and to protect patient privacy."

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This Is How Measles Kills

Wired Top Stories - Tue, 2025-03-11 12:09
Measles is known for its characteristic rash, but it can have serious respiratory and neurologic complications.
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The 33 Best Shows on Apple TV+ Right Now (March 2025)

Wired Top Stories - Tue, 2025-03-11 12:00
Dope Thief, Severance, and Mythic Quest are among the best shows on Apple TV+ this month.
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Six ways Microsoft’s portable Xbox could be a Steam Deck killer

Ars Technica - Tue, 2025-03-11 11:45

The long-running rumors and hints that Microsoft is planning to enter the portable gaming market accelerated forward this week. That's thanks to a Windows Central report that Microsoft is planning to partner with a "PC gaming OEM" for "an Xbox-branded gaming handheld" to be released later this year. The device, code-named Keenan, will reportedly feature "Xbox design sensibilities," such as the branded Xbox guide button, but will almost certainly be a PC gaming device running Windows at its core.

Any Microsoft entry into the world of gaming handhelds will join a market that has become quite crowded in the wake of the Steam Deck's success. To make its own portable gaming effort stand apart, Microsoft will have to bring something unique to the table. Here are some of the features we're hoping will let Microsoft do just that.

A bespoke user interface There's never been a better time to bring back the old Xbox 360 "blades" interface. Credit: Microsoft / Reddit

For decades, Windows has been designed first and foremost for the world of large monitors driven by a mouse and keyboard world. When hardware makers try to simply stick that OS into a handheld screen size controlled by buttons and analog sticks, the results can be awkward at best.

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