The Morning After: Amazon pledges its satellite internet starts this year

Amazon’s satellite-based internet service, Leo, will enter service by mid-2026, so says company CEO Andy Jassy. Writing in his annual letter, Jassy claimed Leo would offer download speeds of up to 1Gbps, far more than what Starlink presently offers. Sadly, Amazon declined to offer any more details about what that mid-2026 service would look like. But given select partners have already been kicking Leo’s tyres for a while, we can only hope.

The mega-retailer is making some grand promises, including faster up and download speeds, cheaper cost and direct integration with Amazon’s other products. Of course, the company can also sell itself on the fact it’s a satellite internet provider not owned by Elon Musk. But it will have to buck its ideas up fast, given how far behind in its deployment of satellites it is.

— Daniel Cooper

ASUS
Devindra Hardawar for Engadget

ASUS’ ZenBook A16 is a 16-inch ultraportable designed to go toe-to-toe with LG’s Gram Pro 16. It’s equipped with Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X2 Elite and designed to address the flaws Devindra Hardawar found in last year’s ZenBook A14. Did it succeed? You’ll have to read his review to get the full story, but he’s certainly happy to have spent the last week using this thing.

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Greece will ban under 15s from accessing social media, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has announced. Like many nations both in Europe and beyond, officials are concerned about the effect social media is having on children’s mental and physical health. The big platforms will be in charge of enforcing the ban, backed up by the hefty punishments enabled by the Digital Services Act.

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Promotional image of the old Kindle and Kindle DX
Amazon

If you’re still using a Kindle or Fire tablet made in 2012 or before, then it’s going to get a little less useful on May 20. Amazon is discontinuing support for those earlier models on that date, removing the ability to purchase, borrow or download new titles. Thankfully, whatever is on the hardware already will remain, so don’t fret if you’re only a third of the way through Remembrance of Things Past.

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Image of the Fender Elle speakers
Billy Steele for Engadget

Billy Steele has been putting Fender Audio’s new speakers through their paces to find what can only be described as a mixed bag. Excellent audio quality and a wide variety of inputs get high praise, but the heavy weight, exposed wood and limited battery life all dent the paintwork.

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Image of the WhatsApp Logo
WhatsApp

WhatsApp’s CarPlay interface isn’t the most elegant or easy way to keep in touch with your friends while driving. Meta has, however, given the UI a little polish to help make it a little easier to get something useful done without pulling your attention from the road.

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This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-engadget-newsletter-111524236.html?src=rss

Apple’s HomePod Mini 2 Delay is Intentional: The Secret Reason Revealed

Apple’s HomePod Mini 2 Delay is Intentional: The Secret Reason Revealed HomePod Mini 2

Apple’s decision to withhold updates to the HomePod Mini since its 2020 release has sparked curiosity among tech enthusiasts and industry analysts. While many of Apple’s flagship products receive regular updates, the HomePod Mini has remained largely unchanged. This delay, however, is not a sign of neglect but a calculated move within Apple’s broader strategy […]

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How to Automate Workflows with Claude Code’s Initiators & Communicators

How to Automate Workflows with Claude Code’s Initiators & Communicators Diagram showing Claude Code tools grouped as initiators that start tasks and communicators that manage running work.

Anthropic’s Claude Code ecosystem introduces a modular framework for managing workflows, focusing on two core components: initiators and communicators. According to Matt Maher, initiators simplify the process of starting new tasks, while communicators support ongoing task interactions. A concrete example is the Slack integration, which allows users to launch Claude Code instances directly from team […]

The post How to Automate Workflows with Claude Code’s Initiators & Communicators appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

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How to Automate Workflows with Claude Code’s Initiators & Communicators

How to Automate Workflows with Claude Code’s Initiators & Communicators Diagram showing Claude Code tools grouped as initiators that start tasks and communicators that manage running work.

Anthropic’s Claude Code ecosystem introduces a modular framework for managing workflows, focusing on two core components: initiators and communicators. According to Matt Maher, initiators simplify the process of starting new tasks, while communicators support ongoing task interactions. A concrete example is the Slack integration, which allows users to launch Claude Code instances directly from team […]

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Why Your AI Adverts Are Missing the Mark & How to Fix Them

Why Your AI Adverts Are Missing the Mark & How to Fix Them Screenshot of Replet 4 ad creation skill showing prompt input and platform options for LinkedIn and Instagram.

AI-generated ads can streamline marketing efforts, but their effectiveness depends on proper groundwork. According to Marketing Against the Grain, one critical step is crafting detailed prompts that include specifics like target audience, platform focus and campaign objectives. For example, a well-defined prompt might specify reaching 25–34-year-olds on Instagram with a focus on sustainability, making sure […]

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Why Your AI Adverts Are Missing the Mark & How to Fix Them

Why Your AI Adverts Are Missing the Mark & How to Fix Them Screenshot of Replet 4 ad creation skill showing prompt input and platform options for LinkedIn and Instagram.

AI-generated ads can streamline marketing efforts, but their effectiveness depends on proper groundwork. According to Marketing Against the Grain, one critical step is crafting detailed prompts that include specifics like target audience, platform focus and campaign objectives. For example, a well-defined prompt might specify reaching 25–34-year-olds on Instagram with a focus on sustainability, making sure […]

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km5’s Neon Yellow CD Player Just Made the Circuit Board the Star

Most brands spend their entire design budget hiding what’s inside a product. km5, the Tokyo audio label that’s been quietly rewriting how people think about CD players, just did the opposite. Their latest drop, released through bPr BEAMS, puts the circuit boards, the laser mechanism, the wiring, all of it, front and center. And it looks extraordinary.

The collection introduces three new color variations: the Cp1 in Neon Yellow, the Cp2 in Clear, and the Hp1 headphones in Clear. Available starting April 1st as an exclusive pre-sale at select bPr BEAMS stores and the km5 online shop, these aren’t just color refreshes. They’re a statement about what audio design can actually look like when a brand commits to a philosophy all the way through.

Designer: km5 and bpr beams

km5’s original aesthetic has always been rooted in rigorous minimalism, the idea that a CD player should be as easy to look at as anything else in a considered space. Their Cp1 was designed like an instant photo frame, built to display the album jacket as art. Their Cp2 had the silhouette of a slim hardback, something you’d be comfortable leaving on a shelf. The Hp1 headphones weighed just 103 grams and arrived with a polished stainless steel band that belonged in a gallery as much as on a commute. The design language has always been controlled, quiet, deliberate.

This new drop takes that same discipline and applies it to a completely different tension. The concept km5 describes as pursuing a contrast between “transparent” and “neon,” a play between the mechanical cool of visible engineering and the almost aggressive energy of neon light. It’s a bold shift in mood that somehow still feels entirely on-brand.

The Cp1 in Neon Yellow is the most immediately striking. The entire frame is cast in that charged, electric green-yellow, and when you look at it, you can see every component underneath lit by the color of the shell itself. It doesn’t look like a product. It looks like something you’d find in a design museum sandwiched between an Olivetti typewriter and an early Apple prototype. The edges illuminate in a way that makes it feel alive, like it’s doing something even when it’s sitting still.

The Cp2 Clear is the one I keep coming back to, though. It’s been a long time coming, because fans of the CP series have been wanting a transparent version of the speaker-equipped Cp2 since the model launched. Now that it exists, it earns every bit of the wait. The internal structure, the laser mechanism, the circuit boards, the speaker grille, all of it sits behind the clear shell in a way that reads more like an exploded technical drawing than a consumer product. It’s serious, it’s cool, and it’s genuinely beautiful in a way that no amount of matte white plastic could replicate.

The Hp1 Clear follows the same logic. The housing is stripped back to transparent, the internals are exposed, and then the lime yellow ear pads arrive as the whole color story’s punctuation mark. It’s a contrast that shouldn’t work as well as it does. The clear mechanical housing next to those soft, textured yellow cushions is the kind of pairing that reads as both street-ready and gallery-worthy at the same time. Techwear people are going to love this. Interior people are going to love this. That’s a rare overlap.

The thing km5 keeps getting right, and this drop confirms it again, is that they understand what the people who buy beautiful objects are actually buying. It’s not just function. It’s not even just aesthetics. It’s the feeling that the people who made the thing cared. That they thought about it all the way down to the part you’d normally never see. Making the inside visible is, in some ways, the ultimate expression of that care. You have nothing to hide when everything you make is worth looking at.

The post km5’s Neon Yellow CD Player Just Made the Circuit Board the Star first appeared on Yanko Design.

Apple M5 MacBook Air: Is the 2026 Upgrade Worth It?

Apple M5 MacBook Air: Is the 2026 Upgrade Worth It? M5 MacBook Air

The MacBook Air, once synonymous with lightweight portability and affordability, now finds itself in a challenging position within Apple’s increasingly diverse MacBook lineup. With the introduction of the budget-friendly MacBook Neo and the high-performance MacBook Pro, the Air’s role has become less defined. Overlapping pricing and performance tiers have muddled its target audience, leaving potential […]

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Apple M5 MacBook Air: Is the 2026 Upgrade Worth It?

Apple M5 MacBook Air: Is the 2026 Upgrade Worth It? M5 MacBook Air

The MacBook Air, once synonymous with lightweight portability and affordability, now finds itself in a challenging position within Apple’s increasingly diverse MacBook lineup. With the introduction of the budget-friendly MacBook Neo and the high-performance MacBook Pro, the Air’s role has become less defined. Overlapping pricing and performance tiers have muddled its target audience, leaving potential […]

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This Common ChatGPT Habit Is Draining Your Claude Tokens in Minutes

This Common ChatGPT Habit Is Draining Your Claude Tokens in Minutes A timer and chat screen showing a Claude session hitting its token limit after long, sprawling prompts.

Many users unknowingly burn through their Claude token limits in record time, often due to habits formed while using other AI systems like ChatGPT. Nate Jones highlights one particularly costly behavior: allowing conversations to extend indefinitely without resetting. This practice leads to bloated context windows, which not only consume more tokens but also reduce the […]

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