The Real Reason Apple Just Rushed Out iOS 26.4.2 (And It’s Not for New Features)

The Real Reason Apple Just Rushed Out iOS 26.4.2 (And It’s Not for New Features) iPhone Wi?Fi settings screen with a weak signal icon, illustrating connection drops seen after iOS 26.4.1.

Apple has officially announced the release of iOS 26.4.2, a focused update designed to resolve critical issues identified in iOS 26.4.1. This update is set to address several significant concerns, including CarPlay connectivity glitches, battery performance problems, Wi-Fi reliability issues, and security vulnerabilities. While the update is anticipated to arrive within the next week, Apple […]

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INMO Air 3 Smart Glasses Excel at Real-Time Translation, but There is a Catch

INMO Air 3 Smart Glasses Excel at Real-Time Translation, but There is a Catch Person wearing INMO Air 3 smart glasses while working at a desk

The INMO Air 3 smart glasses represent a thoughtful blend of practicality and advanced AI-driven features, as highlighted by Kola. Weighing just 48 grams, these glasses are designed for extended wear, offering a lightweight and comfortable fit that aligns with both professional and casual settings. Their dual-eye monochrome display, optimized for tasks like real-time language […]

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Joseph Joseph finally solves the grossest part of mopping

Most people mop their floors, thinking they’re getting them clean. The uncomfortable truth, though, is that the moment you dunk the mop head back into the bucket, you’re no longer cleaning with fresh water. You’re spreading a diluted mix of soap and grime across the same surface you just wiped down. It’s a problem as old as the mop itself, and nobody has done much about it.

Joseph Joseph spent four years trying to solve it. The result is the UltraClean Microfibre Floor Mop Cleaning System, a complete rethink of what mopping should actually achieve. The goal was to design something that genuinely removes dirt rather than just diluting it and spreading it around. The solution required a patented mechanism and six prototypes before the team arrived at a final design.

Designer: Joseph Joseph

At the heart of the design is SprayClean technology, a patented mechanism built into the bucket’s slot. Each time you insert the mop head, a built-in scraper squeezes the dirty water into a sealed collection chamber while six nozzles spray fresh water onto the pad. The mop comes out clean and damp, not soaked, which means your floors dry faster, too.

The bucket is divided into two completely separate chambers. The upper reservoir holds up to 1.4 litres of clean water, enough to cover up to 70 m² on a single fill. That’s most of a typical home in one go. The bottom chamber is translucent, so you can watch the dirty water accumulate as you clean, which is simultaneously gross and oddly satisfying.

The mop head is designed with the same care. It rotates to access tight corners and lies flat to get under furniture, where dust and grime tend to hide. The telescopic handle adjusts to suit whoever’s doing the cleaning. The microfibre pad is machine-washable, and the system comes with three of them, so you’re not stuck waiting for one to dry between rooms.

For large open-plan spaces with a mix of hard flooring and tiles, the UltraClean removes the need to stop and change the water halfway through, a chore that most people skip anyway. And for kitchens, where floors tend to accumulate grease and food residue, mopping with genuinely fresh water each pass makes a noticeable difference in how clean the floor actually feels underfoot.

The UltraClean Microfibre Floor Mop Cleaning System retails for $90. It took four years and six prototypes to get here, which, given how long the classic mop and bucket pairing has gone essentially unchanged, seems like a reasonable investment. Cofounder Antony Joseph calls this the product’s delight factor, and given how satisfying it is to actually clean your floors properly, it’s hard to argue.

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MacBook Neo 2 Tipped for A19 Pro Chips and up to 3x Faster AI

MacBook Neo 2 Tipped for A19 Pro Chips and up to 3x Faster AI MacBook Neo 2

Apple’s highly anticipated MacBook Neo 2 is set to launch earlier than expected, marking a significant shift in the company’s production strategy. This accelerated timeline is largely attributed to Apple’s decision to repurpose surplus A19 Pro chips originally intended for the iPhone 17 series. By addressing the depletion of A18 Pro chips used in the […]

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Why Developers Are Switching to Kimi K2.6 Over Gemini 3.1 Pro

Why Developers Are Switching to Kimi K2.6 Over Gemini 3.1 Pro Modern website interface with dynamic elements created entirely by Kimi K2.6 AI.

Kimi K2.6, developed by Moonshot AI, stands out as an open source AI model offering advanced capabilities for users seeking robust performance on a budget. As highlighted by World of AI, one of its key features is a 256k context window, allowing it to handle extensive workflows and large datasets efficiently. Additionally, the model supports […]

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iPhone Evolution: Massive Leaks Reveal Apple’s Plan Through 2028

iPhone Evolution: Massive Leaks Reveal Apple’s Plan Through 2028 Render-style view of iPhone 17 Pro showing aluminum frame shift and a vapor chamber cooling layout.

Apple is poised to redefine the smartphone landscape with a series of significant updates to the iPhone over the next three years. Between 2025 and 2027, the company plans to introduce new advancements in design, engineering, and functionality. These updates signal a decisive shift from the incremental changes of the past, marking a bold new […]

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Porsche’s new Cayenne Turbo Coupé Electric can do 0-60 mph in 2.5 seconds

Porsche has announced an electric version of its popular Cayenne Coupé and it could be the company's most powerful vehicle ever — either ICE or electric. Mechanically, the Cayenne Coupé Electric is nearly identical to the Cayenne Electric but the body is substantially sleeker for improved range and performance. 

While the front end of the Coupé looks much the same as the Cayenne Electric, the back is giving off BMW X-series vibes in a big way. Porsche says that bulbous rear makes the new model more aerodynamic and thus efficient, with a drag coefficient of just 0.23. It also sits nearly an inch lower than the standard SUV for a more race-ready look. It can haul four adults and comes with a 3.2 cubic foot frunk. 

Porsche's new Cayenne Coupé  Electric can do 0-60 mph in 2.5 seconds
Porsche

There are three versions: the Cayenne Coupé Electric, Cayenne S Coupé Electric and Cayenne Turbo Coupé Electric. All use the same 800-volt architecture that allows charging speeds up to 400 kW, for a 10-80 percent recharge in 16 minutes under ideal conditions. With a 113 kWh battery, range is estimated at 415 miles in the WLTP cycle, which equates to about 350 miles under EPA conditions. 

The main difference between the models is power. The base Cayenne Electric model produces a mere 408 hp (442 hp with overboost), while the Cayenne S takes that up to 544 hp (666 hp with overboost). However, the Cayenne Turbo Electric cranks things up to deranged with 857 hp (1,156 hp overboosted), letting you bring three guests and their cargo from 0-60 mph in just 2.5 seconds and hit a top speed of 162 mph.

Porsche's new Cayenne Turbo Coupé Electric can do 0-60 mph in 2.5 seconds
Porsche

The interior is bound to have a bit less room than the regular Cayenne Electric due to the sloping roofline, but Porsche made things comfortable and high-tech. It comes with an optional electrochromic panoramic roof with adjustable tint and power operated doors, along with a choice of trims including leather upholstery. Physical controls are married with digital interfaces and a screen that stretches from the left edge of the middle console to the passenger side vent. As with other recent lux vehicles, it offers customizable graphics, an AR heads-up display and personalized app integration. 

Debuting at this year's Beijing Auto Show, the Cayenne Coupé Electric starts at $113,800 (minus the $2,350 delivery fee), while the base Cayenne S Coupe Electric is $131,200 and the Cayenne Turbo Coupe Electric costs $168,000. For a luxury sport electric SUV with 350 miles of range and 1,156 hp, that's actually... not bad? After all, you can easily pay six figures for a kitted-out Ford F-150 these days. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/evs/porsches-new-cayenne-turbo-coupe-electric-can-do-0-60-mph-in-25-seconds-091925467.html?src=rss

Why Pairing Claude Code with Karpathy’s Self-Evolving System Transforms AI Workflows

Why Pairing Claude Code with Karpathy’s Self-Evolving System Transforms AI Workflows Claude Code interface generating front-end code using structured knowledge data

Karpathy’s self-evolving knowledge system offers a structured method for organizing and refining information, with direct applications in AI-driven coding workflows. Its three-layer architecture, comprising raw data sources, AI-generated wikis and schema-based rules, provides a scalable framework for managing large datasets. According to World of AI, this approach enhances the performance of coding agents like Claude […]

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iPhone 18 Pro Max Leak: A20 Pro Chip to Feature ‘Super Cores’ and 2nm Efficiency

iPhone 18 Pro Max Leak: A20 Pro Chip to Feature ‘Super Cores’ and 2nm Efficiency Illustration of Apple’s iPhone 18 family with Pro models at the top and standard model treated as secondary.

Apple is reportedly making a bold move in its iPhone lineup, signaling one of the most significant strategic shifts in recent years. The company is placing a stronger focus on its Pro models, delaying the release of the standard iPhone 18 and introducing a new budget-friendly option, the iPhone 18E. These changes are poised to […]

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Turtle Beach’s Command Series puts touchscreens right where your hands already are

Touchscreens have been quietly making their way into almost everything around us. From car dashboards to kitchen appliances, the tap-and-swipe interface that once defined smartphones has spread into nearly every product category imaginable. It’s reached a point where finding a device without a screen feels more unusual than finding one with it. Designers just keep finding new surfaces to embed them on.

Turtle Beach’s all-new Command Series is the latest proof of that. The lineup includes, among other things, two keyboards, the KB7 and the KB5, plus a wireless mouse, the MC7, each with an embedded Command Touch Display. For gamers, streamers, and multitaskers who are constantly juggling tasks at once, having a dedicated control surface right where your hands already rest makes for a genuinely practical setup.

Designer: Turtle Beach

The KB7 is the flagship, a tenkeyless board with a 4.3-inch Command Touch Display built into it. Think of it as a Stream Deck fused onto your keyboard, letting you swap profiles, trigger macros, manage audio, or push OBS scene changes with a tap. For streamers bouncing between a game and broadcast software, it removes a good chunk of extra hardware and window-switching.

Its Titan low-profile Hall Effect switches have adjustable actuation down to 0.1mm with Rapid Trigger support, and the keyboard runs at an 8K polling rate with 0.125ms latency. The slim 29mm chassis is aluminum-reinforced, with double-shot PBT keycaps, textured WASD keys, and an illuminated detachable wrist rest. Dual modular rails let you dock the KP7 add-on keypad for an expanded layout. The KB7 is priced at $199.99.

The KB5 is the full-size option at $149.99, offering the numpad that the KB7 leaves out. Its touchscreen shrinks to 2.4 inches but still handles OBS integration, profile switching, and macro control. Titan low-profile mechanical switches actuate at 1.2mm, backed by ReacTap technology for faster resets. Five dedicated macro keys, a detachable wrist rest, and 8K polling round it all out.

Then there’s the MC7, the device that makes you look twice. It’s a wireless gaming mouse with its own 2.25-inch touchscreen, and it works much the same as the keyboard displays. On the fly, you can adjust DPI, switch between five onboard profiles, mute your mic, or trigger OBS scene changes without breaking your grip or pulling your attention away from whatever’s on your screen.

Under the hood, the MC7 has the Owl-Eye 30K DPI optical sensor, Titan Optical switches, and tri-mode connectivity across 2.4GHz wireless, Bluetooth, and USB wired. Two hot-swappable 1000mAh batteries with a charging dock keep it running indefinitely, with each cell lasting up to 10 hours. It’s priced at $159.99 and launches globally on July 19, 2026, two months after the keyboards.

All three are already up for pre-order at turtlebeach.com. Together, the KB7, KB5, and MC7 form an ecosystem built on the idea that the peripherals you hold every day can surface controls without making you reach for anything else. Touchscreens have ended up in some strange places over the years, but a mouse grip might actually be one of the more intuitive ones.

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