Spotify’s Prompted Playlist lets you describe exactly what you want to hear

Ahead of its upcoming price hike, Spotify is rolling out a more advanced AI playlist feature in the US and Canada. Prompted Playlist, which the company trialed in New Zealand late last year, lets subscribers "control the Spotify algorithm," as the company describes it. "You're not just asking for music, you're shaping how Spotify goes about discovering it for you."

For example, you can guide it to make a playlist of songs you've saved to your Library but haven't listened to yet. (It can tap into your entire Spotify history.) Or, you can tell it to round up songs from a specific television show or movie. (It uses real-time information about pop culture, charts, and history.)

The feature includes options to refresh the playlist over time (daily or weekly). You can edit each playlist's prompt at any time. Each track will include a short note to explain why it was chosen.

Four screens showing the steps to produce a Spotify Prompted Playlist
The standard AI Playlist creator will remain alongside the new Prompted Playlist.
Spotify

Spotify says beta testers have used Prompted Playlist to revisit songs tied to specific moments and filter out tracks they've overplayed lately. "Others are asking for long, lyric-free electronic playlists to power through a workday, or mixing in artists connected to current pop culture moments and viral trends," the company wrote.

There's room for some confusion here because Spotify already has an "AI Playlist" feature. That simpler type will stick around alongside the new "Prompted" variety, which allows for finer tuning and can sift through more data.

Prompted Playlist will be available to Spotify Premium subscribers in the US and Canada "by the end of the month." Once you have access, you can try it by tapping Create, then selecting Prompted Playlist.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/audio/spotifys-prompted-playlist-lets-you-describe-exactly-what-you-want-to-hear-140000153.html?src=rss

Why the Ralph Bash Loop Works Best with a Small, Focused Context

Why the Ralph Bash Loop Works Best with a Small, Focused Context

What happens when a foundational method in AI optimization gets reimagined, and not necessarily for the better? In this guide, Better Stack explains how the Ralph loop, a once-simple yet powerful script, has become a battleground for innovation and controversy. Originally designed to keep AI systems operating in their “smart zone” by managing context windows […]

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How to Easily Switch from Windows 11 to Linux for Gaming Performance Gains

How to Easily Switch from Windows 11 to Linux for Gaming Performance Gains

What if the operating system you’ve relied on for years is actually holding you back? Below, NYXTERA breaks down how Linux, once considered a niche option for tech enthusiasts, is rapidly becoming a innovative platform for modern gamers. With Windows 11 facing criticism for its resource-heavy processes, invasive telemetry, and steep hardware requirements, many players […]

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Turbocharge Your Samsung Smartphone : The Galaxy App Booster Guide

Turbocharge Your Samsung Smartphone : The Galaxy App Booster Guide

For Samsung Galaxy phone users, maintaining optimal performance is essential to ensure a seamless and efficient experience. Samsung offers a dedicated tool called the Good Guardians app, designed to enhance your device’s functionality. Among its various modules, the Galaxy App Booster stands out as a critical feature, allowing faster app launches, smoother operation, and improved […]

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How to find an affordable GPU during the great RAMageddon of 2026

If you're thinking about upgrading to a new graphics card this year, your window for doing so at MSRP has closed. When I first reported on this at the start of December, things were looking bleak but you could still find GPUs from both AMD and NVIDIA at close to their recommended prices. That changed last week when YouTube channel Hardware Unboxed reported that ASUS had stopped producing the RTX 5070 Ti and 5060 Ti 16GB due to ongoing memory shortages. 

After Engadget published the news, NVIDIA disputed the report. “Demand for GeForce RTX GPUs is strong, and memory supply is constrained. We continue to ship all GeForce SKUs and are working closely with our suppliers to maximize memory availability,” a company spokesperson told us. 

The next day, ASUS walked back its previous statements. After “explicitly” telling Hardware Unboxed it had placed the 5060 Ti 16GB and 5070 Ti into "end-of-life status," the company said "certain media may have received incomplete information from an ASUS PR representative regarding these products," adding it had "no plans to stop selling these models."  

Whether or not the 5060 Ti 16GB and 5070 Ti remain in production, one thing is certain: the AI boom has created a great deal of uncertainty in the GPU market. After the news, panic buying sent the price of the 5070 Ti through the roof. Right now, it's impossible to find that model priced at its MSRP of $749. As of the writing of this article, the most affordable version of the 5070 Ti I could find on Newegg was $1,199. 

The bigger problem is that the 5070 Ti isn't the only GPU selling for far more than MSRP. Tom's Hardware has been tracking GPU prices for months, and there's not a single model you can buy at either AMD or NVIDIA's recommended price. That puts PC builders in a tough spot. What do you do if you want to upgrade to a new graphics card this year? 

If you're sitting on an older GPU, the best advice I can give is to stick with your current hardware. If you're fine with the performance of your video card right now, it's best to wait a year or two for the market to settle down.

On the other hand, if your current GPU is not up to the task of running the games you want to play, try to buy a card with at least 12GB of VRAM — preferably 16GB if your budget allows for it. Unless you plan to play mostly older games on a 1080p monitor, it's not worth considering a model with 8GB of VRAM — it won't last you long enough to warrant the purchase price. 

For the most part, the recommendations in Engadget's recent GPU guide are still as relevant today as they were a few months ago. The recommendations I provide here are pulled from that guide and are grouped from most affordable to most expensive. Where possible, I've tried to find options from both Newegg and Amazon. As you go about looking for a new GPU, your best friend is a website like PCPartPicker where you can track pricing across multiple retailers.  

The Radeon RX 9060 XT 16GB is the best mainstream option right now.
The Radeon RX 9060 XT 16GB is the best mainstream option right now.
Devindra Hardawar for Engadget

Unfortunately if you're on a tight budget, there aren't many great options under $400. For that reason, I would steer you to the Radeon RX 9060 XT as the best "entry-level" option. AMD offers two different versions of this GPU: one with 8GB of VRAM and the other with 16GB. Of the two, the latter is the better purchase, but if it's outside your budget, the more affordable model is probably the best 8GB GPU on the market right now.

While I couldn't find the 16GB variant at its recommended price of $350, I did find a few models that weren't far off. Newegg has options from ASRock and Sapphire priced at $400 and $450. At Amazon, meanwhile, you can find models from PowerColor for $400 and $430.     

A Founders Edition NVIDIA RTX 5080 sits on a wood desk.
A Founders Edition NVIDIA RTX 5080 sits on a wood desk.
Devindra Hardawar for Engadget

I'm somewhat hesitant to recommend the RTX 5070. Don't get me wrong, it's a decent enough card, but with only 12GB of VRAM, you may end up replacing it sooner than you think. That said, it's one of the few NVIDIA GPUs that hasn't shot up massively in price, and I suspect that's because people have been passing it over in favor of other 50-series models. If you value NVIDIA's feature set over raw frames, then the 5070 is about the only GPU that makes sense to buy from the company right now.    

On Newegg, I found a 5070 model from Gigabyte for $650. The retailer also has a handful of different MSI variants priced at $630. Amazon has fewer options, but it does have one 5070 from Gigabyte for $585, which is the closest to the card's $549 MSRP.    

If you're a fan of Team Red, the Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT are among the best cards of this generation.
If you're a fan of Team Red, the Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT are among the best cards of this generation.
Devindra Hardawar for Engadget

For a card that offers better price-to-performance than the 5070, the Radeon RX 9070 is your best bet. AMD's take on NVIDIA features like DLSS aren't as polished, but the RX 9070 offers more VRAM and excellent performance across the latest AAA games. 

It's unlikely you'll find one at its MSRP of $550, which was always more of an aspirational price, but I found a few models priced between $590 and $640. Both Newegg and Amazon have a PowerColor model for $590. The two also have a Gigabyte model priced at $600 after $40 rebate with coupon.      

For those with more to spend, the RX 9070 XT is probably where I would cap things. Beyond that, you're looking at GPUs like the 5080 that cost far more than MSRP. On Newegg, I found a model from ASRock selling for $730. Amazon, meanwhile, has options from Gigabyte and ASUS for $720. None of those are great deals, but that's to be expected with a card that's at the top of the stack.    

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/pc/how-to-find-an-affordable-gpu-during-the-great-ramageddon-of-2026-130000654.html?src=rss

Gemini 3.5 Leaked ChatGPT 5.3 Confirmed & DeepSeek Hints at New R Series

Gemini 3.5 Leaked ChatGPT 5.3 Confirmed & DeepSeek Hints at New R Series

What happens when the biggest names in AI collide in a race to redefine the future? Universe of AI walks through how OpenAI’s confirmed GPT-5.3, Google’s leaked Gemini 3.5, and DeepSeek’s cryptic new model are reshaping the competitive landscape. From breakthroughs in reasoning and efficiency to unexpected shortcomings in creative tasks, these developments reveal both […]

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5 Best LEGO Creations of January 2026

LEGO has spent decades proving that plastic bricks can build anything from childhood memories to architectural masterpieces. January 2026 continues that tradition with designs that push beyond simple construction into genuine cultural commentary. These aren’t just toys gathering dust on shelves. They’re conversation pieces that bridge art history, gaming nostalgia, comedy legends, sports culture, and the maker movement into something you can actually hold.

What makes these five stand out is their refusal to play it safe. Each one takes risks with form, function, or concept. Some open to reveal hidden worlds. Others capture movement frozen in absurdity. The best designs this month understand that LEGO’s real magic lies in surprising people who thought they’d seen everything the medium could offer.

1. LEGO Campbell’s Soup Can Opens to Reveal Andy Warhol’s Factory Studio

This LEGO Ideas submission transforms Warhol’s most famous subject into an architectural achievement that honors both pop art and the artist’s creative process. The 24-stud diameter curved exterior alone represents great technical skill, but that’s just the packaging for what’s inside. Months of research went into recreating The Factory’s actual layout, visual language, and cultural significance. The printed artworks covering interior walls reference Warhol’s practice of painting on the floor surrounded by finished pieces.

The metallic interior creates a jarring contrast against the familiar red and white label, mimicking that disorienting moment when commercial design becomes fine art. Props from the actual studio populate the space: the disco ball reflecting celebrity culture, the motorcycle representing Warhol’s fascination with danger and fame, the couch where artists and socialites blurred boundaries. The silver-wigged minifigure presides over it all like a tiny curator. This works as both a display piece and an educational tool, making 1960s avant-garde culture accessible through the universal language of LEGO.

2. LEGO Editions 43019 Soccer Ball Opens to Stadium Interior

This 1,498-piece build measures 15 inches long, 10.3 inches wide, and 2.8 inches tall when fully assembled. The ball exterior alone would make a decent display piece, but cracking it open reveals the real achievement: a complete miniature stadium tucked inside curved walls. Stands, pitch, and match details occupy space most designers would leave hollow. Tiny fans populate the seating areas while players freeze mid-action on the field, capturing that electric moment before kickoff.

The engineering required to create both a recognizable ball exterior and a detailed stadium interior deserves recognition. This isn’t hollow packaging with loose pieces rattling around. Every element serves the dual design, allowing two completely different display configurations from one set. Show the closed ball for sports memorabilia aesthetic, or open it up to reveal the intricate stadium work. That versatility makes it perfect for shelves, desks, or dedicated LEGO display areas. The commitment to surprising builders at every construction stage elevates this beyond typical sports merchandise.

3. LEGO Monty Python Ministry of Silly Walks Build

John Cleese’s Mr. Teabag finally exists in brick form, complete with exaggerated proportions capturing every knee-flinging motion from the legendary sketch. The Technic joints provide genuine articulation rather than decorative suggestion, allowing precise recreation of those impossibly specific movements. This build solves a difficult problem: translating physical comedy into a static medium while preserving all the visual humor that made the original sketch memorable.

The facial expression captures Mr. Teabag’s deadpan bureaucratic seriousness with museum-quality attention to sculptural detail. That silhouette reads instantly from across any room, making it display-worthy alongside traditional LEGO architecture sets. The bowler hat and umbrella complete the aesthetic, transforming simple accessories into essential elements of British absurdist comedy. This works whether you’re a Python fanatic who can quote entire sketches or simply appreciate builds with genuine personality. The wit translates perfectly into plastic brick form.

4. LEGO Portal 2 Test Chamber Creator with Modular Design

The Portal franchise earned its legendary status through ingenious puzzles, dark humor, and an aesthetic so distinctive that orange and blue instantly evoke Aperture Science. KaijuBuilds translated that sterile-yet-sinister world into brick form with this LEGO Ideas submission. The sophisticated modular tile system features 18 unique configurations across 29 total modules, letting builders reconstruct famous chambers or design entirely new challenges. Around 1,280 pieces include Chell, Wheatley, Atlas, P-body, turrets, portals, a Companion Cube, and that infamous cake.

Attention to detail extends to overgrown tiles referencing Portal 2’s decayed facility sections, complete with a white rat nodding to mysterious Rattman. The modular approach mirrors the in-game test chamber editor, transforming this from a frozen diorama into an actual spatial puzzle playground. You can play with configurations rather than building one static scene, which captures the core Portal experience of manipulating space to solve problems. That interactive design philosophy makes this more than fan service. It’s a genuine translation of game mechanics into a physical building system.

5. LEGO Ender-Inspired 3D Printer Model

LEGO and 3D printing occupy similar creative territory, both transforming ideas into physical objects through systematic processes. Despite this natural kinship, no official LEGO model has captured the specific machine democratizing small-scale manufacturing. This fan submission fixes that gap with a recognizably Ender-inspired design capturing both the utilitarian aesthetic and basic kinematic structure of Creality’s popular printer lineup. The build doesn’t actually function like some ambitious LEGO projects, but that misses the point entirely.

Someone unfamiliar with 3D printing could assemble this and understand how Cartesian motion systems work, how hotend assembly relates to the build plate, and why vertical lead screws matter for Z-axis stability. For people who already own an Ender or similar machine, it offers nostalgia and novelty in seeing familiar hardware translated into tabletop collectible form. This bridges two maker communities that share fundamental DNA: the systematic joy of creating physical objects layer by layer, whether through molded plastic bricks or extruded filament.

The New Direction of LEGO Design

These five builds represent where LEGO culture is heading: designs that celebrate specific communities, translate complex ideas into accessible forms, and trust builders to appreciate nuance. They’re not chasing mass appeal. They’re serving passionate audiences who want their interests reflected in brick form, whether that’s pop art history, gaming nostalgia, or maker culture.

The best part is how these designs use LEGO’s constraints as creative fuel rather than limitations. Curved soup cans, modular game chambers, articulated comedy, nested stadiums, and kinematic printer structures all push the medium into new territory. January 2026 proves that after decades of innovation, LEGO still has surprises left to build.

The post 5 Best LEGO Creations of January 2026 first appeared on Yanko Design.

Is Your Mac Slowing Down? Clear System Data for a Speed Boost

Is Your Mac Slowing Down? Clear System Data for a Speed Boost

Efficiently managing your Mac’s storage is crucial for maintaining its performance and making sure smooth operation. Over time, your system accumulates temporary files, such as caches, that can take up a significant amount of storage. While these files are designed to enhance your Mac’s functionality in the short term, they can become a burden if […]

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How Google’s Lang Extract Turns Messy Documents into Trustworthy JSON and Interactive HTML

How Google’s Lang Extract Turns Messy Documents into Trustworthy JSON and Interactive HTML

What if you could turn chaotic, unstructured text into clean, actionable data in seconds? Better Stack walks through how Google’s Lang Extract, an open source Python library, achieves just that by using innovative large language models like Gemini and GPT. Imagine transforming messy customer feedback, dense regulatory documents, or sprawling clinical notes into structured formats […]

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8 Genius Android Apps That Will Change How You Use Your Phone

8 Genius Android Apps That Will Change How You Use Your Phone

  Your Android device is more than just a communication tool—it’s a versatile platform that can be tailored to suit your lifestyle, enhance your productivity, and improve your overall digital experience. By using the right apps, you can unlock its full potential, making it a hub for efficiency, creativity, and convenience. Below, we explore eight […]

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