Samsung updates Bixby to become more conversational

Bixby isn’t typically part of the conversation when it comes to virtual assistants for mobile devices, but Samsung is clearly hoping that you would use it more. The company has launched the latest version of Bixby with the new One UI 8.5 beta, and it has been tweaked to work as a “conversational agent.” Samsung says you’ll now be able to talk to it and give it tasks using natural language, like how you’d talk to other people or, these days, to chatbots.

You don’t have to remember exact commands or names for specific settings. You can just describe what you want to happen, such as “I don’t want the screen to time out while I’m still looking at it.” Bixby will then automatically turn on the “Keep Screen on While Viewing” setting. If you ask it a question, such as “Why is my phone screen always on when it’s inside my pocket,” it could provide several solutions you can choose from.

In addition, the assistant can now access new and up-to-date information on the web. You do searches without opening a browser, and Bixby will display web results right within its interface. At the moment, the updated Bixby is only available in Samsung’s home country of Korea, as well as in Germany, India, Poland, the UK and the US, but company will roll it out more widely in the future.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/smartphones/samsung-updates-bixby-to-become-more-conversational-112649179.html?src=rss

Perplexity Bans Bots & Scrapers Under New Service Restrictions

Perplexity Bans Bots & Scrapers Under New Service Restrictions Screenshot-style view of Perplexity terms showing personal, non-commercial use limits for both free and Pro accounts.

Perplexity AI has recently rolled out a significant update to its terms of service, introducing stricter policies on usage, attribution, and content licensing. As outlined by the Nerdy Novelist, these changes include a shift to personal, non-commercial use only, even for paid subscribers, and a requirement for explicit attribution when sharing generated content publicly. These […]

The post Perplexity Bans Bots & Scrapers Under New Service Restrictions appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

bibigo Just Made Chopsticks With Touchscreen Tips for Scroll-Eaters

There’s a greasy phone screen somewhere in your immediate past. Maybe it was a dumpling, maybe it was a bowl of noodles, maybe it was something with a suspiciously orange sauce. Either way, you were eating and scrolling at the same time, and the evidence is still on the glass. Nobody’s proud of it, but according to a survey bibigo ran through Angus Reid, 96% of Americans have used their phone while eating, so at least you’re in excellent company.

bibigo, the Korean food brand behind what the internet has collectively decided are its favorite dumplings, decided to design for the habit instead of lecturing about it. ScrollSticks are dual-ended chopsticks with touchscreen tips, one end for picking up food and the other for tapping, swiping, and scrolling on a phone. The premise is simple: two dedicated ends for two different jobs, keeping the oil and sauce where they belong.

Designer: bibigo

The research behind the launch is basically a monument to relatable chaos. Beyond the 96% who’ve scrolled while eating, 66% do it often during at least one meal a day. Nearly three in four people report frustrations: 41% are frustrated by getting their hands or phones dirty, 30% struggle to hold a phone comfortably while eating, and 28% can’t keep their screen clean. ScrollSticks are bibigo’s answer to all of the above, which is either very clever or a sign of the times, possibly both.

The design logic is straightforward. You eat with the food end, then flip the chopsticks and use the touchscreen-compatible tips to tap and scroll without transferring dumpling residue onto the glass. The tips work with capacitive touchscreens, so it’s not just poking the screen with metal but actually registers as a touch. One tool, two dedicated functions, and your screen stays marginally more dignified.

The cleaning situation is also handled better than you’d expect from what sounds like a novelty item. The touchscreen tips unscrew from the chopsticks, so you can dishwasher or sink-wash the metal body just like any other silverware. That modularity is doing serious practical work here. A touchscreen-tipped chopstick that you can’t properly clean would be a different, worse product.

bibigo frames ScrollSticks as part of its “food-tainment” innovations, which is a word that exists now and apparently describes branded objects that blur eating and entertainment culture. The previous entry in that line was the bibigo Dashboard Kitchen. ScrollSticks are sillier and more useful, which is a hard combination to pull off.

The chopsticks are a limited-edition drop, and the window is short. That’s fitting for something that is partly a product and partly a cultural artifact: a small, polished admission that dinner and doomscrolling are now the same meal, and if the phone is staying at the table, at least the screen deserves better than a dumpling-flavored fingerprint in the corner.

The post bibigo Just Made Chopsticks With Touchscreen Tips for Scroll-Eaters first appeared on Yanko Design.

Google Pixel 10 vs Pixel 10A: Which One Should You Buy?

Google Pixel 10 vs Pixel 10A: Which One Should You Buy? Side-by-side design comparison of Pixel 10 and Pixel 10A smartphones

The Pixel 10 and Pixel 10A, while part of the same product family, cater to distinct user needs through differences in design, performance, and features. The Pixel 10 is tailored for those seeking a premium experience, while the Pixel 10A focuses on affordability and practicality. Understanding their unique characteristics can help you make an informed […]

The post Google Pixel 10 vs Pixel 10A: Which One Should You Buy? appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

Gemini 3.1 Pro Brings Deepthink-Style Reasoning with Three Thinking Levels

Gemini 3.1 Pro Brings Deepthink-Style Reasoning with Three Thinking Levels An SVG design output generated by Gemini 3.1 Pro, showing cleaner shapes and more accurate spacing than before.

Google’s Gemini 3.1 Pro introduces a range of updates aimed at improving performance and adaptability across diverse applications. Building on the foundation of its predecessor, this release features enhancements such as higher accuracy in humanities exams, improved efficiency in coding challenges, and refined outputs for visual design tasks. According to Sam Witteveen, the model’s new […]

The post Gemini 3.1 Pro Brings Deepthink-Style Reasoning with Three Thinking Levels appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

Why the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra is the Ultimate Smartphone Upgrade

Why the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra is the Ultimate Smartphone Upgrade Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra selfie camera with Sony sensor upgrade

The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra delivers a range of enhancements that elevate functionality, privacy, and user experience. With a focus on meaningful upgrades, this flagship device builds on its predecessor while introducing refined features. From an upgraded selfie camera to advanced privacy tools, the Galaxy S26 Ultra offers a compelling package for users seeking a […]

The post Why the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra is the Ultimate Smartphone Upgrade appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

Google Play used AI to help block 1.75 million bad apps in 2025

Google has announced that with the help of AI, it blocked 1.75 million apps that violated its policies in 2025, significantly down from 2.36 million in 2024. The lower numbers this year, it said, are because its "AI-powered, multi-layer protections" are deterring bad actors from even trying to publish bad apps.

Google said it now runs more than 10,000 safety checks on every app and continues to recheck them after they're published. Its use of the latest generative AI models helps human reviewers discover malicious patterns more quickly, it added. The company also blocked 160 million spam ratings, preventing an average 0.5-star rating drop for apps targeted by review bombing. Finally, Google stopped 255,000 apps from gaining excessive access to sensitive user data in 2025, down from 1.3 million the year before. 

Meanwhile, Google Play Protect, the company's Android defense system, sniffed out over 27 million new malicious apps, either warning users or preventing them from running. The company added that Play Protect's enhanced fraud protection now covers 2.8 billion Android devices in 185 markets and blocked 266 million risky "side-loading" installation attempts. 

"Initiatives like developer verification, mandatory pre-review checks, and testing requirements have raised the bar for the Google Play ecosystem, significantly reducing the paths for bad actors to enter," the company said its blog. "This year, we’ll continue to invest in AI-driven defenses to stay ahead of emerging threats and equip Android developers with the tools they need to build apps safely."

Google has steadfastly justified its relatively high fees on app purchases and subscriptions by touting its investments in app safety. However, its Play store has been under pressure from regulators in Europe and other regions that claim it amounts to a monopoly. Last year, the company changed its fee structure for developers using alternative payment channels, but EU regulators recently claimed the company still isn't complying with Digital Markets Act regulations. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/apps/google-play-used-ai-to-help-block-175-million-bad-apps-in-2025-102208054.html?src=rss

5 New Ray Ban Meta Accessories : Magnetic Battery, Lenses, Travel Storage & More

5 New Ray Ban Meta Accessories : Magnetic Battery, Lenses, Travel Storage & More Magnetic battery system case opened to show compact batteries and the connector for charging Ray-Ban Meta glasses.

Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses have introduced five new accessories designed to enhance their functionality and adaptability, as overviewed by Steven Sullivan. These additions include features like polarized clip-on lenses for improved outdoor visibility and a magnetic infinite battery system that provides extended power on the go. Whether you own the first or second generation of […]

The post 5 New Ray Ban Meta Accessories : Magnetic Battery, Lenses, Travel Storage & More appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

iPhone Shortcuts You Didn’t Know You Needed

iPhone Shortcuts You Didn’t Know You Needed iPhone Shortcuts

Streamlining daily tasks and enhancing productivity has never been easier, thanks to the robust capabilities of iPhone shortcuts. These automation tools, powered by Apple’s ecosystem and third-party app integrations, enable you to perform complex actions with minimal effort. By using these features, you can customize your device to suit your unique needs, saving time and […]

The post iPhone Shortcuts You Didn’t Know You Needed appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

This Pen Flashlight Is Thinner Than an iPhone and Blasts 500 Lumens

Most people don’t carry a flashlight, which is something they only realize when they’re already crammed under a sink, squinting at a fuse box, or trying to read a label in a poorly lit corner of a garage. Cylindrical lights are bulky, they roll off surfaces, and they feel overbuilt for the kind of everyday moments where you just need a quick, reliable beam. So they get left at home, and your phone flashlight ends up doing all the work.

The Wedge SL is a USB-C rechargeable inspection light with a sleek, modern design built to actually stay in a pocket. The ultra-thin unibody construction puts the dimensions closer to a pen than a flashlight, 5.65 inches long, 0.28 inches thick, and about 1.14 oz light, which means it doesn’t fight for space with keys and a wallet. A stainless steel injection-molded pocket clip also lets it ride on a shirt pocket or tool pouch without bouncing around.

Designer: Streamlight

One-handed operation was clearly part of the brief. The tail switch handles momentary or constant-on use, so one hand can hold a panel, a wire bundle, or an awkward hatch while the other hand aims the light exactly where it needs to go. TEN-TAP programmable switch lets users choose whether constant-on defaults to High or Low intensity, which means the light can match your habits rather than forcing you to cycle through modes every time you switch on.

For an inspection light, the available modes are spot on, pardon the pun. Constant-on High runs at 100 lumens for 1.75 hours, Low drops to 50 lumens for 3.5 hours, and THRO (Temporarily Heightened Regulated Output) mode pushes 500 lumens with an 80m beam when you need maximum brightness fast. THRO is activated by a 3-second press, which keeps it from firing accidentally during sustained work while still making it quick to trigger when a tight space needs a real burst of light.

The battery side holds up well. USB-C charging and a four-level LED battery status indicator with charge alerts mean you always know roughly how much is left, without deciphering blink codes. A full charge takes about four hours. The field serviceable, user-replaceable lithium polymer battery is also worth calling out, since many rechargeable lights eventually become e-waste once the cell degrades inside a sealed body.

Durability gets the same careful treatment, as the extruded aluminum alloy case comes with a Type II MIL-Spec anodized finish. The lens is also unbreakable acrylic, and the light is IPX4-rated with 1m impact resistance testing. A bite boot is also included, which lets you grip it with your teeth during two-handed work without scratching the finish or the inside of your mouth.

The Streamlight Wedge SL earns pocket space by being thin, predictable, and quick to operate instead of trying to be a tactical statement piece. A flashlight that’s actually on you is always going to matter more than one that performs better on a spec sheet but gets left on the workbench because it’s too big to bother carrying every day.

The post This Pen Flashlight Is Thinner Than an iPhone and Blasts 500 Lumens first appeared on Yanko Design.