Building AI agents is becoming more accessible with advancements in no-code platforms. A recent walkthrough by World of AI demonstrates how beginners can create functional AI agents using straightforward methods. One example involves setting up an agent to summarize lengthy documents or manage email responses by defining workflows through natural language commands. These systems rely […]
Apple’s upcoming iOS 27, expected to be unveiled at WWDC 2026, is poised to deliver a fresh wave of enhancements to its mobile operating system. Over the years, iOS has been synonymous with innovation, but it has also faced criticism for recurring bugs, limited customization, and occasional performance issues. With the competitive smartphone market evolving […]
Rob Bonta, the Attorney General of California, has released an unredacted copy of a legal document that the state filed in relation to its lawsuit against Amazon, containing details of the company’s alleged price fixing scheme. In it, the state of California accuses the e-commerce company of reaching out to brands and asking them to “fix” the retail prices of their products on competitors’ websites. Due to Amazon’s “overwhelming bargaining leverage” and out of fear of punishment, the brands agree to raise their products’ prices on other retailers like Walmart and Target or to remove them altogether, the filing reads.
California filed an antitrust lawsuit accusing Amazon of price fixing back in 2022. It said the company prevented sellers from offering lower prices on other sites and that vendors risked losing buy buttons and prominent listings if they defied Amazon. In February this year, Bonta filed for a preliminary injunction, asking the court to put a stop to Amazon’s “illegal conduct” while the state’s lawsuit is ongoing and waiting to go to trial next year.
In the unredacted filing, California said that Amazon instructs vendors and brands to increase their prices on other retailers and threatens them with “significant penalties for failure to comply.” State officials gave several examples in the filing, including one incident wherein Amazon allegedly emailed security systems provider Arlo.
The company talked to Arlo about “external price matching,” along with a screenshot of one of its cameras on Walmart, noting that its price of $549.93 “did not go back up.” Arlo reportedly responded that it would get it addressed, and Amazon told the company to “get [it] corrected by EOD.” Afterward, Arlo sent Amazon a screenshot, showing the same Walmart page now listing the camera’s price at $649.99. Amazon ended the conversation by thanking Arlo for its “quick action.” Other samples include Amazon asking Levi’s to “resolve” the lower prices of its khaki pants on Walmart and Hanes to increase the prices of its clothing items on Walmart and Target.
Amazon shrugged off the filing’s release and called California’s case against the company weak. “The Attorney General’s motion is a transparent attempt to distract from the weakness of its case, coming more than three years after filing its complaint and based on supposedly ‘new’ evidence it has had for years,” an Amazon spokesperson told Engadget. “Amazon is consistently identified as America’s lowest-priced online retailer, and we’re proud of the low prices customers find when shopping in our store. Amazon looks forward to responding in court at the appropriate time.”
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/amazon-allegedly-pressured-companies-to-raise-product-prices-with-other-retailers-115302642.html?src=rss
Rob Bonta, the Attorney General of California, has released an unredacted copy of a legal document that the state filed in relation to its lawsuit against Amazon, containing details of the company’s alleged price fixing scheme. In it, the state of California accuses the e-commerce company of reaching out to brands and asking them to “fix” the retail prices of their products on competitors’ websites. Due to Amazon’s “overwhelming bargaining leverage” and out of fear of punishment, the brands agree to raise their products’ prices on other retailers like Walmart and Target or to remove them altogether, the filing reads.
California filed an antitrust lawsuit accusing Amazon of price fixing back in 2022. It said the company prevented sellers from offering lower prices on other sites and that vendors risked losing buy buttons and prominent listings if they defied Amazon. In February this year, Bonta filed for a preliminary injunction, asking the court to put a stop to Amazon’s “illegal conduct” while the state’s lawsuit is ongoing and waiting to go to trial next year.
In the unredacted filing, California said that Amazon instructs vendors and brands to increase their prices on other retailers and threatens them with “significant penalties for failure to comply.” State officials gave several examples in the filing, including one incident wherein Amazon allegedly emailed security systems provider Arlo.
The company talked to Arlo about “external price matching,” along with a screenshot of one of its cameras on Walmart, noting that its price of $549.93 “did not go back up.” Arlo reportedly responded that it would get it addressed, and Amazon told the company to “get [it] corrected by EOD.” Afterward, Arlo sent Amazon a screenshot, showing the same Walmart page now listing the camera’s price at $649.99. Amazon ended the conversation by thanking Arlo for its “quick action.” Other samples include Amazon asking Levi’s to “resolve” the lower prices of its khaki pants on Walmart and Hanes to increase the prices of its clothing items on Walmart and Target.
Amazon shrugged off the filing’s release and called California’s case against the company weak. “The Attorney General’s motion is a transparent attempt to distract from the weakness of its case, coming more than three years after filing its complaint and based on supposedly ‘new’ evidence it has had for years,” an Amazon spokesperson told Engadget. “Amazon is consistently identified as America’s lowest-priced online retailer, and we’re proud of the low prices customers find when shopping in our store. Amazon looks forward to responding in court at the appropriate time.”
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/amazon-allegedly-pressured-companies-to-raise-product-prices-with-other-retailers-115302642.html?src=rss
The aviation industry faces a significant challenge in reducing its carbon footprint, with medium- and long-haul flights heavily reliant on liquid fuels due to their high energy density. In a recent exploration by Two Bit da Vinci, the spotlight is on sustainable aviation fuel (SAF), a synthetic alternative created from agricultural waste, water and renewable […]
Most rooms treat lighting as an afterthought. A fixture goes on the ceiling, a floor lamp fills a corner, and the result is illumination without real personality; technically functional, completely forgettable. The lamps that actually change a room belong to a different category entirely. They’re worth looking at before you’ve switched them on, with forms that say something specific about how light should behave and how a space should feel.
These five designs earn that standard. Some rethink where light is allowed to exist. Others change their function with a single physical gesture. A few carry material quality that improves over time rather than fade. None of them are lamps you choose because something needs filling. They’re the kind of objects that make everything else in the room feel like it’s working harder just by being there.
1. Flying Moon & Sun
Ivana Nedeljkovska’s Flying Moon & Sun flips the usual assumption about lighting — instead of walking toward the light, the light walks toward you. The concept takes shape as two glass orbs, one in warm amber drawn from the energy of the sun and one in cool frosted blue that mirrors the moon’s quieter character. Each levitates above a brushed circular metal base through magnetic force, that floating quality expressing the central idea: a light that doesn’t need to be anchored anywhere in a room.
Living with it means giving up the idea that a room’s light is fixed and neutral. The amber orb suits an evening wind-down or a reading session, anywhere overhead lighting handles the mood badly. The cool blue shifts the atmosphere entirely, bringing a calm ambient quality that works differently in a bedroom than it does in a living room. For anyone tired of reaching for a switch, this concept points clearly in a direction worth following.
What We Like
Dual orbs deliver two distinct lighting characters — warm amber and cool blue — without any additional hardware
Levitation through magnetic force gives it a presence no cord-tethered or wall-mounted fixture can replicate
What We Dislike
Currently a concept design and is unavailable to purchase
Real-world performance around battery life, sensor accuracy, and magnetic durability remains untested
2. Anywhere-Use Lamp
The Anywhere Use Lamp is one of the few portable lamps that actually looks like it belongs in a room. The mushroom silhouette is clean and minimal, available in black, white, and an Industrial edition with a scratch-detailed metal base that reads as honest material character rather than decoration. Six high color rendering LEDs produce a warm, soft glow calibrated toward mood over task — a distinction most battery-powered lamps in this category never bother to consider.
Running on four AA batteries, it disassembles flat enough to slide into a bag and sets up wherever you carry it. Pressing any edge of the cap cycles through four brightness levels with a satisfying tactile click — a detail that makes the lamp genuinely pleasurable to use every day. For a dinner table without an outlet nearby, a reading corner mid-renovation, or a patio gathering that deserves better than a string of bulbs, it places the right quality of glow exactly where it’s needed.
Fully modular and battery-powered — complete location freedom with no outlet planning required
Tactile click feedback on each brightness cycle is a deliberate sensory detail that elevates daily use above anything else in its portable category
What We Dislike
Standard AA batteries require ongoing replacement, adding a recurring cost that a built-in rechargeable option would eliminate
The mushroom silhouette, while clean, is familiar enough in this market to lack the full visual distinction the Industrial edition’s scratched base brings
3. Fire Capsule Oil Lamp
The Fire Capsule is an oil lamp in a cylindrical glass form, and it works because everything has been reduced to exactly what the object needs. A precision-engineered lid keeps the chimney clean between uses. An 80ml capacity delivers up to 16 hours of continuous light — enough for a full dinner or a slow evening without refilling. An included aroma plate lets you layer scent alongside the glow, turning the lamp into a multi-sensory presence on any surface it occupies.
The flat-topped design allows multiple units to stack cleanly, and paraffin oil with insect-repelling properties extends its usefulness outdoors — on a patio, a terrace, or any table where atmosphere and comfort both belong on the list. For a dining setup that already has overhead light and simply needs something warmer at eye level, the Fire Capsule handles it without consuming space you can’t spare. A drawstring pouch makes it as easy to carry as it is to use.
A 16-hour burn time from a single fill makes it a genuinely practical choice for extended gatherings, not just decorative use
The aroma plate adds a scent layer most lamps never attempt, turning a light source into a full atmosphere object
What We Dislike
Paraffin oil requires regular restocking, and the insect-repelling outdoor variant may need sourcing through specialist retailers
The glass chimney, while protected by the lid between uses, requires careful handling when packing for travel
4. JAL
JAL is built from two glass cones joined tip to tip in a form that reads immediately as an hourglass. The bulb sits inside this sealed geometry and appears to float in mid-air — a quality that gives the lamp real presence before you’ve considered what it actually does. Available in transparent or frosted glass with a colored cable as the only other visible element, the form does all the work. It belongs on a sideboard, a console, or a bedside, and holds that position without competing with anything around it.
The more you interact with it, the more considered it reveals itself to be. Place the lamp with the bulb facing upward, and it behaves like a conventional table lamp, sending light toward the ceiling. Flip it so the bulb faces downward, and it becomes a softer source that pools light onto the surface below — closer to a glowing object than a reading companion. One rotation, two completely different functions, no settings required.
What We Like
Flipping the lamp changes its function entirely with a single physical gesture — no apps, dimmers, or remote controls involved
The hourglass form holds its own as a visual object even when it’s switched off
What We Dislike
All-glass construction requires careful handling with no obvious protection during storage or transport
The colored cable adds character but limits neutral styling options for more minimal setups
5. Harmony Flame Fireplace
The Harmony Flame Fireplace is made by craftsmen who build brass musical instruments, and that connection is visible in the finish and felt in the weight of the object. It burns bioethanol that is odorless, smokeless, and clean enough for indoor use, and the flame plays against the reflective brass interior in a way that creates a shifting, living quality of light no bulb can replicate. Shadows move on the surrounding walls. The room feels different. No installation, no wiring, no planning — you fill it and the space changes.
Brass develops a patina over time that makes the object more interesting rather than less — a quality that cheaper materials never manage and most design objects don’t survive long enough to demonstrate. For a dining table that earns its centerpiece through material presence rather than novelty, or an outdoor setting that deserves something more honest than a string of lights, the Harmony Flame Lamp delivers with real authority. It’s also the one on this list that people are most likely to ask about by name.
Hand-crafted brass construction develops genuine character over time, giving it depth no manufactured alternative can match
Bioethanol burns without odor or smoke, making an open indoor flame genuinely practical — rare in a lamp this well-made
What We Dislike
An open flame requires standard fire safety awareness and isn’t suitable for unsupervised use around young children or pets
Bioethanol fuel is not universally stocked and may require a specialist supplier, depending on your location
The Right Lamp Changes Everything Else
Good lighting doesn’t announce itself — it changes how a room feels before you can explain why. These five designs each do something specific: one proposes a new relationship between light and movement, one turns a single rotation into a full shift in function, and one brings the right quality of warmth to wherever the evening happens to be. None of them are objects you choose simply because a corner needed filling.
One works through scent as much as one does through light. One earns its presence through material quality that only improves with time. Another proposes a concept so specific it makes every fixed lamp feel like a missed opportunity. You don’t need all five. But the right one changes how the rest of the room reads — and that’s what separates a lamp worth noticing from one that simply occupies space.
The iPhone 17e signifies a fantastic moment in Apple’s design philosophy, introducing modularity and upgradeable components that set it apart from its predecessors. While retaining key features from the iPhone 16e, the 17e pushes boundaries with advancements in wireless charging, durability, and sustainability. This evolution reflects a growing industry trend toward user-centric design and environmental […]
Apple’s current SVP of hardware engineering John Ternus will take over as the new CEO when Tim Cook steps down this September. Cook said in a statement: “It has been the greatest privilege of my life to be the CEO of Apple and to have been trusted to lead such an extraordinary company.”
Following the death of co-founder Steve Jobs, Cook led the charge for Apple’s post-iPhone and iPad era, launching the AirPods, Apple Watch and Vision Pro. He also turned the company into a service provider with the launch of Apple TV, Apple Music and several other subscription services. Cook will transition to a new role as executive chairman of Apple’s Board of Directors.
Ternus joined Apple in 2001 and became VP of hardware engineering in 2013, later transitioning to a senior executive role in 2021. You might have spotted Ternus being prominently featured at the MacBook Neo launch a few months ago. Expect to see a lot more of him.
We’ve seen a few beautiful moments from the Artemis II crew’s history-making trip around the Moon. Now, Reid Wiseman, the mission’s commander, has something to share. While mission specialist Christina Koch was using a Nikon camera to snap stunning still images of the Earthset, Wiseman used an iPhone 17 Pro Max to film the moment. “I could barely see the Moon through the docking hatch window, but the iPhone was the perfect size to catch the view.”
This was the first time that human eyes had witnessed an Earthset in 54 years, since the Apollo 17 mission.
This year's edition of the robot half-marathon hosted more than 100 competitors, with first place going to Honor and its red-clad robot named Lightning. Last year's event featured many bipedal robots receiving assistance from human operators who ran alongside them, along with some comical mishaps. According to the BBC, around 40 percent of the robots competed autonomously this year, while the rest were remote-controlled.
The PencilVac is light, mobile and easy to use, making it great for smaller living spaces and quick clean-ups. However, it struggles with thicker carpet and rugs. It could be perfect for a future-forward witch costume next Halloween, though.
Apple’s current SVP of hardware engineering John Ternus will take over as the new CEO when Tim Cook steps down this September. Cook said in a statement: “It has been the greatest privilege of my life to be the CEO of Apple and to have been trusted to lead such an extraordinary company.”
Following the death of co-founder Steve Jobs, Cook led the charge for Apple’s post-iPhone and iPad era, launching the AirPods, Apple Watch and Vision Pro. He also turned the company into a service provider with the launch of Apple TV, Apple Music and several other subscription services. Cook will transition to a new role as executive chairman of Apple’s Board of Directors.
Ternus joined Apple in 2001 and became VP of hardware engineering in 2013, later transitioning to a senior executive role in 2021. You might have spotted Ternus being prominently featured at the MacBook Neo launch a few months ago. Expect to see a lot more of him.
We’ve seen a few beautiful moments from the Artemis II crew’s history-making trip around the Moon. Now, Reid Wiseman, the mission’s commander, has something to share. While mission specialist Christina Koch was using a Nikon camera to snap stunning still images of the Earthset, Wiseman used an iPhone 17 Pro Max to film the moment. “I could barely see the Moon through the docking hatch window, but the iPhone was the perfect size to catch the view.”
This was the first time that human eyes had witnessed an Earthset in 54 years, since the Apollo 17 mission.
This year's edition of the robot half-marathon hosted more than 100 competitors, with first place going to Honor and its red-clad robot named Lightning. Last year's event featured many bipedal robots receiving assistance from human operators who ran alongside them, along with some comical mishaps. According to the BBC, around 40 percent of the robots competed autonomously this year, while the rest were remote-controlled.
The PencilVac is light, mobile and easy to use, making it great for smaller living spaces and quick clean-ups. However, it struggles with thicker carpet and rugs. It could be perfect for a future-forward witch costume next Halloween, though.
Claude Design, developed by Anthropic, is a platform that connects design and implementation in a practical way. Matt Maher highlights its ability to generate cohesive design systems, such as buttons, fonts and color palettes, directly from uploaded files or repositories. This feature helps maintain consistency across projects while simplifying the process of creating professional outputs. […]