The Morning After: The Galaxy S26 Ultra’s Privacy Display is pretty cool

Samsung’s Unpacked event midweek revealed three new phones and two sets of earbuds, but the real standout, as usual, is the Galaxy S26 Ultra. This year, the Ultra actually features a bit of genuine tech innovation — and no, we don’t mean it folds.

Let’s talk about its new Privacy Display. This isn't a shimmery, holographic screen protector that’s hard to read and constantly peels off at the corners; this tech is engineered directly into the S26 Ultra’s OLED display.

Samsung Display revealed its Flex Magic Pixel technology back in 2024. The S26 Ultra’s Privacy Display is built off the back of this. It controls the direction of light emitted from the AMOLED at the pixel level, integrating wide-angle and narrow-angle pixel arrays so the display can switch between a wide-angle viewing experience and more private, straight-on views.

While HP’s SureView tech is similar, the amount of customization possible is incredible — and we all have our phones out in public much more than our… HP laptops. It could be perfect for keeping prying eyes off your banking apps, messaging apps and even dating apps.

Otherwise, the rest of the S26 series offers incremental updates with better cameras and newer processors. This makes the base S26 and S26+ a harder sell unless your current Galaxy phone is several years old. Also, following the 2026 trend, they are all pricier this year.

Make sure you check out our early impressions (S26 Ultra, S26, Galaxy Buds 4); reviews are coming soon.

— Mat Smith

Dreamie alarm clock with its light ring on, and the screen displaying a sleep routine: Bedtime Cue, Wind Down, and Noise Mask
Cheyenne MacDonald for Engadget

Ambient’s dedicated alarm clock offers many of the conveniences of your smartphone alarms — highly customizable alarm schedules, a library of soundscapes and noise masks and even Bluetooth so you can connect earbuds. There’s no subscription, it sounds great and sleep insights are supposedly incoming. However, $250 is a lot. Check out our full review.

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Review aggregator Metacritic has removed a review of Resident Evil Requiem because it was AI generated. Kotaku explained the review was published by UK gaming site VideoGamer, but appears to be “written” by a fake AI journalist rather than a real person. “Brian Merrygold” doesn’t seem to exist.

The author’s profile on VideoGamer is just as awkwardly written as the review, and the profile picture of the account also appears to be AI-generated. Literally, the file name includes “ChatGPT-Image.”

ClickOut Media, the company that owns VideoGamer and a collection of other publications, reportedly laid off the staff of its gaming sites earlier this month to pivot to AI-generated content. Here it is.

Continue reading.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-engadget-newsletter-144951777.html?src=rss

8 Incredibly Useful iPhone Apps That Are Actually Worth Downloading

8 Incredibly Useful iPhone Apps That Are Actually Worth Downloading Best iPhone apps for productivity and personalization in 2026

In 2026, the iPhone continues to evolve as a powerful tool for productivity, creativity, and personalization. With the right apps, you can unlock its full potential, tailoring your device to meet your unique needs. Whether you’re aiming to streamline your workflow, stay organized, or add a personal touch to your device, these eight apps stand […]

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Engadget Podcast: Xbox’s leadership shakeup and Samsung’s Galaxy S26

This week, we're diving into the big changes at Xbox and what it all means for Microsoft's gaming future. Phil Spencer, the longtime face of Xbox, announced he's retiring last week. He'll be replaced by Microsoft's former CoreAI CEO Asha Sharma, instead of his longtime deputy Sarah Bond, who plans to leave the company. Will this change actually help the beleaguered Xbox division, or is it another example of Microsoft shoving AI into everything? 

Also, Samsung held its latest Unpacked event this week to announce its new Galaxy S26 family. They look pretty much the same as last year, but the Ultra model includes a unique privacy feature that can instantly make the screen unreadable to bystanders. It's one of those features we expect to see in every phone eventually.

  • Xbox leadership falls apart. what happens next with Phil Spencer and Sarah Bond out? – 1:53

  • Samsung Unpacked: Privacy display on the S26 Ultra looks amazing – 27:27

  • U.S. Defense leadership gives Anthropic a Friday deadline to let it use Claude as it sees fit – 42:38

  • MrBeast editor accused of insider trading on Kalshi – 50:40

  • Discord delays age verification program after user revolt – 54:09

  • Around Engadget – 1:04:04

  • Working on – 1:05:16

  • Pop culture picks – 1:08:21

Hosts: Devindra Hardawar and Igor Bonifacic
Producer: Ben Ellman
Music: Dale North and Terrence O’Brien

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/xbox/engadget-podcast-xboxs-leadership-shakeup-and-samsungs-galaxy-s26-150000180.html?src=rss

This $219 Screen Runs 6 Months Per Charge and Wants Nothing From You

Most of the screens that you encounter everyday is always fighting for your attention, always buzzing, glowing, pulsing with red notification badges designed to hijack your focus. The TRMNL X, a 10.3-inch e-ink smart display priced at $219, takes the opposite approach entirely. It just sits there, calm and papery, waiting for you to glance over when you’re ready. And that restraint might be the most radical design choice in consumer tech right now.

TRMNL’s original model was deliberately lo-fi, a smaller 7.5-inch 1-bit screen with no touchscreen and no backlight. It was almost stubbornly analog in spirit. It appealed to developers, minimalists, and those of us tired of all the bright screens. The TRMNL X is the company’s answer to users who loved the philosophy but wanted more screen real estate and polish. And it delivers on both counts without losing what made the original special.

Designer: TRMNL

The display itself is gorgeous in the understated way that only e-ink can be. At 1872 x 1404 resolution with 16 shades of gray, it renders calendars, weather dashboards, news headlines, and artwork with a crispness that feels more like a printed page than a screen. Partial refreshes happen in under 200 milliseconds, which is fast enough that the display doesn’t feel sluggish when cycling through your content. It’s the kind of screen you can stare at for hours without your eyes complaining, which is something no LCD or OLED can honestly claim.

What I find most compelling about the TRMNL X is how much it trusts you. There’s no algorithm deciding what you should see. You configure your own dashboard with plugins pulled from a library of over 850 options, everything from Google Calendar and Reddit feeds to ChatGPT summaries and YouTube subscriber counts. You arrange them in one of eight layout templates, set your refresh interval, and walk away. The device wakes up periodically, pulls a new image from the server, displays it, and goes back to sleep. That’s it. No infinite scroll. No dopamine trap. No dark patterns. Just information you asked for, presented when you want it.

The hardware reflects this same philosophy of quiet confidence. The frame comes in six finishes, from black and white to sage and faux wood, and the front is completely clean with no visible branding. There’s a magnetic USB-C charging connector, a built-in accelerometer for auto-rotation, and a touch gesture bar for quick navigation. Battery life stretches anywhere from two to six months depending on your refresh rate, which means you can genuinely forget it needs power at all. The enclosure is also waterproof and dust-proof, so it can live in a bathroom or a workshop without issue.

But the real personality of the TRMNL X shows in its hacker-friendly DNA. The firmware is fully open source. The case has actual screws, not glue, so you can open it up, swap components, and tinker to your heart’s content. There’s a Qwiic connector for attaching external sensors, and the community on Discord has already built custom integrations for Home Assistant and all sorts of niche projects. In an era when most gadgets are sealed shut and locked down, this level of openness feels almost rebellious.

At $219, the TRMNL X isn’t an impulse buy. But it’s also not competing with tablets or smart home hubs. It occupies a category that barely existed a few years ago: the passive information display. Something you put on your desk or mount on a wall that keeps you informed without pulling you into a screen-time spiral. The fact that it runs for months on a charge and requires almost zero maintenance makes it feel less like a gadget and more like a piece of furniture.

There’s a growing appetite for technology that respects boundaries, that does its job and then gets out of the way. The TRMNL X is a beautifully considered expression of that idea, a screen that proves sometimes the most powerful design choice is simply knowing when to stay quiet.

The post This $219 Screen Runs 6 Months Per Charge and Wants Nothing From You first appeared on Yanko Design.

Anthropic Launches New Claude Code Remote Control Feature & More AI News

Anthropic Launches New Claude Code Remote Control Feature & More AI News Timeline graphic summarizing Anthropic’s claim about DeepSeek training on Claude outputs and the public reaction.

The latest feature from Universe of AI provide more insights into the evolving landscape of AI-driven productivity, focusing on Anthropic’s Claude Code Remote Control and Cowork platform. These updates highlight the growing emphasis on flexibility and collaboration in professional workflows. For instance, the Claude Code Remote Control introduces a session URL system that allows users […]

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Samsung S26 Ultra vs iPhone 17 Pro Max: Apple is in Trouble!

Samsung S26 Ultra vs iPhone 17 Pro Max: Apple is in Trouble! Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra compared to iPhone 17 Pro Max in design and features

The Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra and iPhone 17 Pro Max represent the pinnacle of modern smartphone technology, each offering a suite of features designed to enhance user experience. However, the Galaxy S26 Ultra introduces a series of advancements that push the boundaries of what a smartphone can achieve. From privacy-focused displays to AI-powered tools, Samsung’s […]

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Elite Dangerous Changes Direction with Player-Built Colonization & Economy Building

Elite Dangerous Changes Direction with Player-Built Colonization & Economy Building Galaxy map shows conflict zones from the Second Thargoid War, with community efforts pushing back alien forces.

Elite Dangerous has undergone a significant evolution since its original launch, shifting from a solitary spaceflight simulator to a dynamic, player-driven galaxy. As Nyxson highlights in the video below, this transformation is exemplified by updates like the Trailblazers Update (2025), which introduced system colonization and the Operations Update (2026), which added zero-gravity combat and mega-ship […]

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Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 Pro: The New ANC King or Just a Reskin?

Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 Pro: The New ANC King or Just a Reskin? Close-up of Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 Pro showcasing sleek design and metallic accents

The Samsung Galaxy Buds 4 Pro represent a significant step forward in the world of premium wireless earbuds. With features such as adaptive noise cancellation, high-resolution audio support, and intuitive controls, they cater to a wide range of users, from audiophiles to casual listeners. However, their full potential is most evident when used within the […]

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Nano Banana 2 Hacks & 4K Image Output Controls Guide 2026

Nano Banana 2 Hacks & 4K Image Output Controls Guide 2026 Settings view showing Nano Banana 2 resolution up to 4K with aspect ratio and temperature controls in a prompt panel.

Google’s new Nano Banana 2 is a platform designed for creative professionals and hobbyists, offering advanced AI features alongside customizable settings. According to Olivio Sarikas, one notable capability is its ability to generate high-resolution visuals tailored to specific requirements by adjusting parameters such as temperature, aspect ratio and resolution. For instance, users can produce 4K-quality […]

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iOS 26’s Ultra Voice Commands Will Change How You Use Your iPhone Forever

iOS 26’s Ultra Voice Commands Will Change How You Use Your iPhone Forever Step-by-step guide to setting up Vocal Shortcuts in iOS 26 for personalized voice control

Apple’s iOS 26 introduces a new feature called “Vocal Shortcuts,” designed to transform how you interact with your iPhone. This innovative tool allows you to create custom voice commands that bypass Siri, making sure your commands are directed solely to your iPhone without inadvertently activating other Apple devices. With Vocal Shortcuts, you gain a new […]

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