How Claude Code & Firecrawl Let AI Agents Browse the Web Exactly Like Humans

How Claude Code & Firecrawl Let AI Agents Browse the Web Exactly Like Humans A Claude Code agent runs inside Firecrawl, browsing websites with a dedicated session and visible page rendering.

The integration of Claude Code and Firecrawl Browser introduces new possibilities for AI-driven interactions on the web. Jay E explains how Firecrawl’s dedicated browser sessions and persistent profiles enable AI agents to navigate websites without API support, simulating human browsing behavior. For instance, an AI agent can use Firecrawl to analyze e-commerce trends, monitor social […]

The post How Claude Code & Firecrawl Let AI Agents Browse the Web Exactly Like Humans appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

McDonald’s Just Built a Gadget That Every Gamer Has Needed Forever

Every gamer knows the panic. You’re mid-session, your team is deep into a raid, and your stomach is absolutely staging a coup. You ordered food 20 minutes ago, and now it’s sitting on the counter getting cold. The second you put down the controller to eat, you risk going AFK long enough to get kicked from the game, lose progress, or let down your whole squad. It’s one of those universal gaming frustrations that nobody has really addressed in a meaningful way. Until now, at least in Türkiye.

McDonald’s Türkiye just introduced “Archie,” a small controller peripheral that solves this exact problem. The device clips onto your gamepad and brings the analog sticks together, keeping your character in motion even when your hands are occupied with a burger instead of the buttons. The result? Your character keeps walking, you keep your spot in the session, and your food doesn’t go cold. It’s a stupidly simple fix to something that has plagued gamers for years.

Designer: McDonald’s Turkiye

The name “Archie” is a nod to the brand’s iconic Golden Arches, and the device’s shape reflects that. It’s a small arch-shaped piece that essentially bridges the two sticks on your controller. It’s not a Bluetooth gadget loaded with firmware updates or a subscription service. It’s just a clever piece of physical design that does exactly what it needs to do and nothing more. I genuinely appreciate that. Not every solution needs to be a tech startup. Sometimes the answer is a well-placed piece of plastic.

Archie comes bundled with what McDonald’s Türkiye is calling the “Pro Gamer Menu,” which includes a Big Mac, medium fries, a medium Coke, and 8-piece onion rings, available for a limited time through delivery orders. The branding is playful, the packaging presumably leans into the gamer aesthetic, and the whole campaign was developed by TBWA\Istanbul. It’s a smart marketing move, but calling it only marketing feels like underselling it. The gadget is actually useful, which is what separates this from your typical branded promotional gimmick.

Fast food and gaming have always had an unofficial relationship. Late nights, delivery orders, gaming fuel, you know the drill. Brands have tried to tap into that culture with discounts, streaming sponsorships, and limited-edition packaging, but most of it feels performative. This is the first time I’ve seen a fast food brand actually design something that speaks directly to the gameplay experience rather than just putting a controller graphic on a cup. That distinction matters.

The AFK problem is particularly brutal in competitive or online multiplayer games. Most games have inactivity timers that will boot a player for not doing anything for a certain period. Some games penalize you for leaving mid-match. Your teammates suffer. Your stats take a hit. Your character might just stand there in the open, practically begging to get eliminated. Gamers have been taping rubber bands around their controllers and propping up joysticks with coins for years. The fact that it took a fast food chain to come up with a legitimate, branded fix is equal parts amusing and oddly satisfying.

Does Archie work for every game? Probably not. Games that require active combat input, precise aiming, or frequent menu navigation will still need two hands. But for open-world games, exploration-heavy titles, or any session where moving in a general direction is enough to stay active, this is genuinely clever. It threads a needle that a lot of gaming accessories miss, which is solving a real problem without overcomplicating the solution.

I hope this doesn’t stay exclusive to Türkiye. The problem Archie addresses isn’t regional. Every gamer, everywhere, has eaten at their desk or on their couch while trying to keep an eye on the screen. McDonald’s stumbled onto something that is simple, charming, and genuinely useful, and that combination is rarer than it looks. Give us the Archie globally, please.

Image courtesy of: @technology

The post McDonald’s Just Built a Gadget That Every Gamer Has Needed Forever first appeared on Yanko Design.

AirPods Max 2: The Upgrade We Wanted, or Just a Refresh?

AirPods Max 2: The Upgrade We Wanted, or Just a Refresh? AirPods Max 2 pictured in multiple new colors, including Midnight and Orange, with the same overall shape.

The AirPods Max 2, priced at $549, builds upon the foundation of its predecessor with a series of refined updates. These include the integration of the H2 chipset, USB-C connectivity, and enhanced audio features. While the overall design remains largely unchanged, new color options and improved sound quality aim to elevate the user experience. However, […]

The post AirPods Max 2: The Upgrade We Wanted, or Just a Refresh? appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

Why the Intel Arc Pro B70 Might Be the Ultimate Budget GPU for Local AI

Why the Intel Arc Pro B70 Might Be the Ultimate Budget GPU for Local AI Software stack graphic naming SYCL and Intel tools that affect Arc Pro B70 AI performance and compatibility.

The Intel Arc Pro B70 is a professional-grade GPU designed to meet the needs of AI professionals and computational workloads, offering a balance between affordability and performance. With 32 GB of VRAM and a price under $1,000, it provides a cost-effective alternative to higher-priced competitors like Nvidia’s RTX Pro 4000. However, as Alex Ziskind highlights, […]

The post Why the Intel Arc Pro B70 Might Be the Ultimate Budget GPU for Local AI appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

Artemis II astronaut puts all of our iPhone moon photos to shame

When NASA allowed Artemis II astronauts to take their smartphones with them, we already knew it could lead to some epic phone shots of the moon. NASA astronaut Reid Wiseman took one such photo on his iPhone, just as the Orion spacecraft his crew was on approached the moon for a lunar flyby. The astronauts turned off all the lights inside the cabin to be able to take better pictures. In the livestream, Wiseman showed the camera a photo he took on his iPhone 17 Pro.

As 9to5Mac notes, he said on the livestream that he took the picture on his iPhone camera with an 8x zoom. NASA reportedly said that the image showed the Chebyshev crater, a lunar impact sight located on the far side of the moon, or the side we don’t see from our planet. Artemis II launched on April 1 for a 10-day journey, with four astronauts onboard the mission’s Orion spacecraft. On April 6, it flew farther away from Earth than any mission before it after it arrived in lunar space, reaching a distance of 252,756 miles from our planet and breaking the record set by Apollo 13. The crew finished the lunar flyby at around 9:35PM on April 6 and is now making its way back to Earth.

We’ll likely see more images of the far side of the moon over the next few days as NASA releases them. The Artemis II crew is expected to splash down in the Pacific Ocean near San Diego on April 10.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/science/space/artemis-ii-astronaut-puts-all-of-our-iphone-moon-photos-to-shame-093740553.html?src=rss

Apple TV 4K (2026) Leak: The First Home Hub with Apple Intelligence Built-In

Apple TV 4K (2026) Leak: The First Home Hub with Apple Intelligence Built-In Apple TV 4K

Apple is preparing to unveil its most significant update to the Apple TV 4K in over three years, signaling a bold step forward in the streaming device market. This release is expected to blend affordability, high performance, and seamless smart home integration, making it a compelling choice for a wide range of users. With both […]

The post Apple TV 4K (2026) Leak: The First Home Hub with Apple Intelligence Built-In appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

How to Turn Your Smartphone Into a Local AI Powerhouse

How to Turn Your Smartphone Into a Local AI Powerhouse Settings screen in Google AI Edge Gallery showing temperature, top P, and a GPU option for faster responses.

Running large language models (LLMs) locally on your phone is no longer just a concept, it’s a practical reality with the Google AI Edge Gallery. This application allows users to execute advanced AI models directly on their devices, bypassing the need for cloud servers. AI Grid’s walkthrough demonstrates how to set up and optimize the […]

The post How to Turn Your Smartphone Into a Local AI Powerhouse appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

iOS 26.5 Beta 1: Every Secret Feature Discovered So Far

iOS 26.5 Beta 1: Every Secret Feature Discovered So Far Menu for transferring message attachments to Android with choices like 30 days, 1 year, or all.

Apple has released two notable updates: the iOS 26.5 developer beta 1 and the iOS 18.7 emergency security patch. These updates cater to different user needs, offering both new features and critical security enhancements. Whether you’re exploring the latest beta or securing an older device, these updates are essential for maintaining optimal performance and protection. […]

The post iOS 26.5 Beta 1: Every Secret Feature Discovered So Far appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized

Pixel 10a Just Proved a Smartphone Color Can Actually Mean Something

Smartphone colors have become one of the more formulaic aspects of mobile design. Most brands cycle through the same soft pastels and stone-inspired neutrals, year after year, with names like Moonstone, Fog, and Porcelain doing most of the heavy lifting. It’s a safe approach that generally works, but there’s rarely any real meaning behind these choices. A color is just a color, and that’s often where the story ends.

Google seems to have had the same thought, at least for Japan. The Pixel 10a Isai Blue is a Japan-exclusive model developed in collaboration with Heralbony, a creative company that works with artists with disabilities to produce new forms of cultural expression. It celebrates a decade of Pixel phones, and rather than simply marking the occasion with a new shade, Google made the color itself worth talking about.

Designer: Google x Heralbony

Japan didn’t get the Pixel 10a when it first launched globally in February, which was a bit of an odd omission given how well the A-series has performed there. The country has quietly grown into one of Google’s stronger Pixel markets, so the wait wasn’t really a sign of indifference. Returning to Japanese fans with something made specifically for them says a lot more than a straight regional rollout would.

The name alone sets this apart from anything Google has done before. “Isai” translates to unique and unparalleled individuality, and this is actually the first time a Pixel color has been given a Japanese name. Most Pixel colors borrow from the natural world, but Isai Blue is built around something more conceptual: a deep navy shade tied to Heralbony’s own brand identity and its mission to celebrate human difference.

That philosophy runs all the way through to the software, too. Three Heralbony-contracted artists, Shigaku Mizukami, Midori Kudo, and Kaoru Iga, each contributed original designs that became exclusive wallpapers on the device. Pick one of the nine available artworks, and Material You automatically reshapes the phone’s icon colors and styling to match. It’s the kind of visual cohesion you don’t usually get with a phone at this price.

Of course, the collaboration doesn’t stop at the screen. Every unit comes bundled with an exclusive bumper case designed around the Pixel 10a’s completely flat back, which does away with any camera protrusion and makes the phone far easier to set down. Original stickers are also included, and the box sleeve carries artwork by Midori Kudo, so the whole unboxing feels deliberately curated.

The Isai Blue comes in a single 256GB configuration, priced at ¥94,900 (roughly $594) and available for pre-order in Japan ahead of its May 20 sale date. It’s only available while supplies last, which fits for something that was never really meant to be a mass-market offering. Google took the time to make this feel like a genuine gesture rather than a routine launch, and Japan has every reason to feel appreciated.

The post Pixel 10a Just Proved a Smartphone Color Can Actually Mean Something first appeared on Yanko Design.

The Hidden Google Workspace Tool That Turns Your Slides Into AI Videos

The Hidden Google Workspace Tool That Turns Your Slides Into AI Videos Google Vids editor view showing timeline, scenes, and template choices inside Google Workspace for quick video building.

Google Vids is an AI-powered platform integrated into Google Workspace, designed to assist with video creation for users of varying experience levels. According to Paul Lipsky, one notable feature is its text-to-video generation, which uses VO3.1 technology to convert written scripts into video content. The free version allows up to 10 video creations per month, […]

The post The Hidden Google Workspace Tool That Turns Your Slides Into AI Videos appeared first on Geeky Gadgets.

Posted in Uncategorized