How to Watch the 2026 World Cup
The games start June 11 and end with a grand finale in New Jersey on July 19. There are 104 of them. Here’s how to watch ’em all.
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The games start June 11 and end with a grand finale in New Jersey on July 19. There are 104 of them. Here’s how to watch ’em all.
Referees for the 2026 World Cup will be wearing cameras positioned at their temples, allowing TV audiences to see a live view of the pitch from a vantage point they never have before.
The automaker today is turning on vehicle-to-grid charging for its GM Energy customers. Will people actually use it?
Apple has announced the latest version of macOS. It’s all about the reintroduction of Siri, which is now accessible from anywhere on the Mac desktop.
Apple took the wraps off iOS 27 at its WWDC event, and the iPhone update is chock-full of smart upgrades, with a big focus on improvements to Siri.
With a competitive price, winning design, and better performance than the R1, Rivian could be set to break into the big leagues. Just make sure you get the right model with the right tech.
Updates include a new souped-up Siri, lots of iOS enhancements, and some inkling on how an AI partnership with Google has come to power Apple’s products.
Siri is now directly embedded into the camera app, and there are more artificial intelligence tools in the Photos app to alter your images.
From a stand-alone app to a Google Gemini partnership, here’s everything you need to know from WWDC 2026 about Apple’s upcoming overhaul of Siri.
The popular wildfire tracking app is adding flood monitoring to its platform. It’s the first new disaster alert on the service, with many more to come.
Follow our WWDC 2026 live blog for all of the updates coming to iOS, macOS, watchOS, and more.
The annual developer event is where Apple announces operating system updates—like iOS 27—and maybe even teases future hardware. Here’s how to see it all.
From battery life to privacy, there are many hurdles to the idea taking off.
You can tap the star-shaped, NFC-enabled wand at terminals to make contactless payments. It's the first of several tap-to-pay hardware doodads coming from Cash App.
Two rules that can't both be true Event sourcing has one rule: you never delete. You append. The log is the source of truth, and rewriting history is the cardinal sin. GDPR Article 17 has one rule too: when a user asks, you erase their personal data. Not "hide it," not "flag it deleted" — erase it, everywhere, including backups. Put an event-sourced system in front of a privacy regulator and those two rules collide head-on. The user's name, email, and address are baked into CustomerRegistered , AddressChanged , OrderPlaced — dozens of immutable events, replicated to read models, snapshotted, and sitting in every nightly backup you've ever taken. "Just delete the events" breaks event sourcing. "Never delete" breaks the law. Most teams discover this tension after they've committed to append-only. A word on why this isn't academic for me. I build from Germany. Article 17 is EU law — the GDPR, or DSGVO as we call it here — not a German invention, but Germany enforces it about as hard as anywhere in Europe: regional data-protection authorities that issue real fines, and "we were careful" has never been a defense that held up. That pressure is exactly why I wanted erasure to fall out of the architecture instead of being a promise I make to an auditor and then pray I can keep. Why "delete the row" doesn't actually erase anything Say you give in and hard-delete the events for one user. You've still got their data in: every read-model projection rebuilt from those events, every snapshot that rolled them up, every backup taken before the deletion, every replica and every export that already left the building. Chasing personal data across all of those, provably, on a 30-day regulatory clock, is a nightmare — and a single missed backup tape means you didn't comply. Physical deletion doesn't scale to a system designed to keep everything forever. Crypto-shredding: delete the key, not the data The trick is to stop trying to delete the data and instead delete the ability to read it
The company’s RTX Spark chips might finally turn the “AI PC” into reality.
I put my family on a private social network, and all I got was this lousy group chat. At least it’s secure.
Microsoft’s OpenClaw-style agent appears in Teams, just like a human colleague, and automates your dull office tasks.
In the social event planner’s first major move toward monetization, Partiful is getting ticketing directly in the app.
Opal, the company famous for making a fancy webcam, has pivoted to making other consumer electronics. Fueled by big investments from OpenAI and Samsung, it’s working on an audio gadget first.