Best Sports Streaming Service for 2025




Amazon is experimenting again. This week on the GeekWire Podcast, we dig into our scoop on Amazon Now, the companyβs new ultrafast delivery service. Plus, we recap the GeekWire teamβs ride in a Zoox robotaxi on the Las Vegas Strip during Amazon Web Services re:Invent.
In our featured interview from the expo hall, AWS Senior Vice President Colleen Aubrey discusses Amazonβs push into applied AI, why the company sees AI agents as βteammates,β and how her team is rethinking product development in the age of agentic coding.
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With GeekWire co-founders Todd Bishop and John Cook. Edited by Curt Milton.
Subscribe to GeekWire in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen.
When you secure excellent components for your PC, you expect things to run smoothly. Smooth frames, fast loading times, the works. So when you've shelled out for an awesome GPU and still have game stuttering, it can be immensely frustrating, but the problem might be something less obvious.

If you buy something, you should own it. Amazon is, by far, the biggest name in the eBook market, but the company puts tight DRM restrictions on these eBooks so you can't take them outside the Kindle ecosystem.

NotebookLM may just be an assistant to many people, but this is just the most basic functionality. You can take advantage of its system to do whatever you want, and that means it can be a way to have fun.

If you're like me, you use Discord for communication all day long. Those hours of use mean Discord has the opportunity to soak up lots of data about you and your use of the app. A few settings keep the collection at bay.



Google's Pixel watches are rolling out an improved always-on display.
Tech site 9to5Google spottedΒ that with Wear OS 6, theΒ Pixel WatchΒ has added always-on capabilities for media controls (such as controlling your music) as well as the timer app. Previously, these sorts of tools would blur after a certain amount of time. Now, they remain on the screen, with the display having been slightly changed from its previous iteration.
That could mark a major improvement for people who use their watch to, say, time a workout or track what they're cooking. Mashable named the Google Pixel Watch 4 the best Android smartwatch of 2025 β so it's an improvement on an already good product. Tech Editor Timothy Beck Werth wrote it was "elegant enough to wear to the office, but comfortable and smart enough to monitor workouts." Senior reporter Christianna Silva, meanwhile, wrote in their review that the "Pixel Watch 4 is a true runners' watch, and it's gorgeous too."
So now, if you're a serious runner doing sprints on a track, you won't need to fiddle with the display to check your times. That's a small change that could have a big impact.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Kat Tenbarge / Wired:
Some Reddit moderators say a surge of AI slop on the site is eroding its authenticity and could lead to a feedback loop of AI models training on AI contentΒ βΒ Reddit is considered one of the most human spaces left on the internet, but mods and users are overwhelmed with slop posts in the most popular subreddits.
The site is called Hackaday, and has been for 21 years. But it was only for maybe the first half-year that it was literally a hack a day. By the 2010s, we were putting out four or more per day, and in the later 20-teens, we settled into our current cadence of eight hacks per day, plus some original pieces over the top. Thatβs a lot of hacks per day! (But βEight-to-Ten-Hacks-a-Dayβ just isnβt as catchy.)
With that many posts daily, we also tend to reach out to a broader array of interests. Quite simply, not every hack is necessarily going to be just exactly what you are looking for, but we wouldnβt be writing it up if we didnβt think that someone was looking for it. Maybe you donβt like CAN bus hacks, but youβre into biohacking, or retrocomputing. Our broad group of writers helps to make sure that weβll get you covered sooner or later.
Whatβs still surprising to me, though, is that a couple of times per week, there is a hack that is actually relevant to a particular project that Iβm currently working on. Itβs one thing to learn something new every day, and Iβd bet that I do, but itβs entirely another to learn something new and relevant.
So I shouldnβt have been shocked when Tom and I were going over the weekβs hacks on the podcast, and he picked an investigation of injecting spray foam into 3D prints. I liked that one too, but for me it was just βlearn something newβ. Tom has been working on an underwater ROV, and it perfectly scratched an itch that he has β how to keep the top of the vehicle more buoyant, while keeping the whole thing waterproof.
That kind of experience is why Iβve been reading Hackaday for 21 years now, and itβs all of our hope that you get some of that too from time to time. There is a lot of βnewβ on the Internet, and thatβs a wonderful thing. But the combination of new and relevant just canβt be beat! So if youβve got anything you want to hear more about, let us know.
A truly smart home isnβt one that you control with your voice or phone, but one that is fully automated. Presence detection is key to creating an environment that anticipates your next move, whether thatβs turning on a light in a cupboard or understanding exactly who is in which room.

I've always had a soft spot for Bentley. Thereβs something about the leather, the wood, the deep carpets, and that quiet swagger the brand carries that just gets me. It turns even a quick grocery run into something that feels a notch above normal life.
