9.2 C
Bucharest
Thursday, April 16, 2026
Home Blog

REVIEW HONOR MagicPad4 – cea mai subțire tabletă din lume ar putea fi și cea mai rapidă. Magia din spatele a 4,8 milimetri, 450 de grame și Snapdragon 8 Gen 5


REVIEW HONOR MagicPad4 – cea mai subțire tabletă din lume ar putea fi și cea mai rapidă. Magia din spatele a 4,8 milimetri, 450 de grame și Snapdragon 8 Gen 5

Link

Bigger checks, fewer bets: Seattle startup deal count drops to lowest level since 2020

Seattle-area startups attracted about $1.5 billion in venture funding across 69 deals in the first quarter of 2026, according to the Q1 2026 PitchBook-NVCA Venture Monitor.

The deal count was the lowest since mid-2020, continuing a trend of venture capital concentrating into fewer, larger rounds, with a disproportionate share of the funding going into a smaller handful of promising startups, many of them in artificial intelligence.

By comparison, the Seattle region’s deal value was $2.2 billion across more than 100 deals in the first quarter of 2025, a year ago. At its peak in early 2022, the region logged 152 deals in a single quarter — more than double the latest figure.

It’s a pattern that is also playing out nationally. U.S. startups raised $267 billion in Q1, more than double the prior record, but five deals — including rounds by OpenAI, Anthropic, and xAI — accounted for nearly three-quarters of that total.

“VC has entered the era of consensus deals, and that dynamic will likely persist,” observed the authors of the PitchBook-NVCA report, released Wednesday morning. “Across all stages and series, a small portion of companies is vastly outraising the rest.”

The risk is that the concentration of capital in a shrinking pool of companies could leave much of the startup ecosystem starved for funding even as headline numbers look relatively healthy.

Rankings: According to the report, the Seattle area ranked seventh in the country in the quarter by total capital raised, and 10th overall by deal count.

The region typically ranked No. 6 to 8 on both measures from 2017 to 2020, but has slipped in various quarters by different metrics in recent years. Austin, for example, has surpassed Seattle in deal value and Miami has overtaken it in deal count.

Space standouts: One bright spot is space startups. Stoke Space in Kent raised $350 million, Starcloud in Redmond landed $170 million, and Portal Space Systems in Bothell closed on more than $61 million, according to PitchBook, including a recently reported $50 million round

That’s a combined $580 million from a cluster of companies building rockets, orbital data centers, and spacecraft propulsion systems in the suburbs south and east of Seattle.

AI and infrastructure: Other big deals in the first quarter included a $300 million Series D for Temporal, the Bellevue-based developer infrastructure startup, and $100 million for Seattle-based Overland AI to scale its autonomous military ground vehicles.

Seven of the 10 largest Seattle-area deals in Q1 carried AI tags, mirroring a national trend in which 88.8% of all U.S. venture deal value went to AI companies, according to PitchBook. 

Other notable rounds included a $60 million seed funding for Entire, the developer platform launched by former GitHub CEO Thomas Dohmke, who is based in the Seattle area.

What is Seattle, anyway? Xbow, an autonomous cybersecurity company founded by GitHub Copilot creator Oege de Moor, raised $120 million in a Series C round that valued it at more than $1 billion.

Xbow lists Seattle as its headquarters, but its address is a mailbox at a Pioneer Square co-working space, and its roughly 200 employees are distributed globally — one of the realities of the remote-first era, and a reminder that HQ designations don’t always reflect a meaningful local presence.

See GeekWire’s funding tracker for more recent Pacific Northwest deals.

Link

Deadspin | Iowa’s Tavion Banks declares for NBA draft, hopeful of return to Hawkeyes

NCAA Basketball: NCAA Tournament Elite Eight-South Regional-Iowa at IllinoisMar 28, 2026; Houston, TX, USA; Iowa Hawkeyes guard Tavion Banks (6) shoots against the Illinois Fighting Illini in the second half during an Elite Eight game of the South Regional of the men’s 2026 NCAA Tournament at Toyota Center. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

Iowa guard/forward Tavion Banks declared for the NBA draft on Wednesday and also said he is entering the transfer portal.

Banks indicated that if he is granted a fifth season of eligibility, he would like to return to the Hawkeyes.

“As I explore all options in continuing my basketball career, I am declaring for the NBA Draft, while also entering my name into the transfer portal in the event that a fifth year is granted,” Banks announced on social media. “If a fifth year becomes an option, I want to be a Hawkeye!”

The 6-foot-7 Banks averaged 10.2 points and tied for the team lead of 4.6 rebounds per game for an Iowa squad that advanced to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament before falling to Illinois. In the second round, Banks scored a team-best 20 points to help the Hawkeyes post one of the more stunning wins of the tournament with a 73-72 victory over 2025 national champion Florida.

Last season was Banks’ first at Iowa. He followed coach Ben McCollum from Drake. Banks averaged 10.1 points and 5.0 rebounds for the Bulldogs in 2024-25.

Banks, who turned 23 on April 1, also played two seasons at Northwest Florida State, a junior college, before transferring to Drake.

While Banks awaits a decision on whether he will receive another season of college eligibility, he is saluting the season he spent in Iowa City.

“Competing as a Hawkeye this past season and helping lead this team to the Elite Eight was an amazing experience,” Banks said. “This was one of the best years of my life and it was everything I could have imagined. I want to thank my family, coaches, teammates and Hawkeye Nation for making this a memorable year in my basketball journey.”

–Field Level Media

Link

Best drone deal: Take 31% off the DJI Mini 3 Fly More Combo with DJI RC

SAVE $220: The DJI Mini 3 Fly More Combo is on sale at Amazon for $499, down from the standard price of $719. That’s a 31% discount and a record-low price at Amazon.


$499
at Amazon

$719
Save $220

 

Now that the weather has improved, we’re back to outdoor adventures. If you’re looking for a new outdoor hobby, becoming a pro drone pilot could be a great endeavor. It gets you outside, offers incredible vantage points, and you can share your footage with the rest of the world. If you could use a new or upgraded drone, check out this Amazon deal.

As of April 15, the DJI Mini 3 Fly More Combo is on sale at Amazon for $499, down from the standard price of $719. That’s a 31% discount that takes $220 off the price. It’s also a record-low price at Amazon by $100.

While the brand has branched out in offerings over the last decade, DJI drones still remain some of the best on offer. DJI faced an FCC ban last year, but that hasn’t stopped third-party sellers from getting DJI drones out to U.S consumers. Just be a bit cautious about which third-party seller you’re buying from.

Today’s deal on the DJI Mini 3 Fly More Combo with the DJI RC is from Smart Fly Gear which has a 100% positive rating over the last 12 months at Amazon, so this is a good option.

The DJI Mini 3 is a beginner friendly model and comes with plenty of accessories for making learning a breeze. It’s a lightweight model that folds down into a compact size and DJI threw extra batteries into this bundle. The three batteries will spell approximately 114 minutes of flight time. It also has level 5 wind resistance which means it can safely capture stable footage and return home in winds up to about 23 miles per hour.

There’s also one-tap takeoff and landing functions as well as several beginner tutorials available. Video transmission is possible within 32,800 feet and you can record in 4K HDR video.

While it’s at a never-before-seen low price, snatch up the DJI Mini 3 Fly More Combo for under $500. Your spring and summer adventures will get a major level-up with your new hobby.

Link

Livetext Război în Iran, ziua 48. Iranul suspendă exporturile de produse petrochimice

00:00 – Acum 2 ore

16-04-2026

Toți senatorii republicani din SUA, cu excepția unuia, au votat ca războiul împotriva Iranului să continue

După cum am relatat, senatorii americani au votat cu 52 de voturi la 47 împotriva unei rezoluții conduse de democrați care viza oprirea războiului dintre SUA și Israel împotriva Iranului până când ostilitățile vor fi autorizate de Congres.

Senatorul Rand Paul din Kentucky a fost singurul republican care a votat în favoare, subliniind sprijinul continuu al partidului pentru politica de război a lui Trump. Senatorul republican Jim Justice din Virginia de Vest nu a votat.

A fost a patra oară în acest an când democrații au forțat voturile asupra unor măsuri similare, dar toate au eșuat în fața opoziției republicanilor. Singurul „nu” a venit de la senatorul din Pennsylvania, John Fetterman.

Liderii partidului democrat au promis că vor continua să prezinte o rezoluție privind puterile de război până când conflictul se va încheia sau Congresul va autoriza continuarea luptelor.

00:00 – Acum 2 ore

16-04-2026

După întâlnirea cu Pakistanul, cel mai important diplomat iranian promite pace

Ministrul iranian de externe, Abbas Araghchi, a declarat miercuri că Teheranul își menține angajamentul față de promovarea păcii și stabilității în regiune, după ce l-a primit în Iran pe șeful statului major al armatei pakistaneze, mareșalul Asim Munir, și pe delegația care îl însoțește.

Munir, care a devenit un intermediar cheie între Statele Unite și Iran, a sosit la Teheran în fruntea unei delegații de nivel înalt care purta un mesaj de la Washington, potrivit armatei pakistaneze de astăzi.

„Sunt foarte încântat să-l primesc pe mareșalul Munir în Iran”, a declarat Araghchi într-un mesaj publicat după întâlnire.

Araghchi și-a exprimat, de asemenea, aprecierea pentru găzduirea discuțiilor de către Pakistan, numind-o o reflectare a „profunzimii și forței” relațiilor bilaterale dintre cele două țări.

„Angajamentul nostru față de promovarea păcii și stabilității în regiune rămâne ferm, iar acest angajament este împărtășit între noi”, a spus el.

00:00 – Acum 2 ore

16-04-2026

Iranul ordonă suspendarea exporturilor de produse petrochimice

Compania Națională Petrochimică (NPC) din Iran a suspendat exporturile de produse petrochimice „până la o nouă notificare” pentru a acorda prioritate aprovizionării interne perturbate de atacurile americano-israeliene între 28 februarie și 8 aprilie.

„După cum știți, având în vedere condițiile actuale și pagubele rezultate din război și atacurile ostile împotriva țării, sprijinirea industriilor interne și a consumatorilor este de mare importanță și sensibilitate”, a declarat Mohammad Motaghi, directorul pentru dezvoltarea industriilor din aval al NPC, într-o scrisoare din această săptămână.

Motaghi a mai spus că, având în vedere gestionarea deficitară a cererii în industriile din aval, sunt necesare controale la export pentru a preveni ieșirea directă și indirectă de mărfuri din țară.

Pentru a asigura materii prime pentru producătorii din Iran, Motaghi a ordonat oprirea exporturilor de produse petrochimice și a instruit companiile să ia măsuri pentru a returna transporturile care au fost exportate, dar care nu au fost încă livrate în străinătate.

Iranul este un exportator major de polimeri precum polietilena și polipropilena, precum și de alte produse petrochimice utilizate pentru fabricarea materialelor plastice și a unei game largi de bunuri de consum și industriale.

00:00 – Acum 2 ore

16-04-2026

SUA vor da sancțiuni secundare țărilor care cumpără petrol iranian

Secretarul Trezoreriei, Scott Bessent, a declarat că SUA sunt „acum dispuse să aplice sancțiuni secundare” țărilor care cumpără petrol iranian sau iau banii de la Teheran.

Bessent, când a fost întrebat despre o scrisoare trimisă de Departamentul Trezoreriei aliaților care sugerează că sancțiunile actuale împotriva Iranului nu au impactul dorit, a spus că aceasta „nu este o caracterizare corectă”.

„Ieri, am anunțat Operațiunea Furia Economică și, timp de peste un an, am avut presiune maximă asupra iranienilor, atât pentru blocarea plăților către statul iranian, cât și pentru a ataca conturile IRGC (Corpul Gărzilor Revoluționare Islamice)”, a spus el.

Secretarul Trezoreriei a adăugat că administrația ar dori să înghețe „mai multe fonduri ale conducerii IRGC și ale oricăror membri ai conducerii iraniene”. Și, a spus el, administrația Trump a transmis țărilor „că, dacă cumpărați petrol iranian, dacă bani iranieni se află în băncile voastre, suntem acum dispuși să aplicăm sancțiuni secundare, ceea ce este o măsură foarte severă”.

Bessent a declarat că au reiterat amenințarea în mod specific la adresa a două bănci chineze, deși nu a specificat care dintre ele.

Rețineți: În ianuarie, președintele Donald Trump a declarat că va adopta un tarif de 25% pentru țările care fac afaceri cu Iranul „cu efect imediat”. Cu toate acestea, acest lucru nu părea să intre în vigoare la momentul respectiv.

Un tarif pentru țările care fac afaceri cu Iranul ar avea un impact direct asupra Chinei, un partener comercial major atât al Iranului, cât și al Statelor Unite.

00:00 – Acum 2 ore

16-04-2026

Donald Trump trimite încă 10.000 de soldați în Orientul Mijlociu ca să forțeze Iranul să cedeze

Potrivit unor surse oficiale citate sub protecția anonimatului, Pentagonul va trimite mii de soldați suplimentari pentru a consolida prezența americană din zonă. Întăririle sunt structurate astfel: Grupul de atac USS George HW Bush: Aproximativ 6.000 de militari aflați la bordul portavionului și al navelor de război din escorta sa vor ajunge în regiune în următoarele zile. Grupul Amfibiu Boxer: Alți 4.200 de soldați, incluzând membri ai Unității Expediționare a 11-a a Corpului Pușcașilor Marini, sunt așteptați să sosească spre sfârșitul lunii aprilie.

Abonați-vă la ȘTIRILE ZILEI pentru a fi la curent cu cele mai noi informații.

ABONEAZĂ-TE ȘTIRILE ZILEI

Urmărește cel mai nou VIDEO


Google News
Urmărește-ne pe Google News



Abonați-vă la canalul Libertatea de WhatsApp pentru a fi la curent cu ultimele informații

Link

The First ‘Clayface’ Footage Was Wonderfully Disgusting

That Clayface is getting a new DC movie before Batman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, and the Flash—basically every single non-Super person in the DC Universe—at first seems weird. Of course, we’ve all heard how DC Films co-president James Gunn read a script by the prolific Mike Flanagan and instantly knew he had to make it. But why? How was it going to work? It’s all hard to picture.

That is, until you actually see pictures, which we have thanks to the Warner Bros. panel at CinemaCon 2026 this week. Gunn’s DC co-president, Peter Safran, took the stage to show the first-ever footage from the DC film, and it was chilling and gross. It also made it much clearer why this movie is happening before all the rest.

In the footage, which has not yet made it online, we start with a shot of a man in a hospital bed. The light is harsh and yellow. His face is completely wrapped in bloody bandages. But his eyes are open. WIDE OPEN. Almost like he’s looking at something terrifying. The camera slowly pushes in on this man, and we get several quick, jarring cuts. Of a face being cut. Of someone getting injections. Lots of disgusting stuff. Is this what happened to this person? Is he remembering it? It sure seems that way.

We then go to a montage of footage of a much more handsome man: Matt Hagen, played by Tom Rhys Harries. We see him running down the street, through neon-lit tunnels, past a police car that says Gotham City on it. It’s hard to know what’s happening, but basically, we just know this man is scared of something and trying to get away from it. The scenes are intercut with the words “Look fear in the face.”

Finally, and most memorably, the last shot of the footage features this man looking totally normal, then putting his hand to his forehead and wiping straight down, completely removing his face. His face, as you can guess, is clay.

Safran described Clayface as “a riveting horror thriller,” and we got all three of those things from the footage. This movie is going to be messed up. And we cannot wait.

Written by Mike Flanagan, directed by James Watkins, and starring Harries and Naomi Ackie, Clayface is currently set for release on October 23.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

Link

Deadspin | Reign extend Evan O’Steen’s deal through 2030 season

NCAA Womens Soccer: College Cup-Championship-Florida State at StanfordDec 8, 2025; Kansas City, MO, USA; Florida State Seminoles forward Taylor Suarez (9) celebrates with goalkeeper Evan O’Steen (2) after defeating the Stanford Cardinal to win the 2025 NCAA Women’s Soccer College Cup Championship at CPKC Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images

The Seattle Reign extended the contract of 18-year-old goalkeeper Evan O’Steen through the 2030 season, the team announced Wednesday.

O’Steen was the youngest player to ever sign with Seattle when she reached a deal at age 17 in January.

O’Steen was part of Florida State’s national championship team in 2025.

“Securing Evan O’Steen through 2030 is an important step in building long-term stability within our roster,” Seattle general manager Lesle Gallimore said in a news release. “She has all the qualities we value in a goalkeeper — composure, work ethic and a strong presence — and we’re excited to continue developing her within our environment.”

O’Steen has yet to make her professional debut. The Reign have a top-notch goalie in Claudia Dickey, a member of the United States Women’s National Team.

“I’m very excited to extend my time with Seattle Reign FC,” O’Steen said in the news release. “Being part of this goalkeeper group and learning from such experienced players has been incredibly valuable, and I’m looking forward to continuing to grow and develop here.”

–Field Level Media

Link

This 100TB cloud plan might outlive your monthly subscription habit

TL;DR: Internxt’s 100TB cloud storage plan is on sale for a one-time payment of $974.47, offering long-term storage without monthly subscription fees.


$974.97

$9,900
Save $8,925.03

 

Storing memories these days tends to come with a monthly bill. Over time, those costs add up, especially if you need a lot of space. Internxt offers a different approach with a one-time payment for long-term storage. For a limited time, you can score a lifetime subscription to 100TB of cloud storage for just $974.47.

Internxt offers a privacy-first model using end-to-end encryption. In practical terms, your files are encrypted, and only you can access them. It’s also open-source, so its security setup isn’t just taken at face value.

Mashable Deals

By signing up, you agree to receive recurring automated SMS marketing messages from Mashable Deals at the number provided. Msg and data rates may apply. Up to 2 messages/day. Reply STOP to opt out, HELP for help. Consent is not a condition of purchase. See our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.

With 100TB of storage, this isn’t the kind of plan you outgrow quickly. It’s more than enough room for large photo libraries, video files, work archives, and everything else you’ve been meaning to back up “eventually.” Consider it a place for both your important files and the ones you’re not quite ready to delete just yet.

Files sync across devices, with access available through desktop apps, web browsers, and mobile apps on iOS and Android. It also supports Linux, which is still a nice bonus in a world where not everything does.

The interface is straightforward, so you’re not spending time figuring out how to use your storage. Uploading, organizing, and sharing files all feel familiar, but you have way more space to work with.

On the security side, files are encrypted and split into smaller pieces before being stored, adding another layer of protection. The zero-knowledge model means Internxt can’t access your data, even if it wanted to.

If you’ve been paying for cloud storage month after month, a lifetime plan like this is at least worth a look—especially if your storage needs aren’t getting any smaller.

Get lifetime access to 100TB of Internxt cloud storage for $974.47.

Grabbing this deal? Score a Microsoft Office 2021 license for free when you apply a code at checkout through 4/19: GWP4MAC (for Mac) or GWP4WIND (for Windows).

StackSocial prices subject to change.

Link

Românii, pe primul loc în Europa la „analfabetism digital”. Planul UE ca europenii să aibă competențe digitale până în 2030 pare tot mai departe


Românii, pe primul loc în Europa la „analfabetism digital”. Planul UE ca europenii să aibă competențe digitale până în 2030 pare tot mai departe

Link

I built my entire workshop around Ryobi ONE+, and it just works

Ryobi has carried a budget stigma for as long as I can remember. Walk into any Home Depot and you’ll find the green-and-black tools in the affordable section, quietly implying they’re what you buy when you can’t justify spending more. I bought into that framing for years — picking up a Ryobi tool when I needed something fast and half-expecting to outgrow it. That was before I built out a full ONE+ 18V collection and actually put the platform through consistent use. Ryobi tools are considerably stronger than their reputation suggests, and for most homeowners, dismissing them outright is the more expensive choice.

The battery platform is the whole product

Every tool you add costs less than the one before it

The ONE+ platform has been around since 1996, and the core premise has stayed the same: one 18V battery format that works across every tool in the lineup, regardless of when you bought it. That sounds like standard marketing language until you actually own four or five packs and start adding tools.

Bare tool pricing is where the math shifts. Once you have batteries, new additions drop significantly in cost. Bare tools fill out the collection cheaply once you own packs — impact drivers and circular saws both typically land under $70. The 18V ONE+ power inverter — clips onto any ONE+ battery, outputs a live AC outlet — runs about $49 as a bare tool. Purpose-built portable power stations from standalone brands typically cost three to five times that for comparable functionality. The platform lock-in that initially feels like a constraint becomes the reason each tool costs less than it looks like on a spec sheet. You’re not buying a new tool; you’re building on what you already own.

What I’ve run through the ONE+ lineup over the past few years

My Ryobi ONE+ circular saw cut every piece of lumber for a built-in storage wall I put together in the garage over two weekends. The Ryobi impact driver replaced my old drill for any job involving structural fasteners — the kind of work where a drill would bind, require pilot holes, or strip screws before seating them properly. Neither of those results surprised me much once I started using the tools consistently.

The yard side of the collection has been just as useful. The 40V side — leaf blower, stick edger, string trimmer — covers yard maintenance from first thaw to the last mow of the season, all on the same battery platform. All three earn their place before spring yardwork season starts, and gas cans for yard tools haven’t been on my shopping list in a couple of years.

One caveat worth making: not every tool in the ONE+ lineup justifies a purchase. Some exist because the platform needed a category covered, not because Ryobi had a particularly strong product to put there. The tools worth tracking down are the ones with an actual track record — and there are enough of them to build a capable collection.

Performance has genuinely caught up

Where cordless tools were a decade ago vs. where they are now

ryobi drill and impact driver on desk Credit: Jonathon Jachura / MUO

The gap between cordless and corded performance has narrowed substantially for the kind of work most homeowners actually do. A corded saw still wins at sustained heavy cuts, and nothing in the ONE+ lineup replaces a table saw. But for weekend projects, seasonal maintenance, and the general range of tasks a garage workshop handles — today’s cordless tools are in a different place than they were ten years ago.

My old drill would bog down on structural fasteners and occasionally strip screws before they were fully seated. The ONE+ impact driver handles that same work cleanly and consistently. The gas leaf blower it replaced started fights every time I pulled it out of storage. The cordless version has started on the first button press every single time. Two-plus years of regular use across real projects — not controlled conditions or cherry-picked tasks.

The habits that keep the battery platform healthy

What actually shortens pack life — and what doesn’t

A platform built around shared batteries only stays useful if those batteries last. Most people assume heavy use is the main culprit behind early degradation. The real driver is more mundane: what you do when the tools aren’t running.

Research into lithium-ion degradation puts the calendar aging figure at roughly 20% capacity loss per year for packs stored fully charged. Drop that storage level to the 40–60% range, and the same figure falls below 5%. For packs sitting unused for more than a few weeks, running them down before storing makes a meaningful difference across a few seasons of ownership.

Two other habits belong in the same conversation. Plugging a cold battery directly into the charger is the more damaging one. Below freezing, the charging process breaks down in ways that leave permanent structural damage in the cells — not recoverable wear, but actual physical degradation. Letting a cold pack warm up indoors for an hour before charging costs nothing and prevents it entirely. The other habit is using the charger as a storage dock. Modern chargers cut off at 100%, but many follow that with a low-level trickle charge to maintain full capacity as the cell naturally self-discharges. Pulling the pack off the charger when the indicator goes green keeps it out of that sustained high-voltage state. Three habits, none of them complicated.

A workshop that grows without starting over

The ONE+ platform’s real advantage isn’t any individual tool — it’s that every new addition makes the collection more capable without requiring a fresh investment from scratch. That compounds over time in ways that are easy to miss when you’re comparing spec sheets and brand reputations. If you’re running tools commercially eight hours a day, the ONE+ lineup isn’t your ceiling. For homeowners building a practical, flexible workshop on a reasonable budget, it’s worth a serious look — the reputation hasn’t kept up with the tools.

Link