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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.


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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.

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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.

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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

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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.

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Curentul populist și rețelele de socializare amenință democrația românească, susține șefa CCR

Cele mai mari vulnerabilități ale democrației românești

Șefa Curții Constituționale a României, Simina Tănăsescu, atrage atenția că „vulnerabilitățile democrațiilor provin mai ales din interior”.

Tănăsescu a subliniat că „dificultățile pe care le vedem cu toții în privința configurării regimurilor politice și adaptarea statului la realitățile contemporane, inclusiv la invazia social media”, sunt provocări care nu pot fi ignorate.

În contextul acestor frământări, Tănăsescu consideră că, deși Constituția României este „destul de viabilă” și „perfectibilă”, nu este necesară o schimbare fundamentală a acesteia.

„De câte ori analizăm cam ce s-ar dori prin revizuire, vedem că sunt acele aspecte care sunt garanții, care poate jenează puterea politică și o determină să se încadreze în anumite limite”, a explicat aceasta.

Cu toate acestea, șefa CCR a subliniat că anumite ajustări legislative ar putea eficientiza activitatea instituției. Un exemplu concret este articolul 29 din Legea Curții Constituționale.

„Aș schimba «citare» cu «înștiințare». Activitatea CCR e foarte bogată. Avem pe rol vreo 16.000 de dosare. Foarte multe sunt repetitive, ceea ce presupune o doză mare de efort pentru un rezultat minim”, a declarat Simina Tănăsescu. Această modificare ar permite o mai bună alocare a resurselor pentru dosarele complexe care necesită atenție sporită.

În plus, creșterea curentului populist și utilizarea unor instrumente democratice precum referendumurile adaugă o dimensiune suplimentară acestor provocări. Potrivit șefei CCR, aceste tendințe pot crea un echilibru fragil, cu potențialul de a influența negativ stabilitatea democratică dacă nu sunt gestionate corespunzător.

Cine este Simina Tănăsescu, primul președinte femeie al CCR 

Elena-Simina Tănăsescu, în vârstă de 57 de ani, a fost aleasă președinte al Curții Constituționale a României pentru un mandat de trei ani în iulie 2025. Ea este prima femeie care ocupă această funcție de la înființarea instituției, în 1992. Tănăsescu îi succede lui Marian Enache. 

Cu o carieră academică impresionantă, Tănăsescu a obținut licența în drept la Universitatea din București în 1991, urmată de studii aprofundate și doctorat în drept public la Universitatea „Aix-Marseille III” din Franța între 1991 și 1997.  

De asemenea, are studii postdoctorale în drept constituțional, finalizate în 2011 la București, și o abilitare pentru conducerea doctoratelor la Universitatea Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne, din 2015.  

„Această funcție reprezintă o mare responsabilitate și o onoare” a declarat Tănăsescu la momentul numirii. 

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PlayStation Plus April catalog adds include Horizon Remastered, Squirrel with a Gun and Frank Stone

For PlayStation Plus subscribers, April is going to be a little bit spooky, a tad sporty and extra squirrelly. PlayStation Plus Extra and Premium players will get access to The Crew Motorfest, Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered, Football Manager 26 Console, Warriors: Abyss, Squirrel with a Gun, The Casting of Frank Stone and Monster Train. Additionally,Wild Arms 4 will be exclusive to Premium libraries. Expect the full lineup to go live on April 21.

The Crew Motorfest, Horizon Zero Dawn Remastered, Warriors: Abyss and Wild Arms 4 will hit PS4 and PS5 consoles, while the rest of the month’s additions are PS5 only. In the case of Horizon, PS4 players will receive Horizon Zero Dawn Complete Edition, rather than the PS5 remaster.

Horizon, The Crew and Football Manager are self-explanatory at this point in gaming history, but here’s a quick rundown of the more underground titles on April’s list: Warriors: Abyss is a hectic hack-and-slash roguelite from Koei Tecmo; Squirrel with a Gun is a silly yet competent third-person shooter from a two-man indie team; Monster Train is a much-loved demonic deckbuilder from Shiny Shoe and Good Shepherd Entertainment; and Wild Arms 4 is a PS2-era RPG from Japanese studio Media.Vision.

The Casting of Frank Stone is what PlayStation Plus was made for, in my estimation. It comes from Supermassive, a campy-horror studio that I’m quite fond of, but it’s a crossover with Dead by Daylight, a game I’ve never played, despite a latent interest in its vibe. For whatever reason, Frank Stone never eclipsed other titles in my to-play pile and in the harsh light of 2026, I was on the verge of forgetting all about it. Now that it’s free and being shoved in my digital face (complimentary), I’m ready to give it a go. And who knows, maybe it’ll be a gateway into the rich world of Dead by Daylight.

Most of the games on this month’s list can fit this description to some degree — minus the Dead by Daylight hook, unless you really squint at Monster Train — so it feels like a quality batch.

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Deadspin | Report: Saudi PIF on verge of cutting LIV Golf support

Golf: LIV Golf Miami - Second RoundApr 6, 2024; Miami, Florida, USA; The LIV Golf logo is on display along the 10th hole during the second round of LIV Golf Miami golf tournament at Trump National Doral. Mandatory Credit: Reinhold Matay-Imagn Images

Speculation over the future of LIV Golf ran rampant after league executives reportedly were summoned to New York for an emergency summit.

The Financial Times reported Wednesday that Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund is on the verge of cutting its support for the league and that an announcement could come as soon as Thursday.

LIV Golf members are currently in Mexico City preparing to play the sixth event on the 2026 calendar, starting on Thursday. Golfer Sergio Garcia told reporters there Wednesday that the players “have not heard anything.”

All outward appearances indicated the event was proceeding as planned, with LIV Golf posting interviews and tee times on social media.

Garcia said a shutdown would be contrary to what they have heard from Yasir Al-Rumayyan, governor of the Saudi PIF.

“That is not what Yasir told us at the beginning of the year, that he is behind us, that they have a project of many years,” said Garcia, translated from Spanish.

The PIF has reportedly poured more than $5 billion into LIV Golf since it launched in 2022, luring stars like Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau and Phil Mickelson with lucrative contracts and massive tournament purses.

LIV Golf’s potential demise would not come as a total shock given the circuit’s stagnant television ratings and its inability to attract any big names of late, coupled with the recent departures of Brooks Koepka and Patrick Reed back to the PGA Tour.

After Mexico City, there are nine events remaining on the schedule in LIV Golf’s fourth season.

–Field Level Media

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Amazon’s Ember Artline TV is a new Samsung The Frame dupe: Where to preorder

Amazon’s first true rival to Samsung’s The Frame finally has a release date. The Amazon Ember Artline, a 4K QLED TV that can display artwork, will launch in the U.S. on Wednesday, April 22, according to a company press release. Preorders are now open.

The Ember Artline comes in a 55-inch size ($899.99) and a 65-inch size ($1,099.99). Shoppers can take their pick from 10 interchangeable frame colors.

Amazon originally unveiled the Ember Artline at the Consumer Electronics Show in January, where it also announced that it would be rebranding all of its smart TVs with the “Ember” moniker. (The Fire TV name will still apply to Amazon’s TV interface, streaming media players, and soundbars.) Amazon’s TV listings had been updated to reflect the new branding by the time of writing on Wednesday, April 15.

Ember Artline owners get access to a library of over 2,000 art pieces for free, per the press release:

There’s no extra cost or subscription required to access the thousands of free art pieces available on the Amazon Ember Artline. Our collection spans artistic movements and includes Impressionist classics by Monet, Degas, and Renoir, alongside contemporary works of street art, murals, mixed media, and photography. Customers also have access to 60 exclusive motion video pieces commissioned by documentary filmmaker Sam Nuttmann, who traveled the world capturing landscape and wildlife scenes.

If you’re not sure which pieces will look best on your wall, the Ember Artline can offer suggestions using its AI-powered “Match the Room” feature. Simply upload a couple of pictures of your room by scanning a QR code with your phone. The TV will pull artwork options based on the colors and decor style of your space, as well as any “recurring themes” in your existing wall art, Amazon said.

You can also have the Ember Artline display slideshows and collages of your personal snapshots by connecting it to your Amazon Photos account.

a person using the amazon ember artline tv's match the room feature

Amazon’s AI-powered “Match the Room” feature can suggest art pieces that fit your home’s vibe.
Credit: Amazon

Notably, the Ember Artline is the only TV in Amazon’s lineup with a matte finish, which makes it more convincing as artwork than a traditional screen.

Billed as “Amazon’s first lifestyle TV,” the Ember Artline is now the most affordable alternative to Samsung’s The Frame, a popular premium 4K QLED TV that doubles as artwork. Competing options like the Hisense CanvasTV and the TCL NXTVISION TV cost $999.99 and $1,299.99, respectively, in 55-inch sizes. Samsung’s latest 55-inch The Frame also goes for $1,299.99.

In 2022, Amazon updated its cheaper Fire TV Omni QLED Series (now Ember QLED Series) with an “Ambient Experience” gallery feature that replicates The Frame’s Art Mode, letting it display art or photos. However, that model lacks a matte finish and picture frame-like bezel — meaning the Ember Artline is Amazon’s first proper The Frame dupe.

Price aside, the Ember Artline’s extensive and completely free library also makes it a compelling buy. The Frame owners get access to a rotating selection of only 30 pieces per month; its full library of 5,000-plus pieces is locked behind a Samsung Art Store subscription ($4.99 per month or $49.99 per year). The Hisense CanvasTV is preloaded with around 1,000 pieces, while the TCL NXTVISION TV has access to only 350-plus artworks, but over 100,000 pieces of AI-generated art.

the amazon ember artline tv

The Ember Artline includes access to more than 2,000 free art pieces.
Credit: Amazon

Based on a cursory glance at its spec sheet, the Ember Artline’s only major downsides appear to be its lack of Dolby Atmos support and its basic 60Hz refresh rate. With smoother refresh rates of 120Hz to 144Hz, its rivals are better for gamers and hardcore movie buffs.

The Ember Artline comes with a custom wall mount, but if you’d rather prop it up on a console, you can buy legs for it for $19.99. Extra frames start at $74.99 apiece.

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Cât dau naşii la nuntă în 2026 în funcţie de eveniment. Românii au răspuns sincer: „Nu aş pune mai mult”


Cât dau naşii la nuntă în 2026 în funcţie de eveniment. Românii au răspuns sincer: „Nu aş pune mai mult”

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Spotify Just Partnered With One of Amazon’s Best Bookselling Rivals


What do you primarily use Spotify for? Enjoying music? Keeping up with your favorite podcasts? Listening to audiobooks? Well, the next time you open it (at least on Android) you might just use it to shop for a book—not just an ebook, mind you, but a physical book.

Spotify is officially a bookseller

As reported by TechCrunch, Spotify is now selling physical books on its Android app to users in the U.S. and the U.K., with plans to roll out the feature to iPhones next week. The company first announced the initiative back in February, revealing that it was partnering with Bookshop.org to facilitate the transactions. This isn’t your typical corporate agreement, either: Bookshop.org is designed to connect buyers to their local independent bookstores, rather than some enormous conglomerate or distributor. Bookshop says that 50% of the book sale price goes directly to the publisher (who then pays the author), while 30% goes to the bookstore you choose upon purchase. Another 10% goes towards a profit-sharing fund that is distributed among all the bookstores the site works with.

It might seem a bit silly to think of buying a book through Spotify, an app originally meant solely for music. But like many platforms, Spotify has adapted and grown its offerings over the years. It already sold audiobooks, so why not print and e-books? In effect, Spotify is now directly competing with Amazon as a place you can go for all your literary needs, whether you prefer to read or listen to your books. Maybe a Spotify-branded e-reader is up next—though the last time Spotify tried to sell its own device, it didn’t end up working out too well.

Note that there isn’t a dedicated storefront for buying books on Spotify. Instead, you’ll see a “Get a copy for your bookshelf” button appear under individual audiobooks. When you choose this, you’ll be taken to that book’s Bookshop.org page.


What do you think so far?

Spotify’s “Page Match” and “Audiobook Recaps” are getting updates too

In addition to this news, Spotify also announced an update to Page Match, its feature that lets you sync your place in a book using your phone’s camera. Now the feature supports over 30 languages, including French, German, and Swedish. Spotify’s audiobook summarization feature, “Audiobook Recaps,” is also now accessible on Android. Previously, this feature was exclusive to iOS, and let users listen to a summary of what they had already listened to in an audiobook.

There have also been updates to audiobook charts across the app, which show customers which books are currently the top sellers. Audiobook charts recently launched in Germany, and users in the U.S. and U.K. now have a dedicated chart for the most popular kids and family-oriented audiobooks, too.



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Hornets, Trail Blazers Set the Tone for Wild NBA Postseason | Deadspin.com

If the first night of the NBA play-in tournament is an appetizer of what’s coming for the next couple of months, the postseason will be at the very least intriguing.

The teasers came with a couple of compelling results. While there’s no guarantees that a new wave of contenders have been identified, there’s the notion that there are must-see moments ahead.

Ripe with controversy, comebacks and drama, it’s odd to suggest that the Charlotte Hornets and Portland Trail Blazers could be responsible for setting the tone.

The Hornets survived for a 127-126 overtime victory against the visiting Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference. In the Western Conference, the Trail Blazers rallied for a 114-110 road victory in Phoenix to advance into the playoffs.

The Suns will have to play Friday night at home against Wednesday’s Golden State-Los Angeles Clippers winner for the right to reach the playoffs.

The Hornets have work to do as well, taking on the loser of Wednesday’s Orlando-Philadelphia game on Friday with a spot in the playoffs in the balance.

The Heat have been eliminated, failing to reach the playoffs for the first time since prior to the COVID pandemic. Their chances might have dimmed anyway with Bam Adebayo sitting out since early in the second quarter Tuesday because of a back injury. He played only 11 minutes.

That’s where the controversy arrived in the first game following the regular season. Adebayo crashed to the floor courtesy of an undetected trip by Hornets star guard LaMelo Ball.

The Heat were hot that no infraction was called, with coach Erik Spoelstra adamant after that the game that the maneuver should have resulted in Ball’s ejection.

Instead, Ball made the winning shot a couple of hours later.

These play-in games don’t come with the benefit of a series, so this saga won’t play out across another week.

Should they win Friday, the Hornets might be fun to have around in the playoffs for no other reason it’s an injection of new blood. They’re a team that emerged to exceed expectations from what most observers projected last fall. Charlotte hasn’t appeared in the playoffs in a decade.

After Coby White rescued the Hornets in regulation with a tying 3-pointer, they won on Ball’s drive for a basket and then – of all things – a defensive play with Miles Bridges blocking the game’s final shot on Davion Mitchell’s attempt to extend Miami’s season.

Charlotte’s success in the first play-in game came despite minimal contributions from Kon Knueppel, who’s a favorite to be named Rookie of the Year. The NBA’s most productive 3-point shooter during the regular season went 0-for-6 from long range and 2-for-12 overall.

But the Hornets have Ball, who’s been waiting for the spotlight to shine his way.

Later out West, the Trail Blazers earned the right to hold the No. 7 seed and face the San Antonio Spurs in the first round. All it took was rallying from 11 points down in the fourth quarter and a 41-point night from Deni Avdija.

Portland finds itself in the playoff field for the first time since 2021. That qualifies as an infusion of something new, with Avdija landing in the playoffs for the first time.

We could enjoy more of what he has to offer after Tuesday night’s sampling.

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