Plus: FBI scam warning, Fidelity data breach, Honda recall, Apple Watch lifesaver β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β β In partnership with Oracle | Fri-yay is upon us, friend! Letβs flash back to before we all used iPhones and Androids. Whatβs the bestselling non-Apple, non-Android phone of all time? Is it the β¦ A.) BlackBerry Curve, B.) Motorola Razr V3, C.) Nokia 1100 or D.) Samsung SGHβE250? Put on your thinking cap, and youβll find the answer at the end! π Iβm so close: Help me reach 100,000 subscribers on YouTube. Hit this link, then pat yourself on the back for supporting a small business. Wahoo! β Kim π« First-time reader? Sign up here. (Itβs free!) IN THIS ISSUE π€ Got your back πΈ Crypto scammers never stop π¬ Handy-dandy password trick | TODAY'S TOP STORY 9 easy ways to save Iβm a cheapskate. There, I said it. I go digging for ways to save money in my tech life, and Iβm happy to pass them along to you, too. 1. Use a tool to find coupons: Searching online leads to codes that donβt work or, worse, malware-infected sites. I like Honey. It runs in the background to look for deals on what youβre already buying. CamelCamelCamel will alert you if thereβs a price drop on something youβre eyeing on Amazon. 2. Try free versions of expensive software: Unless you absolutely need Microsoft 365, donβt waste your money. Iβve recommended LibreOffice, the free, open-source office software suite, for years, and it just got a major update. It works on Windows, Mac and Linux. 3. Check your phone provider perks: T-Mobile includes free Netflix, Apple TV+ and Hulu (with ads). Verizon customers get the Disney bundle, Walmart+, Paramount+, Apple One, Netflix and Max. 4. Get something for nothing: Open Facebook or Nextdoor and search for βbuy nothingβ and your town or city name. Pick the one closest to you. Voila, youβve just found a group of folks who give things away for free. You can offload stuff you no longer need and pick up a thing or two. Freecycle is another good option. 5. Use one of my favorite Amazon tricks: If thereβs something I want but am not ready to buy, I add it to my cart, then click Save for later. Every now and then, scroll that list. When an item goes on sale, youβll see it there. 6. Cancel what youβre not using: I use Rocket Money* for that. Itβs an app that quickly finds all your recurring subscriptions and lets you easily cancel those you no longer want. The first time I logged in, it saved me $360! Why Barry had three paid weather apps, Iβll never know. 7. Trade your email for discounts: Brands email special deals to their newsletter subscribers. If thereβs a brand you love, go to their website. Trust me, they want you to sign up, so the forms will be front and center. 8. Get paid to play: Apps like Swagbucks let you take surveys, play games, watch videos and scan grocery receipts to earn rewards. You can cash βem out for gift cards starting at just $1 or save up to $250 to receive that amount of cash in PayPal deposits. Thereβs also a $10 welcome bonus. Download on Android or iOS. 9. Shop refurbished or open-box items: Amazon Warehouse is an excellent source for video games, appliances, power tools, cameras, school supplies and electronics. You can use your Prime benefits for free shipping, and thereβs a good return policy. Just check the itemβs condition so you know what youβre getting. Apple sells refurbished gear, too. π€£ What do you call a cheap wig? A small-price toupee. (You laughed!) |
WEB WATERCOOLER You canβt spell βcryptoβ without βCβRβYβ: The FBI created a fake cryptocurrency to nail pump-and-dump fraudsters. Thatβs where they inflate a cryptoβs price with phony trades, convince others to buy, then cash out before the crash. The FBI set up a slick website, and shady companies took the bait. Now, 18 people and companies face fraud and market manipulation charges. But there are thousands more out there. π¨ Fidelity Investments got hacked: No details yet on what personal data was leaked from 77,000 customers, but Fidelity says funds werenβt accessed. Hackers got in using two newly created customer accounts. Iβll bet you $10 that the number of customers affected is much, much higher. Change your passwords. π Watch the kiddos: Roblox stock dropped 9% after claims surfaced that the online game platform is a βpedophile hellscape.β Kids are being exposed to grooming, p*rn, violence and abusive language. Games kids can join include "Escape to Epstein Island" and "Run from Diddy Simulator." Awful. β οΈ Drive a Honda? Theyβre recalling 1.7 million vehicles, including 2022β2025 Acura Integras, Honda Civics, CRβVs and HRβVs. Watch for sticky steering, difficulty turning and strange noises. Call 1β888β234β2138 for info on a free fix. Green Day is going all out: To celebrate their βDookieβ albumβs 30th anniversary, the California punk rock band has released βdemasteredβ versions of their songs played on some hilariously inconvenient formats, including βPulling Teethβ on a toothbrush, βChumpβ on a Teddy Ruxpin and βWelcome to Paradiseβ on a Game Boy cartridge. The promo vid is amazing. π° More cash for your old phone: iPhones retain their value much longer than models from Samsung, Google or OnePlus. Demandβs higher too. iPhone folks sell or trade in their phones 41% of the time, compared to just 17% of Android owners. Sadly, 30% of Android folks just end up tossing their old phones. Microsoft's latest update is a mess: During installation, Windows 11 24H2 creates a 9GB temporary cache folder that canβt be deleted. Tools like Disk Cleanup donβt do anything. Microsoft is working on a patch. Iβll let you know when it rolls out. βπ» Hope it doesn't malfunction: Researchers have developed a human-like robotic finger capable of performing routine physical exams. The "bioinspired soft finger" uses tech sensors to feel around for abnormal lumps, take your pulse and even venture into β ahem β those other places for diagnostics. Bums away! |
DEALS OF THE DAY Channeling my inner MacGyver Save money and space with one thing that does many things. This pen ($10) is also a stylus, leveler, ruler, and a flathead and Phillips-head screwdriver. Kitchen tongs (10% off now) you can also use as a whisk and spatula. A hammer ($22) that packs in pliers, a serrated knife, a saw, a wire cutter, a prying claw, a nail file, a bottle opener, and flathead and Phillips-head screwdrivers. The 8-in-1 kitchen stack ($12) includes a funnel, juicer, grater, egg cracker, shredder, can opener, egg separator and measuring cup. A flashlight ($24) thatβs also a seatbelt cutter, a window breaker, a red flashing emergency light, a power bank and an alarm. |
TECH LIFE UPGRADES π Tech on a budget: Raycons have studio-quality sound and a whopping 32 hours of battery life, and they fit comfortably in every ear with precise fittings. I bought a pair for Barry last week. He loves how they sound, and I love how easily they pair with all his tech. Go to BuyRaycon.com/kim right now for up to 50% off.* When you get stuck in Reply All hell: Instead of muting every single email that comes through, mute the entire thread. In Gmail, for example, look at the toolbar at the top of the email. Click the three dots, then Mute. Ah, sweet silence. π΄ Enable this on your Apple Watch: Sleep apnea is seriously dangerous, and the Series 9, Series 10 and Ultra 2 can spot the signs. Open the Health app on your iPhone, search for "breathing disturbances," then tap Set up. Follow the directions on screen and youβre good to go. Enter your βPa$$word!β: Iβve done this for years β abbreviate a sentence into a password. So, βI ate three peanut butter sandwiches today!β could become βI83pbsammies2day!β Whatever you do, just promise me you wonβt use β123456β or βpassword1.β π± Gloom and doomscrolling: In case you didnβt know, doomscrolling is when you get caught in a cycle of viewing negative posts on social media. You can set time limits for certain apps, but those are easy to bypass. I have a phone-addicted friend who has her husband hide her phone after 8 p.m. Weird but it works! Ever wonder what I do when Iβm not on the air or writing this newsletter? Drop by and follow me on Instagram. Thatβs where I post the fun stuff, like my $500 photo shoot. |
LISTEN UP Get Temu off your phone ASAP Think those low prices are a steal? Think again! I tell caller Tom from South Carolina what youβre really paying for. Plus, Google buries Trumpβs campaign, Chicagoβs surveillance cameras and Disney+ tries the Netflix stunt. Play now (37:50) β | |
| |
BY THE NUMBERS 24,000 Redbox machines Left abandoned across the U.S. CVS, Walgreens, Walmart, Dollar General, Albertsons and Kroger all are trying to get permission from Redboxβs bankruptcy court to trash the 890-pound DVD vending machines (paywall link). Hey, maybe you can score one. 30% of shoppers Say return fees are more annoying than jury duty and the DMV. I agree β I was just charged a 20% restocking fee when I tried to return a few sweaters. Check the policy before you buy, and just know many retailers will waive those fees if you go to a physical location. $8,999 tiny home For sale on Amazon. With shipping and tax, youβre $11,000 away from a nice, new mother-in-law suite, gym, library, man cave, fancy βshe shedβ β you name it. You really can buy anything on Amazon. I love this idea! |
WHAT THE TECH? This all-concrete one-bedroom, one-bath home sits on 2.5 acres in the California desert, and itβs priced at $1,450,000. Yeah, I think it looks like a World War II pillbox bunker, too. |
UNTIL NEXT TIME ... The answer: C.) Nokia 1100. It sold more than 250 million units. Dang. The little tank debuted in 2003, and you probably remember it as simple, affordable, reliable and almost impossible to break. π€£ Back in the day, my Nokia fell out of my hand and landed on my car, so I took it to Best Buy, but they said they donβt fix cars. Thatβs another issue of The Current done and dusted. Grab your custom referral link below and share it with a friend. When one person signs up, Iβll send you my new eβbook loaded with 50 smart AI prompts for free. See you back here tomorrow with the best tech newsletter in the USA! β Kim |
Komando Referral Program Refer one person That's all you need to get my latest eBook, "50 Smart Ways to Use AI," a $9.95 value β yours for FREE! 1οΈβ£ Copy your link: https://referrer.komando.com/8818309c/3 2οΈβ£ Share your link on social media, through email, in a text β your call! 3οΈβ£ Kick back and relax! When someone uses your link to sign up for my newsletter, I'll send my new eBook to your email address. CLICK TO SHARE β Or copy and paste this link to others: https://referrer.komando.com/8818309c/3 In "50 Smart Ways to Use AI," Kim shares helpful prompts for today's most common AI chatbots. Whether you're tackling spreadsheets, planning rainy-day activities or developing a wellness plan, let AI handle the heavy lifting for you! | |
|
|
|
|