The Current + Crypto scam, flying cars, sound secrets, startup fixes and more tech smarts - In partnership with RYSE | Howdy, happy Monday, friend. Hereâs a question thatâs more loaded than your inbox after vacation. When Warren Buffett and Bill Gates were each asked to sum up his success in one word, they gave the exact same answer. âš These two billionaires with very different styles both pointed to the same superpower. (No, itâs not âdropshipping.â) So what was the magic word? A) Manifestation, B) Focus, C) Luck or D) Brunch? Take a guess. The answerâs at the end, and it might just change how you work this week. Keep this free newsletter free. Check out our sponsor, RYSE. Theyâre bringing smart shades to the masses. More info about them below! đ€ Know someone who still confuses Warren Buffett with Jimmy Buffet? Forward this to them. Letâs set the record (and the investor) straight. đ« First-time reader? Sign up here. (Itâs free!) | TODAY'S DEEP DIVE Save your genius Image: ChatGPT Your brain is meat. Beautiful, magical meat. But it loses things. Important things like âbrilliant 4 a.m. business ideaâ slip into the gray matter of the most sophisticated organ on the planet. Thatâs why the smartest people I know (including me!) have a âsecond brain.â A digital vault that catches ideas, plans, reminders and projects before they vanish into the void. If youâre still trying to keep it all in your head, itâs time for an upgrade. Hereâs how second-brain apps like Notion, Evernote and Apple Notes can help you work smarter, not harder. Apple Notes (free and probably already on your iPhone/Mac): Fast, simple, searchable. Itâs the one I use. Evernote: Great for organizing notes, web clippings, PDFs and images. Notion: For power users who want to build an entire âcommand centerâ for their brain. Iâm talking about tasks, notes, databases, even project dashboards. đ Only rule: Pick one youâll actually open and use daily. Donât overcomplicate it. đïž Step 2: Dump everything Scribble half-formed shower thoughts. Save quotes, links, screenshots of tweets you laughed at too hard. Whatever needs saving, get it in there before you forget it. Save quotes, book ideas, article links or random tech tips you want to try later. Snap a picture of handwritten notes, and drop them into your app. Dictate quick thoughts using voice-to-text if youâre driving or walking. You get the gist. đ Tip: Donât overorganize. The goal is to catch ideas, not perfect them. â
Step 3: Build simple systems Hereâs where this becomes magic. Youâve made a safe zone for your thoughts. Now itâs time to do something with it. Work projects: Track ideas for meetings, client notes, deadlines. Personal life: Grocery lists, vacation ideas, home projects, things to ask your doctor. Dream goals: Business ideas, fitness plans, book outlines, bucket lists. Quick wins: Save recipes, gift ideas, funny things your kids say, quotes you love. đ Pro move: Create a âQuick Captureâ note for the day. Every random thought goes there, no stress. Throw stuff in like itâs hot. Sort when you feel emotionally stable. Your brain was designed to solve problems, not remember the Wi-Fi password to your in-lawsâ house from 2013. Your brainâs real job is to think, be creative and solve larger problems. Let a second-brain app handle the clutter, so your real brain can stay brilliant where it matters. |
| | You might spend 40 hours a week glued to your phone, but you spend nearly three times that inside your home. That one stat has a certain tech monopoly (đ) scrambling back into the booming Smart Home space. One company saw this wave coming long before Big Tech did⊠RYSE. They quietly locked in 10 powerful patents in one of the most overlooked corners of your home⊠Smart shades. Backed by a major Best Buy partnership and with 159 million potential customers, RYSE is the talk of the town when it comes to the smart home space. Right now, shares are just $1.90. Once Big Tech makes its grand re-entry, this window could slam shut. Thatâs why savvy investors are jumping in while the price is still low. Act now and receive up to 25% bonus shares. Don't miss out. This could be the next smart home success story. â This is a paid advertisement for RYSE. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Please read the offering circular at https://invest.helloryse.com/. |
THE KIM KOMANDO SHOW Web traffic is tanking If your site traffic just dropped 40%, Googleâs new AI Overviews could be the reason. Plus, the âHawk Tuahâ girl tries a rebrand and why free AI tools arenât what they seem. And here's a tip: never use your voiceprint at the bank. Listen on Komando.com â |
WEB WATERCOOLER đ Crypto CEO sentenced: Alex Mashinsky, former Celsius Network CEO, just got slapped with 12 years for securities and commodities fraud (paywall link). Prosecutors wanted 20, but he got off slightly easier. Celsius collapsed in 2022, leaving a $1.19 billion crater. Turns out its slogan, âUnbank Yourself,â actually meant âUnpack Your Belongings in Cellblock D.â đ” Virginia limits kidsâ screen time: A new law will ban anyone under 16 from using social media for more than one hour a day. Apps will verify age, and parents can adjust if their kids get more time. Once they hit the limit, the app is supposed to block access ... though itâs unclear how thatâll work. đ Sneaky students: College kids are turning in papers with typos ⊠on purpose. This helps fool AI detectors after using chatbots to write essays. Some even tell bots to write like a âdumbâ freshman or run their work through multiple tools to hide the AI fingerprints. Clever? Yep. Smart? Not so much. đ Sick social media trend: Awful accounts are using AI filters to make the women in overly sexual TikTok and IG gym videos look as if they have Down syndrome. Theyâre adding captions like âSyndrome is down but your d*** is up.â Why? It goes viral, and they try to redirect people to adult sites. And yes, the original clips are stolen. đ Feeling left behind? Download NetSuiteâs free knowledge drop, âThe CFOâs Guide to AI and Machine Learning.â* No matter what you do, you should know more about AI. Itâs not going anywhere. đ€ CRM sentience: Salesforceâs Einstein Copilot just dropped for public beta, and itâs like Clippy got a PhD and an Adderall prescription. It reads your company data, automates tasks and generates content, all without leaking your Q1 projections to Skynet. Also, itâs now called Agentforce, which sounds less friendly and more ... ready for war? Romance scams continue: A retired Texas man fell for an online âromance,â and then âsheâ convinced him to dump his 401(k) into crypto. Spoiler: It was all fake, complete with a site showing his money âgrow.â Now, heâs out $500K, his house is up for sale, and heâs job hunting. Love hurts, but thatâs next level. đł Last chance to save on beautiful trees without the wait or the hassle: At Fast Growing Trees*, use promo code KIM to save an extra 15% on fast, easy and expert-approved planting. They have the perfect trees and plants for your location, shipped right to your door. No messy trips to the garden center. I love my avocado tree! |
DAILY TECH UPDATE Why your next iPhone could cost over $2,000 Apple hyped its new AI as a game changer. Now the rolloutâs delayed, and the competitionâs pulling ahead. Listen on Komando.com â |
DEVICE ADVICE âĄïž 3-second tech genius: Want to silence a call in a nanosecond? Just press the power button on your phone once. Poof, off to voicemail the person goes. đ Master volume control: Is the volume too loud or too quiet but never just right? You can change it in smaller increments. On Mac: Just hold down Option + Shift and press F12 (volume up) or F11 (volume down) to adjust it in quarter increments. On Windows: Click the speaker icon in your task bar, then use your mouse scroll wheel while hovering over the volume bar for smaller, smoother adjustments. Or install a tool like EarTrumpet for even more precise volume control, per app. Whatâs that songâs name? The YouTube Music app can help you track it down. Just hum, sing or whistle the tune. Open the app, tap search and hit the audio wave icon (top right) and give it a try. Heads up, it works best with popular or catchy tunes, not indie ones. đ” A dollar here, a dollar there: It seems like every subscription is more expensive than when I signed up. Use the Rocket Money* app to see what youâre paying for. I do! Theyâll even cancel a subscription for you if itâs not worth the money anymore. đ» Speed up startup: Is your PC booting up slowly? Too many apps may be launching when you turn it on. On Windows: Go to Settings > Apps > Startup to see everything that starts automatically. The higher the âimpact,â the more it slows things down. Toggle off the apps you donât need. It can make a big difference. On Mac: Click the Apple menu > System Settings > General > Login Items and Extensions. Youâll see a list of apps that open at startup. Select what you donât want and click the minus (â) button to remove it. You can also check the Background Items section, thatâs where sneaky slowdowns hide. |
BY THE NUMBERS Within 5 years We might be regrowing teeth. Scientists found a gene called USAG-1 that stops teeth from forming, then blocked it to regrow chompers in mice and ferrets. Now the drug is in human trials. Fingers crossed for no weird side effects. 508,883 The number of bacteria lurking on your sofa per 15.5 inches squared. Thatâs 75 times more than a toilet seat. Turns out the dirtiest place in your house might be where you binge Netflix. 40 feet Thatâs the size of a new submarine-hunting sea drone called the âBlueWhale.â It uses special sensors to spot underwater and surface threats, and can help clear mines. The cool bit? Itâs fully autonomous and runs on batteries for weeks. Basically, a Roombaâs scarier cousin with serious military vibes. Hereâs a clip of it. |
WHAT THE TECH? | | Buckle up, the AirCar is real, itâs certified, and itâs taking off in early 2026 for the low-low price of about $800,000. This is the first mass-produced eVTOL (short for electric vertical takeoff and landing) with 500+ successful rides. Klein Vision, a Slovakian company whose hobby appears to be arm-wrestling physics, has actually built a winged wonder. It drives like a sports car and then sprouts appendages like a Transformer going through puberty. Cruises at 10,000 feet if youâre brave, filled with dreams and signed off on a solid estate plan. Chances are this turns cities like Miami into an aerial war zone. |
LOGGING OUT ... đ§ The answer: B) Focus. When Warren Buffett and Bill Gates were asked to distill their success into one word, they both answered without hesitation: Focus. The kind of tunnel vision that makes your task list quake in fear, although part of me wishes they said brunch. Buffett famously spends 80% of his day reading and thinking â no notifications, no multitasking, just pure, uncut concentration. Gates? He schedules his life in small chunks, as small as five-minute increments (how is this even possible?), squeezing every ounce of productivity out of his calendar. Checking out our sponsors helps us pay the bills. Click this link to take a look at RYSE. See you back here tomorrow with another issue of the best free tech newsletter in the USA! Until then, stay charging, stay charming. đđâ Kim đŁ Donât keep me a secret: Share this email with friends (or copy URL here) | |
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