The Current-Sun + Diamond ring scam, sneaky kid hack, wellness tech in cars and must-know tech smarts right here - In partnership with NordPass | Welcome to your Sunday, friend. How about we kick things off with a little trivia question. Since todayâs deep dive is about future tech, letâs go back in time. What major tech company got its name during a brainstorm while one of its cofounders was tripping on LSD? Youâll find the answer at the end. âAre password managers really safe?â Itâs not just about hackers, itâs about control. If your passwords are saved in your browser or scribbled on sticky notes, youâre putting your entire digital life at risk. The password manager I use is built for serious protection and puts you in the driverâs seat. Details below. â Kim đ« First-time reader? Sign up here. (Itâs free!) | TODAY'S DEEP DIVE The future is ear Letâs be real: Smartphones are getting out of hand, literally. We traded pocket space for bigger screens, better cameras and more power. Some of these glass bricks are the size of a paperback novel and about as easy to use one-handed. Even Marty Cooper, the man who invented the cell phone, told me directly that the future of communication is a chip embedded behind our ears. No screen to crack. Just an invisible little whisper bot baked into your skull. Sounds crazy, but so did the idea of Instagram in your pocket, 30 years ago. The phone is evolving, fast. Hereâs whatâs trying to eat its lunch: â Wearables that actually do stuff Your Apple Watch or Pixel Watch can already handle calls, texts, payments and your resting heart rate. One tap, and youâre checking vitals or pausing a playlist. Smart rings (Oura, Samsung, etc.) are slowly taking over, too. Congratulations, youâre engaged to your biometric data. And yes, we have real-life Star Trek-style comms badges coming. Beam me up, notification settings. đ€ AI wearables ⊠flopped The Humane AI Pin promised screen-free, voice-first living. Reality? It was glitchy, sluggish and hotter than a toaster. Humaneâs now offloading its tech to HP. The Rabbit R1? Same idea, different shape. Still clunky. Still not your phoneâs final boss. The only intelligent thing was your decision not to buy one. đ¶ïž Smart glasses are plotting Meta and Ray-Ban have a thing. Appleâs cooking up AR glasses. The goal is to beam texts, maps and TikToks into your eyeballs. Finally, a way to make eye contact less personal. Please donât try to change the volume mid-commute and accidentally salute a stranger. đ§œ Squishy screens might be a thing Researchers at the University of Bath built DeformIO, a pressure-sensitive blob of digital clay you can poke and squeeze like your own weird little UI stress ball. It uses conductive gel and embedded sensors to detect how itâs being deformed, translating those gestures into real-time digital input. Think of it as a physical interface that bends and flexes with your fingers. Practical? Not yet. Fascinating? Very. Bad news if you hate explaining things to the TSA. đźSo whatâs next? Phones arenât disappearing overnight. But maybe theyâll be slowly replaced (or joined) by smaller, smarter, squishier things that blend into your life instead of taking it over. Your next âphoneâ might live on your finger, whisper in your ear or melt into your glasses. You might not even notice it, until it starts finishing your sentences. |
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Digital Life Hack How to make AI-generated pics look good ChatGPT-4oâs new image tools turn your photos into eye-popping digital art. Hereâs how to get the best results, fast. Listen on Komando.com â |
WEB WATERCOOLER đ Diamonds arenât forever: What if a mystery red box with a diamond ring arrived in your mail? Ask Tiffany Grove. She got one from the âGlobal Gemological Research Academy,â did some digging and realized it was a scam. It came with a QR code for a âwarrantyâ that leads to a phishing site. Apparently, the only gem theyâre offering is emotional damage. Donât scan it, just report it. đ€ AI just passed the Turing test: Yep, the one where a human has to guess if theyâre talking to a machine or a real person. In a study, people chatted for five minutes with both a human and a chatbot without knowing which was which. Their job? Pick the human. GPT-4.5 fooled them 73% of the time, and LLaMA 3.1 got 56%. Yikes. đđ»ââïž Luxury vehicles are turning into spas? Brands like Mercedes, Lincoln and BMW are going all-in on in-car wellness (paywall link). The Lincoln Nautilus, for example, has a âRejuvenateâ program with massage chairs, mood lighting and scent diffusers. Kale yeah, this is great! Because nothing says âIâm thrivingâ like getting aromatherapy in traffic. đ„· Another gold bar scam: A Florida woman lost over $280,000 after scammers tricked her into thinking her Social Security number was compromised. A fake federal officer told her to protect her assets by buying gold from a bullion store. They arranged a delivery, gave her a secret âpasswordâ and then vanished. PSA: No legit agency asks for gift cards, crypto or undercover missions. đ„Ž âWhatâd you say?â If you find yourself asking this more and more, itâs time to make a change. Forget the hearing aids your grandpa wore; todayâs tech is so much better. These hearing aids* have two tiny processors that analyze the sound around you to make conversations crystal clear. Incredible. If your ears had a software update, this would be it. đ± Does your kid have a burner phone? Weâve reached the era of middle schoolers running black market tech ops. A dad posted to Reddit after he found out his 12-year-old son was hiding one in a pillow to access apps he wasnât supposed to be on. Signs to watch for: Theyâre ignoring the phone you know about, there are sudden dips in data usage, or you notice new devices using the Wi-Fi. đș Make your own Netflix? Vimeo just launched a new tool that lets you build your own subscription-based streaming service (no coding required). Because clearly, what the internet needs is one more subscription service. You can offer tiered memberships, stream live events, sell merch and customize the whole thing. They say itâs to give us more control and cash instead of relying on the algorithm, but remember, Vimeoâs still taking their cut. đŸ Blast from the past: Bill Gates is in his nostalgia feels. To mark Microsoftâs 50th, Bill is letting you download the OG operating system he and Paul Allen whipped up. Fire up your nostalgia engines and see what computing was like when disco was king. |
DEALS OF THE DAY Hop and shop đŁ Easter Sunday is just two weeks away. Nowâs the perfect time to add these to your basket, I mean cart. Spring into breakfast with this cute bunny-shaped mini waffle maker (33% off). These colorful Play-Doh eggs (32% off) are great for keeping little hands busy. Shh ⊠I wonât tell if you keep a four-pack of Peeps marshmallows ($12) all to yourself. Have everyone enjoy your holiday feast with these ergonomic utensils (29% off). Wine lovers, this aerator funnel (38% off) filters out sediment but keeps every drop of flavor. Stumped? Check out this Easter basket idea extravaganza. đ„ Bring the heat: Cozy up next to this 7-inch portable firepit (13% off) on your patio to end your night on the right note. |
DEVICE ADVICE âĄïž3-second tech genius: Track a flight instantly by typing the flight number into Google (like Delta 123) to see the live status and arrival time. đ Need a bedtime story for the kids? Itâs tough to get creative at 8 p.m. when your brainâs fried from a long day. No worries, just use a chatbot to tell the tale. I like to include the childâs age, interests and a theme. For example: âCan you make up a bedtime story for a 5-year-old boy about a brave knight?â VoilĂ , no stress to impress. Safe Wi-Fi anywhere: Using public Wi-Fi is risky no matter where you go. It doesnât make a difference if you stay at a five-star luxury hotel, have lunch at your hometown diner or youâre at the airport. The easy way to protect yourself? Turn on a VPN.* đïž Get paid to shop: Apps like Fetch and Ibotta let you earn cash back and gift cards by snapping pics of your receipts. Use them at places like Amazon, Walmart and hundreds more. Cmd + spacebar:This Mac shortcut opens Spotlight, an incredibly powerful tool for finding documents quickly, opening apps or searching the web right from your desktop. Check your laptop battery: On Windows, get a detailed report that includes usage, capacity and battery life estimates. Open the command prompt by hitting the Start menu, then typing in cmd or cmdâ .â exe in the Run command box. Press Enter. Now, smarty-pants, type or paste in the following: powercfg /batteryreport đ Tame your cords: Got a mess of loose cables around your desk? Velcro cable ties are a quick fix to clean things up. Plus, they make those dangling cords way less tempting for nosy pets with a chewing habit. Bonus: Theyâre super cheap. Hereâs a pack of 60 for $7. Sweet! |
MY TRUSTED ADVICE đïž Every weekend on my award-winning national radio show heard on over 420 stations, I talk with interesting folks like you. Catch these convos on a station near you, or find my weekend show as a podcast in your favorite podcast player. Sgt. Katie Cunningham from Great Falls, Montana, wants you to know sheâs fine. Fake missing person posts with her picture are all over Facebook. Stop sharing them! Sam from Austin, Texas, found love and easy money investing in gold online. Instead, scammers drained $80,000 from his bank account. Briana from Houston, Texas, went viral after exposing pedo messages sent to her daughter on the Zepeto app. Plus, Constance asks about AI and copyright, Kathy needs tips for her Teslaâs blind spot, Darryl seeks travel advice, Bill wants tools to transcribe handwritten notes, and so much more! đ Letâs talk about anything digital in your life, whether itâs family matters or your business. Make an appointment to speak with me right here. |
SUNDAY TO-DO LIST đ¶đŒââïžââĄïž Take me on a walk: Listen to my showâs podcast. I wear this weighted vest when I walk to burn 200 more calories. đ Read this: This deep dive on the AI humanoid arms race is giving âfuture dystopia, but make it casualâ vibes. đ
Check your speed: Head to fast.com and see if your ISP is secretly throttling your connection. đž Score something free: r/Freebies is a gold mine of samples youâll forget you ordered until they magically show up. đȘ Explore the universe: Help scientists identify far-off galaxies from your couch (no telescope required). |
WHAT THE TECH? | | The robot uprising starts in your backyard. Starting at $2,299, Segwayâs new GPS-guided yard assassin can cut up to 2.5 acres, silently, precisely and without needing perimeter wires. It covers 1.25 acres in 24 hours, charges in 80 minutes and mows in neat little lines thatâll make your HOA weep with joy. The Navimow X3 maps your yard with GPS, dodges sprinklers like a mechanical ninja and returns to its charging dock like a Roomba with commitment issues. Oh, and thereâs an expansion bay for a mosquito repellent, fertilizer dropper and trimmer add-on. Finally, waging advanced military warfare against the planetâs single largest enemy â mosquitoes. This thingâs one firmware update away from passive-aggressively cutting your neighborâs overgrown lawn out of spite. |
LOGGING OUT ... The answer: Apple. Yep, Steve Jobs came up with the name Apple after returning from a fruitarian retreat at an apple orchard. He was on LSD at the time and said the name sounded âfun, spirited and not intimidating.â Plus, it would cleverly appear before Atari (his former employer) in the phone book. And the rest is iHistory. đ Oh, Steve Jobs also loved a Big Mac. (I saw you shake your head!) â Less than 1 second: Thatâs all it takes for hackers to crack a six-character password, even if youâre using a mix of upper- and lowercase letters and numbers. Stop risking it and upgrade to a password manager that creates and remembers long, strong passwords for you. Youâll be glad you did. Thanks for letting me in your inbox along with the best free newsletter in the USA. Youâre officially a tech whisperer. Go amaze someone. đ„łâ Kim đŁ Donât keep me a secret: Share this email with friends (or copy URL here) | |
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