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      Gears Technica: Favorite coffee-making setups from the Ars Technica staff

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 8 September, 2023 - 18:45 · 1 minute

    kevin_coffee4-scaled.jpg

    (credit: Kevin Purdy)

    If you're like our staff, you'll understand that good cup of brewed coffee is a requirement every morning. Whether it's a simple French-pressed brew or an espresso-based drink with complex flavors and aromas, coffee has not only provided the fuel to get the Ars Technica stuff through our daily tasks but it's become a ritual that helps us start the day anew and grounds us—pun intended—amid the chaos of the world.

    We asked the Ars staff to show off their coffee-making setups and tips below—they range from low to high tech, from hand-cranked grinders to automatic machines and all points in between, but all these methods have one thing in common: They make awesome coffee.

    John Timmer's setup: Flavorful French press method

    Buy The John Timmer French Press setup

    (Ars Technica may earn compensation for sales from links on this post through affiliate programs .)

    What I want from coffee-making equipment is purely a function of what I'm looking for from coffee. And that is as much flavor as you can possibly extract from beans that are roasted so dark that they risk absorbing all light and becoming a black hole. I want a thin sheen of random organic molecules floating on top of an explosion of bitter, complex flavors.

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      Ars Frontiers is here: Come (virtually) hang out with the experts

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 22 May, 2023 - 13:00 · 1 minute

    The Frontiers livestream. Your favorite Ars writers will appear inside of this magic box starting at 1:30 pm US Eastern Daylight Time!

    It's Frontiers Day at Ars Technica! Between the hours of 13:30 and 17:00 (all times US Eastern Daylight, UTC-4:00), we'll be carrying our livestreamed discussion with a half-dozen expert-packed panels on topics that range from IT to health care to space innovation. Each session will last approximately 30 minutes, with the last 10 minutes reserved for questions and answers from the audience. If you want to weigh in, leave your questions as comments on the YouTube stream . (You can also leave questions in the comments of this article, but YouTube is the preferred place because the moderators gathering questions will be focusing their efforts there.)

    Schedule and sessions

    The event kicks off at 13:30 EDT, with a quick intro from Ars Editor-in-Chief Ken Fisher and me. Even though this is a virtual event, Ken and I will be at the Ars studio at the Condé Nast Manhattan office to act as hosts. Ken will welcome everyone in and say some opening remarks, and we'll roll from there directly into the sessions. Each session will also be bookended by a short recap by Ken and me.

    Session 1: TikTok—banned or not, it's probably here to stay (13:30 EDT)

    Ars senior policy reporter Ashley Belanger gets to be up first with an especially relevant topic : While Congress and various states are vowing action against TikTok, will "banning" the app (whatever "banning" actually means) really come to anything? What are the policy implications around this kind of regulation, and how did we get here? We'll feature EFF Legal Director Corynne McSherry among the panel's guests, along with Columbia University's Ioana Literat and former White House lawyer and CPRI Executive Director Bryan Cunningham .

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      Don’t miss Ars Frontiers 2023: Top minds talk AI, mRNA, and TikTok bans

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 10 May, 2023 - 12:00 · 1 minute

    Don’t miss Ars Frontiers 2023: Top minds talk AI, mRNA, and TikTok bans

    Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

    Ars Technica is pleased to announce the return of Ars Frontiers, our single-day event that explores tech's most vexing and fascinating issues. This year's event will be held on May 22, and everyone is invited! Attendance this year is virtual, so we'll be streaming all six sessions over the course of three and a half hours.

    Readers who stop by the front page every day already know that Ars is a leader in bringing smart people together to talk about important topics—whether that means interviewing experts about current events or watching our highly skilled readers dissect an issue in the comments. In that same spirit of fostering brilliant discussions, this year we've curated a list of topics that explore the modern interconnectedness of innovation, with panels led by our subject matter authorities like Eric Berger and Dr. Beth Mole. All sessions will be streamed live on the Ars YouTube channel.

    The main event

    Ars Frontiers 2023 will feature six virtual sessions on May 22, starting at approximately 13:30 US Eastern Daylight Time (-4 UTC). Ars Technica Editor-in-Chief Ken Fisher and I will host the event from our studio in Manhattan. Each session will run about 30 minutes, which will include some time at the end for audience questions. Here's the line-up! (Session order might change between now and when the event happens.)

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      Screen Time: A ridiculous April 1 rhyme

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Saturday, 1 April, 2023 - 13:00 · 14 minutes

    Screen Time: A ridiculous April 1 rhyme

    Enlarge

    It's April Fools' Day—but who needs more "fake news" in their lives right now? So here's a real poem instead, a six-part rhymed couplet romp in the playful spirit of Dr. Seuss or of Roald Dahl's Revolting Rhymes . It contains everything that literary critics say a good poem should: yak bile, yurts, Descartes, broken bones, lawyers, and an imagined Krogan romance. It brought me great joy to write such ridiculous rhymes, and I hope you experience at least a tiny fraction of that feeling as you read.

    As part of my recent experimentation with AI image generation, the images come from Microsoft's Bing Image Creator (which is powered by DALL-E). I think the drawings do a surprisingly good job of bringing some color to such a long string of words, even if—as so often happens with AI images—the fine details are a little odd.

    Enjoy!

    f84049ac-4a72-49d5-968c-e37b4037e87a.jpeg

    In 2007, when phones began changing,
    My mother engaged in some life rearranging.
    A client of hers used some "herbal" pomade,
    Then he itched and he burned and he swore and he swayed.
    His hair all fell out and it hurt when he sat,
    He was owed, he complained, compensation for that.
    My mother agreed, and it came out at trial:
    The "herb" in the cream was your basic yak bile,
    Well known for its harm to follicular lining
    But cheap when you needed to keep male hair shining.
    So mom won her case 'gainst the maker of hair gel,
    And got a promotion and started to buy. Well—
    She bought a red car, a blue dress, and a Shih Tzu
    With money that being made partner will get you.
    She purchased a lake house, a boat, and two skis,
    Booked space on a flight known for pulling 6 Gs,
    She joined Junior League and a gym called "The FitZone"
    But bigger change came when she snapped up that iPhone.

    33c90160-d950-453d-bb6f-cbcd89f21489-1.jpg

    Watching Steve Jobs in his black shirt and jeans
    As he pitched the rectangular slab of her dreams,
    She saw in his spiel the last item she needed,
    to keep her life's lawn well-cut, watered, and weeded,
    The one thing she lacked that would make her complete:
    A phone that would mark her among the elite.
    She used it for voice calls, text messages, maps,
    And—when Jobs allowed it—then even for apps.
    At first she took pleasure in whipping it out,
    But soon she had questions; later came doubt.
    Moving through life needed motion and sass,
    But here she was now, just swiping on glass.
    On subways, in cars, while at church, in the bar,
    She stuck to that phone like one mired in tar,
    Unable to extricate finger or eye,
    Caught like a mammoth just waiting to die.
    The things in her life that were golden and green
    Soon looked beige and boring set next to that screen.

    26335547-beec-481b-8138-e3be2829b476.jpeg

    My dad was a "writer"—I put that in quotes,
    Since he never wrote anything longer than notes,
    That went in my lunchbox or in my mom's purse;
    When we left the house, he just stayed in and cursed.
    Writer's block had long blocked him from living his genius,
    A bona fide, certified, true act of meanness
    Doled out by a cosmos so fickle and foul
    That it blessed dad with bricks but provided no trowel.
    He cooked all our meals, cleaned our clothes, skimmed our pool
    Wore green sneakers, red glasses, and had a strict rule
    Against washing his jeans—said it messed with the denim—
    But under the cool lay a thin streak of venom.
    So mom went to work and she brought home the bacon,
    While dad stayed inside on a long-term vacation.
    A self-proclaimed "genius" who’s blocked might start drinking,
    When hopes and raw talent both feel like they're sinking
    But rather than going the Hemingway route,
    Dad scooped up the bottles and threw them all out.
    He holed up instead in the den with a TV,
    A seventy-five inch reflective monstrosity,
    Loudly proclaiming to any who'd listen
    That prestige TV's "golden age" had arisen.
    He hatched a keen plan to watch every minute
    Of every long series with "real actors" in it.
    Forget those new novels, forget those old poems,
    And don't even mention the biblical tomes.

    644f035a-93ca-49d1-afdf-0e093c826356-1.jpg

    Hollywood offered the realest life lessons:
    The Ts and the As and the Smiths and the Wessons;
    Hearts on parade; life's jocularity;
    drugs sold in Baltimore; peace, love, and charity.
    But—
    Whenever I happened to peek in the door
    He seemed to be lying asleep on the floor,
    Reality shows were binge-blasting above him,
    Great British bakers with great British muffins.
    The "truth" TV showed him was older than dirt:
    Spend your life lying down and your soul starts to hurt.

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    If they were both addicts, I remained clean;
    Life still had a sheen that out-shined any screen.
    I read and I built and I played—then repeated,
    While they binge-watched Frasier or read what they’d tweeted.
    But one bright blue day, I could take it no more,
    A dim indoor life was both safe and a bore.
    So I put down my book and I rose from the couch,
    Went outside, climbed a tree, slipped right down and screamed “ouch,”
    Since I broke half the bones in my left and right feet
    And for weeks couldn’t walk, though I could learn to beat
    A huge backlog of games for my sweet new PlayStation,
    Brought up to my room by a dark delegation:
    Two guilty-eyed parents, both clearly aware
    The outdoors wasn’t “great,” no one needed “fresh air,”
    And “go out and play” was a scam by some nurses
    Who’d push us outside... and then right into hearses.
    We were safer at home, in the bedroom or basement,
    Enthralled with a screen—the best cheap risk abatement.
    My parents retreated, their offering made
    And I stayed in bed, where I slept and I played.

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    No timers, no limits, no digital locks
    And no one complained if I wore the same socks
    For five days in a row while I wandered the West
    Where I gambled, shot, looted as one of the best
    Of the worst men on earth, who would take all your cash
    And then rustle your horses—until a game crash
    Corrupted each one of my character saves
    And my undying bandit now rests in his grave.
    I role-played my way through space outpost and ocean,
    Kissed girls, then a guy, then two alien Krogan
    And after I saved Ancient Greece, modern Gotham,
    The Milky Way, Earth, and a meadow in blossom
    I jumped into war games and called down some woe
    Upon trench-coated Nazis, last hateable foe.
    Then I found out, when my six weeks were through,
    And the casts were sawed off and my feet felt like new,
    That the “real world” was scary and not as much fun
    As a good online game, tight controls, and a gun.

    f88820b3-0af3-4b23-815f-3c538f506fdf.jpeg

    The universe spoke to us each that December
    In ways that no one would much want to remember.
    My dad had become the first human to view
    Each glorious show in his long Netflix queue.
    A powerful sense of despair then descended
    As he pondered paths in which his life had tended.
    Without the TV, he had no good distraction
    From thinking and thinking about his inaction.
    And mom gained a habit of checking her phone
    At inopportune times—not just when alone.
    Once in the courtroom, she gave a small snort
    After reading a joke text on spousal support.
    The judge made her stand and then read her a lecture,
    Suggesting that maybe her friends shouldn’t text her
    While she was in court or there’d be an attempt
    To blackball my mom and find her in contempt.

    af8c7ed9-aaad-44a6-9cd4-cd28dade9c9a-1.jpg

    I spent so much time slaying demons and liches
    I gained thirteen pounds and came down with eye twitches
    Which didn’t concern me until Christmas came—
    And I spent it upstairs with a video game.
    Something wasn’t quite right—life was losing its savor
    That hard-to-define-it-but-you’ll-know-it flavor.
    All three of us sat on our beds or on chairs
    Feeling much too depressed to go up or down stairs.
    In the New Year, my mom called a Zoom meeting
    And we all said yes, that we should start treating
    Our addictive and yet unacknowledged submission—
    And start seeing screens with a lot more suspicion.
    So this would be it: our year of detoxing.
    We took all our screens and spent Sunday night boxing
    Them up and then down to the basement we went;
    We were going to be free—one hundred per cent.
    “We’ll rethink it all,” my dad said, “Like Descartes!
    And rebuild our lives from the floor to rampart.”
    Then came the fidgets, the phantom limb feeling
    That some part of you was cut off and not healing,
    That reflex of reaching for phone or controller
    And finding your hand felt a little bit colder
    With nothing to cradle, no glorious gizmos
    That promise to stop you from thinking of escrows,
    Of egos, of toads beneath harrows, of death
    That still stalks us with rattling breath…
    Well—
    We tried what we could, we ate family dinners
    And read books on how to think just like real winners,
    Books written by not-yet-disgraced CEOs
    And relationship gurus who maintained their pose
    That life had a code, and they had it figured;
    Everything came down to slogans and zingers.
    “Self-love is not selfish,” my mother would say,
    Walking past with her yoga mat. “So—Namaste!”
    My dad ditched his flannels for logoed T-shirts
    That said things like “Good Vibes” and “Selfishness Hurts.”
    But I couldn’t quit the allure of distraction—
    Did we have to kill all of that sweet screen time action?
    Could ten minutes matter—heck, round up to an hour—
    With that glowing blue screen of unusual power?
    So on Easter Sunday, screens still in the basement,
    I crept out at night from my hidden emplacement
    Yearning to feel that now long-lost connection,
    Looking to have a device resurrection.

    449fbb98-cd98-4761-b2c2-2f03fbbceb7c-1.jpg

    I tip-toed downstairs, where I flipped on the switch
    And startled my dad, who said, “Son of a bitch!”
    Because there were my parents, on a ratty old loveseat
    With gadgets plugged in and a cheese plate to eat.
    They sat side-by-side, I saw with a shock,
    she texting away while he watched The Rock.

    2609f6ae-74a8-4601-b15b-5ed10e59bf8e.jpeg

    Self-help hadn’t helped, so our loins then we girt
    For a nine-hour drive to New York—and a yurt.
    The Shambala Center would unchain our brains
    Through mindfulness, yoga, and chanted refrains.
    (And some really remarkably boring-ass food;
    Brown rice will sustain you but won’t lift your mood.)
    It was Buddhist by way of San Fran and Cape Cod;
    Big dollops of Burning Man, self-help, and God.

    d039f52b-3c8c-4c14-8bc1-83bf02b8ba0c-1.jpg

    We woke up at six and imagined hot showers
    While hiking instead through the cold for two hours.
    We warmed up by milking five cows and six goats,
    Then shoveling muesli bars into our throats.
    Meditation time followed, from nine until ten,
    At which point we down-dogged—then got Zenned again.
    We lived in each moment, just present and grounded
    Content without screens until mealtime bells sounded.
    Post-lunch you could meet with a life coach of sorts
    Who wore sandals and socks and some shocking short shorts
    She held herself out as a spiritual leader,
    A wonderfully wise counselor and soul reader.

    6732aac3-eb12-420b-a0cc-c5676d03f953-1.jpg

    Mom, dad, and I got the same strong advice:
    “Treat your cell phones like vermin; treat them like lice!
    Shampoo them and tweeze them right out of your life,
    And if that doesn’t work—go ahead, grab a knife!
    Cut them and stab them until they’re all dead;
    No gadgets should come anywhere near your head.”
    This felt extreme, but she was persuasive;
    “Doing without” came to seem innovative.
    But she closed each session with one final koan:
    “Bury your fears before ditching your phone.”
    Feeling better and kinder and somewhat more mellow.
    Without all those gadgets to thunder and bellow
    Their notifications, their beeps and their boops,
    Our brains settled down and stopped spinning in loops.
    But three weeks in tents being mindful as balls
    Made us realize how much we loved houses and walls.
    Back home we headed, not “cured” and not “better,”
    But willing to hack at our digital fetter.

    f47ad5a7-4db9-4ccf-8ac8-8f0c5300fe5f.jpeg

    Dad gave up his plans to watch all the way through
    The Lord of the Rings and the whole MCU,
    And instead moved his TV right out of the den,
    Then stopped, picked it up, put it back in again.
    “I don’t need an office,” he said, “and the desk?
    You can forget it—just so Kafkaesque.
    My new way of writing is outdoors and rambling.
    Treat life like a slot machine and then get to gambling
    That words won by walking will mean something special—
    Real and alive, not just self-referential.”
    No more skinny jeans, no more sweatshirts with hoods.
    In khakis and boots, Dad went tramping through woods.
    He got poison ivy his second week out,
    But wasn’t distracted by even this bout
    Of bad fortune, nor by the deep itching
    From gnats that in week four invaded his stitching.
    He owned a hard truth that was clear to us all:
    Dad wasn’t a Jesus nor even Saint Paul.
    He was (at the most) a quite minor apostle
    Making his way through the throng and the jostle
    Of life with good grace and a few observations
    Jotted while fleeing those indoor temptations.
    He bowed to his failures as though to a teacher,
    Which unblocked the words, even when they were weaker
    Than he might have wanted—than he might have yearned for—
    And yet he was working and up off the floor.

    16de0a59-246e-4b9d-af96-f235f874d887-1.jpg

    My mother faced down her imposter syndrome
    And read up on healing her microbiome.
    She downed probiotics but felt like a jerk
    When repeating her mantra: “I’m good at my work!”
    But as she grew comfortable with her own worth
    She gradually felt like her one shot on earth
    Was wasted on suing the modestly vile—
    Like those who made cash selling rare black yak bile.
    Yes, bile was bad but not quite as soul killing
    As finding yourself socialized into willing
    That you could spend more of your life’s precious powers
    Contractually parsing for billable hours.
    Who needed a Bentley or rides on a jet
    When all that one wanted—all one could get—
    In an ultimate sense was some love and affection
    (And a quite passable strappy sandal collection.)
    But when she had shared this enlightened perspective
    With her fellow partners, she got a corrective
    To her big idea that less work wasn’t lazy.
    The partners just looked at her like she was crazy,
    A “typical woman” who valued her kid
    More than flying first class on Spring Break to Madrid.
    So Mom quit. She walked out. She began something new,
    A firm where the goal was not just to accrue
    But to live . Sure, money was less by a factor of two,
    Yet so was the time—“And you can’t beat the view
    From your own corner office,” she said with a smile,
    “Even when it looks out on the city trash pile.”
    Having worked on herself and then taken real action
    Mom now needed less of that online distraction.
    She used her phone daily but once through our door,
    The glowing rectangle went into a drawer.

    bc38cbb9-3787-4b3b-b72e-b1fee3f07a73-1.jpg

    As for me, I could spin out a credible story
    About how I came to stop playing those gory
    And glorious shooters I loved to lose days in,
    But that would not be a true-hearted confession.
    Games are amazing! You can’t just say no
    To a drug that’s so potent, it lets you go pro
    And play e-sports tourneys for serious bank
    By attacking with Ryu or driving a tank.
    So I couldn’t stop gaming—perhaps I had failed,
    But my custom controller just couldn’t be jailed.
    Yet I did venture out with my mom and my dad
    On short winter walks that were quiet and sad
    And long summer rambles that filled me joy
    In green growing things and the ways they destroy
    That terminal sense of a distance from life,
    Our love of distraction, “the news,” and of strife
    And offer instead a rest from algorithms,
    Not free from our problems—but slowed to life’s rhythms.
    And though I kept thinking of games in 3D,
    I ignored all my fears and then free-climbed a tree.

    d3698606-55d9-463d-9a13-33c28486e74b-1.jpg

    So that’s the whole story, with jolts and collapses
    And more than a few temporary relapses,
    Of how screens invaded, like all colonizers,
    Dismissing our cultures, proclaiming theirs wiser.
    And much of it was unbelievably awesome
    But some was just petty, and parts were just dumb.
    Amazing the way screens could melt down like wax
    And fill in our minds’ and our hearts’ biggest cracks,
    To keep us engaged with the unending new
    While ignoring the quiet, the boring, the true.

    7912e23f-c93a-499b-9d04-5ed3487bd5e2-1-300x296.jpg

    Read on Ars Technica | Comments

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      Today’s best deals: Google Pixel 6 Pro, Xbox Series S, and more

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 10 August, 2022 - 16:42 · 1 minute

    Today’s best deals: Google Pixel 6 Pro, Xbox Series S, and more

    Enlarge (credit: Ars Technica)

    It's Wednesday, which means it's time for another Dealmaster. Today's roundup of the best tech deals from around the web includes the return of the lowest price we've seen for Google's Pixel 6 Pro. As of this writing, Amazon subsidiary Woot has the 128GB unlocked version of the phone available for $700 , which is $200 off Google's MSRP and matches the discount we saw during Amazon's Prime Day sale last month.

    We broadly recommend the $449 Pixel 6a as the best value for those in need of an Android phone these days, and it's worth noting that Google has already shown off its upcoming Pixel 7 phones , which are likely to launch in a couple of months. If you need a higher-end Android phone right now, though, this is still a good price for a device we continue to like . The 6a still gets you most of the way there for less, but by comparison, the 6 Pro offers a bigger display (6.7 inches instead of 6.1) with a faster 120 Hz refresh rate (instead of 60 Hz), more RAM (12GB instead of 6GB), and better battery life (5000 mAh instead of 4410). Both devices—as well as the base mid-tier Pixel 6—get you capable cameras and a clean take on Android with update support through fall 2026, though.

    Besides Google phones, our roundup also includes a relatively rare discount on Microsoft's Xbox Series S, which is currently down to $250 at Adorama. This deal again matches the lowest price we've seen and should be reflected after adding the console to your cart. The Series S remains the weaker of the two current-gen Xbox consoles —it's usually good for playing in 1080p (and sometimes 1440p) at 60 fps, not the 4K output and more stable frame rates of the brawnier Xbox Series X. It also lacks a disc drive, and its 512GB of storage is relatively paltry. That said, it's still capable of playing everything the Series X can, it's physically much smaller, and most importantly, it's much cheaper. As your primary "next-gen" console, it's not an ideal (or especially future-proof) choice, but as a secondary device to cover Xbox exclusives, pair with an Xbox Game Pass subscription, or stick in a kid's bedroom, it's a decent value at this deal price. A recent game devkit update is expected to give a slight boost to the device's performance, too.

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      The best Labor Day tech deals we can find this weekend

      Ars Staff · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Saturday, 4 September, 2021 - 14:14 · 1 minute

    The best Labor Day tech deals we can find this weekend

    Enlarge (credit: Ars Technica)

    It's Labor Day Weekend in the US, which means the Dealmaster has once again been busy picking through a barrage of sales to help you find the best tech deals currently available. In general, Labor Day sales won't top Black Friday or Cyber Monday when it comes to the quality or quantity of worthwhile discounts, but if you can't wait another couple of months to pick up your gadget of choice, this year's holiday has brought a few deals of note.

    Our roundup includes a number of strong prices on Apple products, for one, including the "Product Red" edition of the Apple Watch Series 6 for $249 . Apple is expected to launch the Series 7 in the coming months, the discount only applies to the red model, and you may see shipping delays at Amazon. Still, this deal matches the lowest price we've tracked for what we consider the best all-around smartwatch you can buy right now.

    Beyond that, Apple's iPad Air is back down to its joint-low of $500 . That's still not cheap, but, particularly at this price, the Air remains the closest thing to a "just right" option in Apple's tablet lineup. Elsewhere, the entry-level MacBook Air is currently available for $850 , which again matches the lowest price we've tracked and is good value for what's still an excellent laptop for most casual needs . Other recommended Apple devices like the entry-level M1 Mac Mini , Pencil stylus, and MagSafe wireless charger are also on sale.

    Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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      The weekend’s best deals: Samsung microSD cards, gaming chairs, and more

      Ars Staff · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Saturday, 28 August, 2021 - 14:38 · 1 minute

    The weekend’s best deals: Samsung microSD cards, gaming chairs, and more

    Enlarge (credit: Ars Technica)

    Our latest Dealmaster includes a nice one-day sale on Samsung microSD cards, as the 256GB and 512GB variants of the company's Evo Select card are down to $28 and $60 at Amazon , respectively. The former discount is the best we've seen since January, while the latter matches the lowest price we've ever tracked. As we've noted before , this certainly isn't the fastest card on the market, but it's reliable and performant enough for most casual needs, making it a good value when it's on sale.

    Elsewhere, our deals roundup has a couple of steep discounts on Anda Seat's Kaiser 2 and T-Pro 2 gaming chairs. You can read our review from earlier this year for more details. While they're better suited for taller folks (think 5 feet, 8 inches or more), those who can fit into them should find them to provide sturdy frames and firm-but-generally-comfortable padding, regardless of whether they call themselves "gamers." Again, they're particularly solid value at these prices.

    Beyond that, we also have deals on Apple's wireless MagSafe charger, recommended webcams, Razer's handheld Kishi game controller for iOS, a couple of AMD Ryzen processors, and more. You can see the full rundown for yourself below.

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      New users can get 3 months of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate for $1 today

      Ars Staff · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Thursday, 13 May, 2021 - 19:33 · 1 minute

    A collage of electronic consumer goods against a white background.

    Enlarge (credit: Ars Technica)

    Today's Dealmaster is headlined by a new deal on Microsoft's Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, as new users can get three months of the video game subscription service for $1 . We've seen Microsoft offer this deal before, but it still represents a $30 savings. (The company typically gives new users one month of service for $1 before bumping the cost up to $15 per month.) Those who currently subscribe or have previously subscribed to Game Pass Ultimate aren't eligible for the discount.

    As a refresher, Game Pass Ultimate pairs Microsoft's Xbox Live Gold service—which is required for online play with most Xbox games—with its all-you-can-eat Game Pass subscriptions for Xbox consoles and PC for one monthly fee. A membership also includes access to the company's cloud gaming platform (which is out on Android and semi-available on iOS and Windows ) and a subscription to EA's Play service .

    The general consensus is that Game Pass Ultimate is one of gaming's best deals, and the Dealmaster is inclined to agree. The service's library now covers hundreds of games across genres: there's the expected Microsoft-made series like Halo , Forza , and Gears , but also titles from newly-acquired studio Bethesda , major sports games like MLB The Show and FIFA , larger-scale "triple-A" games like Destiny 2 , Control , and Outriders (some of which arrive on release day), older classics like Banjo-Kazooie and various Final Fantasy games, and indie gems like Subnautica , Celeste , and Outer Wilds , among many others. Games rotate in and out of the service over time, and you'll get the most out of it if you're constantly looking for new titles to sample. But it's not hard to see the value if you are that type of player (and own an Xbox).

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      Apple’s MagSafe wireless charger is on sale for a new low price today

      Ars Staff · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 11 May, 2021 - 18:14 · 1 minute

    Apple’s MagSafe wireless charger is on sale for a new low price today

    Enlarge (credit: Ars Technica)

    Today's Dealmaster is headlined by a new low price on Apple's MagSafe Charger for the iPhone 12, with the wireless charging pad marked down to just under $30 at Amazon and Walmart. While that's still not cheap by wireless charger standards, it is $10 off Apple's MSRP and about $5 off the usual going rate we've tracked online over the past couple of months.

    We recommended this charger in our guide to the best iPhone 12 accessories for supplying an advertised 15 W of power to Apple's latest smartphones, which makes it technically faster than most other wireless chargers on the market. It can get an iPhone 12 from 0 to 30 percent charge in about a half-hour and 0 to 60 percent in roughly one hour. Its magnetic design aligns easily and stays attached to those devices with little fuss, and it can work through certain MagSafe-compatible cases.

    The usual trade-offs with wireless chargers still apply here, namely that it's not truly wire-free and that using a traditional USB-C-to-Lightning cable with the appropriate charger will still top your device up noticeably faster. You'll need a 20 W or higher USB-C 3.0 PD wall charger on hand to reach the MagSafe Charger's maximum charging rate, too. But if you like the convenience of simply plopping your new iPhone on a pad to charge and are willing to pay a premium for the fastest wireless speeds possible, this deal should make the cost more manageable.

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