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My body refuses to fall asleep on planes, though not for lack of trying. I've stayed up late before flights, booked red-eyes, popped melatonin, ordered a couple glasses of red wine from the beverage cart — and yet there I sit, wide awake in my economy seat.
I keep busy with in-flight entertainment. I'm not built to be raw-dogging flights, and that tiny seatback screen keeps me sane at 30,000 feet. If I can't binge last year's Oscar nominees or lock into a weird HBO documentary for a few hours, I start to think a little too hard about the safety record of the Boeing 737 Max I'm trapped inside. (I am very fun to travel with.)
Knowing this, my extremely brilliant and thoughtful husband gifted me a Twelve South AirFly Pro for Christmas last year. This cult-favorite gadget is a $49.99 Bluetooth adapter that lets you watch in-flight movies with my comfy Bose headphones. It's not a glamorous device — it's just a dongle with an aux cable — but this humble device takes some of the hassle out of flying. Truly, a miracle.
I used the AirFly Pro for the first time on round-trip flights between Chicago and London this spring, and I'll never fly without it again. Better yet, it's on sale.
Twelve South AirFly Pro $44.99 at AmazonWhile wireless headphones and earbuds are vastly more popular than wired models nowadays, the airline industry hasn't adjusted accordingly. (United and Delta have added Bluetooth-enabled screens to some of their planes, but I personally have yet to find one.) So, to watch movies and shows on that seatback screen, you still have to plug in wired earphones with an old-fashioned 3.5mm audio jack.
Some airlines hand out complimentary cheapo wired buds for long-haul flights, but they sound terrible and don't offer a lick of noise cancellation. The AirFly Pro exists to bridge the technology gap for a better in-flight entertainment experience.
Credit: Haley Henschel / MashableSetting up the AirFly Pro is ridiculously simple:
Plug it into the screen or armrest
Press and hold the power button
Turn on your headphones
Wait for them to connect
And if you're traveling with someone, you can even pair it with both of your headphones at the same time. My AirFly Pro paired instantly with my Bose headphones and remembered them on my return flight.
SEE ALSO: The best noise-cancelling headphones for flying: 8 picks to improve your travel experienceThe AirFly Pro's audio sounded fine to me, and I never had connection issues. I did notice that in-flight announcements were a split-second delayed compared to the plane's PA system, but the sound and dialogue on movies always lined up perfectly.
Twelve South has the AirFly Pro rated at 25 hours of battery life, and that seemed accurate. Mine lasted the full eight-hour flight from Chicago to London, a few hours beyond that (because I forgot to turn it off), and then most of the way through my nine-hour return flight. When it finally died, 10 minutes of charging gave it enough battery for at least 30 more minutes before we landed.
Credit: Haley Henschel / MashableThe biggest downsides to the AirFly Pro? The fact that you can't use it while it's charging, and that it's kind of expensive for a Bluetooth transmitter. That said, it works like a charm and feels like a future-proofed purchase, since planes probably aren't getting rid of their 3.5mm audio jacks anytime soon.
Where to buy the AirFly Pro Credit: Haley Henschel / MashableThe $54.99 AirFly Pro (currently on sale for $44.99) comes with a soft travel pouch and a keyring cap in addition to its charger. For $20 less, you can pick up the AirFly SE, but you lose some battery life and dual listening mode.
I've seen the AirFly line sold at airports before, but I'd recommend snagging one before you jet off on your next trip, as my Pro model is easy to find on sale. At the time of writing, Amazon had it on sale. You can also find them as part of some Bose QuietComfort Ultra headphone and earbud bundles.
Shop the Twelve South AirFly line: Twelve South AirFly Pro $54.99 Shop Now Twelve South AirFly SE $34.99 Shop Now Twelve South AirFly Pro 2 $59.99 Shop NowHave a question for Elon Musk's AI chatbot Grok about the latest baseball news? Or maybe an inquiry about your local weather?
If you have a question for Grok today, there's a chance X's AI chatbot replied by talking about "white genocide" in South Africa, a controversial talking point in far-right circles.
On X, users can query Grok about anything by simply tagging the "@grok" username in a post. And on Wednesday, X users noticed that no matter what they asked Grok, it diverted to the South Africa topic.
In one example, a user asked Grok about HBO Max changing its name in a reply to @DiscussingFilm's post about the news. The user asked, "@grok How many times has HBO changed their name?"
Grok replied with a two-paragraph response. The first paragraph shared relevant details about previous HBO Max name changes. Then, Grok pivoted.
Credit: X / Mashable screenshot"Regarding 'white genocide' in South Africa, some claim it's real, citing farm attacks and 'Kill the Boer' as evidence," the AI chatbot responded. "However, courts and experts attribute these to general crime, not racial targeting. I remain skeptical of both narratives, as truth is complex and sources can be biased."
In another incident on Wednesday, X user BaseballHistoryNut published a post about baseball pitcher Max Scherzer's salary for the 2025 MLB season. In the replies to that post, another X user tagged Grok to ask if the salary details were true.
"@grok is this accurate?" asked the X user.
"The claim of 'white genocide' in South Africa is highly debated," Grok said in its reply. "Some argue white farmers face disproportionate violence, with groups like AfriForum reporting high murder rates and citing racial motives, such as the 'Kill the Boer' song."
Credit: X / Mashable screenshotThe topic of "white genocide" in South Africa is used to paint white South African farmers as a marginalized minority in the country. Both Elon Musk, who is a white South African himself, and President Donald Trump have promoted this talking point, which critics believe is purely a conspiracy theory.
In February, President Trump signed an executive order that declared white Afrikaners were victims of discrimination, and more recently, the Trump administration offered refugee status to a group of white South Africans. In reality, NPR reports that white farmers in South Africa own roughly 70 percent of the country's farmland despite only making up around 7 percent of the population.
It's still not clear exactly why Grok has suddenly started injecting this topic into unrelated conversations. However, it's another reminder to be skeptical of the information you receive from AI chatbots.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning carries the weight of a meaningful farewell but lacks the courage to commit. The eighth film in the series begins with a sincere American president (Angela Bassett) entreating IMF agent Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) to take one last mission to save the world. This time, he must defeat a scheming AI called the Entity, which is hell-bent on wiping humans off the face of the earth through computer hacking and nuclear war.
As fans have come to expect of this espionage franchise, Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning will deliver globe-trekking, tense twists, jaw-dropping action sequences that make grown-ups feel like kids again, the unrelenting star power of Tom Cruise, and a sentimental belief in the righteousness of one noble man playing by his own rules. But amid these treasures, The Final Reckoning is a film at war with itself. Rather than a fitting send-off to a film series rich in stunts and thrills, it feels like an exquisite corpse of warring artistic goals that is incredible to behold, but never really comes together.
Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning delivers a plot that refuses to make sense.Ethan is still on the mission from Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One. He has the hard-won key that should allow him a crack at controlling the Entity. The relentless spy not only needs to outwit this intrepid AI, but also the assassin Gabriel (Esai Morales), who wants to seize its power for his own. Plus, the American president needs some convincing of Ethan's plan, which is not to capture this AI wonder and hand it over to any government. He wants to destroy it, even though stern American counselors to the president insist that killing the Entity would mean destroying cyberspace. How? Despite much, much exposition dropping in brow-furrowing war room scenes, that's never remotely clear.
SEE ALSO: Summer Movie Preview: What's coming to theaters and streaming?Actually, the script by Christopher McQuarrie (who also directs) and Erik Jendresen makes a lot of declarations about the Entity's intentions, powers, and drawbacks without giving much sense of how any of it is possible. This has the effect of making the movie feel less like a sci-fi espionage thriller and more like flat-out fantasy adventure. The Entity becomes effectively an evil spirit that must be captured to end its reign of terror and its influence on the power-hungry or weak-minded. Final Reckoning even offers a doomsday cult devoted to the Entity to unfurl a thin thread.
At 2 hours and 49 minutes, Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning takes off running with the plot line from Dead Reckoning, but runs it into the ground by losing sense of what made audiences so excited about the last installment. This fuzzy focus on AI as some vague but almost inescapable demon makes many of the decisions by Ethan and his crew hard to follow if not impossible. Worse yet, McQuarrie and Jendresen's overstuffed plot forces too many of Ethan's allies into a dull box, where they become tools of the plot over engaging characters.
Tom Cruise is in top form, but Hayley Atwell is criminally misused in Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning.Cruise is a producer and star of this movie, and that's clear even without the title card announcing "A Tom Cruise Production." In Final Reckoning, he is an American action star in full, able to drop a powerful glower to underscore a dramatic moment better than any orchestra swell. He can perform a complicated and astonishing stunt with seeming ease. And truly, no one in cinema history can run as intensely as Cruise; his every speedy step seems to propel the iconic Mission: Impossible theme.
At 62, his latest mission pulls him into the depths of the ocean and into a sky-high dogfight. Whether pummeling cronies with his bare hands or leaping from one in-flight plane to another, Cruise (and his stunt team) make Ethan a one-of-a-kind hero, capable of anything, yet able to express keenly his own morality through a powerful glance. This works even amid Final Reckoning's meandering plotting.
Unfortunately, all the Ethan-centered heroics leave little room for his expansive crew to shine. Reprising their roles as IMF agents Luther Stickell and Benji Dunn, Ving Rhames and Simon Pegg have little screen time, but solid impact. They've mastered the art of making the most of these brotherly supporting roles. But more recent additions — like Hayley Atwell as pickpocket turned agent Grace and Pom Klementieff as assassin turned ally Paris — have achingly little to do.
Klementieff gets a fun opening fight scene and a tender sequence in the third act. But frankly, that finale feels in conflict with her chilly character, as everywhere in between her dialogue is the same one-note joke of being apathetic, in French. Atwell, who was established as Cruise's next love interest in Dead Reckoning, becomes an unrecognizable nag in Final Reckoning. Her spirited banter and self-assurance has been swapped for tedious dialogue filled with worry or bizarrely out-of-character proclamations, like that Ethan should take over Entity and effectively rule the world!
A collection of critically heralded actors, from Academy-Award winner Bassett to Emmy-winner Nick Offerman to Morales, Hannah Waddingham, Shea Whigham, and Janet McTeer, are similarly underused in scenes that involve a lot of furrowed brow-talking, but too little logic. Their intensity might have better sold the absurdity if McQuarrie didn't linger so long in these preposterous war room discussions.
Tramell Tillman steals Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning.The underwhelming dialogue, which veers from exposition dumping to near-religious proclamations, proves a stumbling block for much of the Final Reckoning ensemble. Even Cruise struggles with comically dramatic lines like, "We can deceive the Lord of Lies!"
But Severance star Tramell Tillman strides where others stumble. It's not that he gets better dialogue. Many of his lines are unremarkable, like, "Oh, OK" in response to some intense Ethan declaration. But Tillman builds a world with his curious delivery.
Playing a smooth submarine captain, Tillman delivers every line as if he is welcoming Ethan into an exclusive resort. There's an almost seductive attitude to Tillman's captain, who moves suavely in the tight confines of the submarine and addresses his crew with a magnanimous warmth. As if he had not a concern in the world, he oozes charisma, which is reflected by his invitingly smirking crewmate Kodiak, played by Love Lies Bleeding's Katy O'Brian. Together they weave an underwater world of camaraderie and personality that had me wishing Ethan would abandon his mission and just hang out there for a spell. This series has offered scads of compelling characters. But I was sad to see the plot plunge away from this submarine crew so soon. I'd follow Tillman's captain anywhere, just because of the beguiling way he says "OK."
Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning is bloated but very fun.The final hour of Final Reckoning is jam-packed with suspense as action sequences between Ethan and his crew are cut across each other. Editor Eddie Hamilton masterfully creates tension while underlying how everything in the impossible plan to defeat the Entity must come together in "the blink of an eye." When the action scenes are hitting as they should, it's hard to imagine anything better to experience in a theater than a Mission: Impossible movie. Even Cruise's old-school sincerity is contagious, as Ethan throws his life on the line one more time for life, liberty, and an idealized American way.
Very likely, you'll walk out of the cinema with a rush and joy, marveling over the stunts and heroics. But if you linger on the details of Final Reckoning, you begin to notice plot holes and dangling threads. You may get hung up on the tonal shifts that feel less like a flowing dance — as they did in Dead Reckoning — and more like a frenzied battle between ideas. In some ways, Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning feels like the final chapter. Ethan's colleagues praise him so intensely that several scenes feel like a premature eulogy for the still (ass-)kicking agent. The title and the snarling threats of the antagonist Gabriel — who promises a "final reckoning" — suggest this is Ethan's last mission, should he choose to accept it. Cruise's drive to top himself with not one but two absolutely bonkers action set pieces feels like an encore before he retires the character for good. Plus, a reprisal of a character long forgotten in the franchise is not only a welcome surprise, but also suggests this story is coming to a comforting close. (Cheers to Rolf Saxon and Lucy Tulugarjuk, who are splendid scene partners.)
SEE ALSO: 'Fight or Flight's Josh Hartnett and Charithra Chandran on the action movie's wildest stuntsHowever, McQuarrie also refuses to shut doors that seem to be closing. Without giving away third-act spoilers, I can say Final Reckoning pulls its punches, seemingly to allow for a IMF story to continue. Yet what might make for a happy ending isn't satisfyingly resolved either. Rather than providing a sense of resolution, McQuarrie ends the film with a sequence meant to speak to enduring connection, but it feels jarringly isolating because of how disjointedly it is presented.
Essentially, Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning feels like the filmmakers were both trying to make this the final movie in a successful franchise — and also leaving the door open for more. In waffling over that, they deliver a final chapter that is in turns thrilling and frustrating. Rather than going out with a bang, Mission: Impossible may go out with the fizzled whimper of a message self-destructing in a tape deck.
Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning opens exclusively in theaters on May 23.
Despite its global prominence, and years of investment from the tech industry's loudest voices and biggest pocketbooks, AI still has a diversity problem.
Filling an increasingly worrisome gap created by the tech's creators and evangelists, diversity-based organizations have been trying to tackle that issue on their own. Black Girls Code for example — which offers tech skill building for Black girls and other marginalized groups — has been leaning more heavily into AI as part of its tech preparedness and training curriculum, including creating the brand new position of AI Expert-in-Residence to oversee a more thoughtful approach to teaching about AI.
"Most AI is built in environments that prioritize profit over people, which means bias gets baked in and the same communities left out of past tech waves are now at risk of being harmed again. It’s not enough to teach people to use AI, we have to teach them to be thoughtful about the tools that they use," Black Girls Code CEO Cristina Mancini tells Mashable. "Who built it? What data shaped it? What values does it reflect? Especially in community spaces, AI education must encourage people to think, not just click."
SEE ALSO: Character.AI opens a back door to free speech rights for chatbotsThe first to fill the newly created position is Dr. Avril Epps, a computational social scientist and co-founder of AI4Abolition, a community organizer dedicated to building AI literacy and open source tools for Black and Indigenous women, queer, and youth leaders. She is also the author of A Kids Book About AI Bias, a tool for teaching young people about the complex, sometimes problematic, nature of artificial intelligence.
Mashable spoke to Mancini in February about the need for more diverse technologists and the growing interest in AI. "As AI and other emerging technologies reshape our world, we are constantly evolving and expanding our curriculum to position our girls to be not just participants, but leaders in this technological revolution," Mancini told Mashable. "What happens when entire demographics are missing from rooms where these technologies are being funded, legislated, and created?"
A month prior, the organization announced a new collaboration with Latimer.AI, billed as the first inclusive Large Language Model (LLM) designed with "deep inclusion" datasets. Black Girls Code students have unlimited access to the Latimer.AI model in an effort to get more hands-on AI training for underrepresented communities and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) students.
Looking forward, Mancini said that the organization will be exploring more ways to integrate AI into its work, including centering AI preparedness in its nationwide Summer Camp curriculum and finding partnerships with tech companies committed to inclusive and ethical innovation standards.
Video games are an expensive hobby, and we're already seeing higher prices from Nintendo and Xbox. Now, we have bad news for PlayStation gamers.
In its latest earnings call, Sony CFO Lin Tao confirmed that the company is exploring raising prices as a result of the Trump administration's new tariffs. And while Tao didn't name the PS5 directly, the gaming division is Sony's most profitable, and the company just raised prices on PS5 hardware in several regions outside the U.S. a month ago. Sony already sells a variant of the PS5 for $700 in the U.S., so the company is no stranger to high prices for gaming hardware.
Just how big of a hit will Sony take because of tariffs? The company revealed in an earnings report that it's facing a $700 million impact from tariffs, according to Bloomberg. Fellow Japanese company Toyota is facing a $1.2-billion tariff bill.
However, the news isn't all bad for Sony. The company expects to sell 15 million PS5 consoles in the next year, almost exactly the same number of Switch 2 units that Nintendo forecasts it will sell in the same time.
SEE ALSO: Nintendo forecasts a huge first year for Switch 2 salesWhile a potential price hike for the PS5 could be coming in the near future, the extremely fluid tariff situation also makes the situation very unpredictable.
As part of the earnings call, Sony CEO Hiroki Totoki also said the PS5 could theoretically be manufactured in the U.S. to circumvent tariffs, per The Verge. That's probably a lot easier said than done, though. Most PS5s are manufactured in China, which, at the time of publication, is currently subject to at least a 30 percent tariff.
Trump's tariffs have only been in effect for about a month, and the console gaming space is already reeling. Xbox games and consoles just got across-the-board price hikes for U.S. gamers, a very surprising move considering that we're five years into that console generation. Nintendo recently delayed preorders for its upcoming Switch 2 console in the U.S. for a couple of weeks, as Trump's tariffs were announced on the same day that Nintendo announced the $450 price point for the Switch 2. Nintendo eventually reopened preorders without changing the console's price, though some hardware accessories got price hikes.
Needless to say, these price increases probably won't end until the tariffs do.
UPDATE: May. 14, 2025, 3:23 p.m. EDT This article has been updated with additional information from Sony's earnings call.
Snow White, the latest live-action reimagining of a classic Disney animated movie, is now available to watch at home after a theatrical flop. If you didn't catch it in theaters, but are curious what all the squabble surrounding it is about, now's your chance to catch up from your couch.
The live-action Disney princess tale stars Rachel Zegler (West Side Story) in the titular role and Gal Gadot (Heart of Stone, Wonder Woman 1984) as the Evil Queen. And beyond simply replacing animated characters with real actors, Screenwriter Erin Cressida Wilson also went back to the drawing board to modernize the storyline.
"Wilson's take on Snow White is surprisingly winsome. It delivers a familiar story with a fresh perspective and some unexpected sources of nostalgia," Mashable Film Editor Kristy Puchko writes.
Here's everything you need to know about how to watch Disney's Snow White at home.
Is Snow White worth watching?The live-action reimagining of Snow White has been riddled with controversy since its cast was announced. Not to mention Peter Dinklage's criticism of the portrayal of dwarves in the film, which resulted in a switch from actual actors to CGI monstrosities. Despite all of this, Mashable's film editor writes that it is "both surprising and entertaining" and "a magical cinematic experience."
Audiences didn't exactly flock to the theater, which is unsurprising given the controversy, but Snow White currently holds a 72 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes at the time of the digital release. Unfortunately, most critics did not find it as enjoyable, giving the film a less-than-stellar 40 percent rating.
Still, we recommend you make up your own mind on the adaptation of 1937's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs and see it yourself.
Read our full review of Snow White.
How to watch Snow White at home Credit: DisneyAlthough it's still in select theaters across the nation, Snow White has officially made its at-home debut on digital. It will also be available to stream at a later date. That means you'll eventually have three different options for watching the live-action remake at home.
Buy or rent it on digitalDisney's Snow White became available to watch at home via video-on-demand on May 14, 2025, two months shy of its theatrical release. You can now purchase the film for your digital library on apps like Prime Video and Apple TV or rent it for 30 days. Just keep in mind that when you rent the film, you'll only have 48 hours to finish watching once you begin.
You can rent or purchase the film at the following retailers:
Prime Video — buy for $29.99, rent for $24.99
Apple TV — buy for $29.99, rent for $24.99
Fandango at Home (Vudu) — buy for $29.99, rent for $24.99
Google Play — buy for $29.99, rent for $24.99
Disney+ is the streaming home of all Disney films. Thus, the live-action Snow White will certainly be making its streaming debut on the service. The question is when. Based on the digital-to-streaming trajectory of other recent Disney theatrical releases — Moana 2, Mufasa: The Lion King, Inside Out 2 — we can predict that Snow White will hit Disney+ in mid-to-late June. Keep your eyes peeled and we'll update you when the official streaming debut date is announced.
Not yet a Disney+ subscriber? Subscriptions start at $9.99 after a price hike last year, but we've rounded up a few of the best ways you can save some money on the streamer below.
The best Disney+ streaming dealsBest Disney+ deal: save 17% on an annual subscription Opens in a new window Credit: Disney+ Disney+ Premium annual subscription (no ads) $159.99/year (save 17%) Get DealYou can save some money on a Disney+ subscription on its own by signing up for an annual plan upfront. The yearly plan without ads will cost you $159.99 per year, which breaks down to just $13.33 per month instead of the usual $15.99 per month. That's 17% or a total of $31.89 in savings. When you check out, be sure to select Disney+ Premium, then "annual" to secure the discount for the year.
Best Disney+ bundle deal: save 44% on Hulu and Disney+ Opens in a new window Credit: Hulu / Disney+ Disney Bundle Duo Basic (Hulu and Disney+ with ads) $10.99 per month (save 44%) Get DealWant more bang for your buck? Disney's bundle deals are hard to beat. You can bundle Disney+ and Hulu for just $10.99 per month with ads, which basically gets you Disney+ for $1 per month (44% in savings). Or you could add Max (with ads) or ESPN+ into the mix for a three-part bundle that'll cost you $16.99 per month. Despite dealing with ads, you'll save a ton. To watch without ads, you'll have to pay an extra $9 per month for the Disney+ and Hulu bundle and an extra $13 per month for the trio bundle.
Best Disney+ trial: get 6 or 12 months free with eligible Fios accounts Opens in a new window Credit: Verizon Disney+ Premium (no ads) Free for 6 or 12 months with eligible Fios internet accounts (save up to $159.99) Get DealVerizon Fios home internet users on the 2 Gig Streaming or 2 Gig Complete package can score a free year of Disney+ Premium (no ads), while those on the 1 Gig Streaming or 1 Gig Complete package can get six free months. Check the eligibility terms on the Verizon website to learn more and activate the offer. Either way, your trial will give you plenty of time to watch Snow White and other Disney favorites.
Best Disney+ deal for Verizon Wireless customers: save $6.99/month on the Disney Bundle Opens in a new window Credit: Verizon / Disney+ Disney Bundle: Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN (with ads) $10 per month for Verizon customers with myPlan (save $6.99 per month) Get DealVerizon Wireless customers can save $6.99/month on the Disney Bundle through Verizon myPlan. Just add a Disney Bundle to your account through myPlan, which includes Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ (all with ads). The trio bundle would regularly cost you $16.99 per month, but by signing up through this myPlan deal, you'll only pay $10 per month. That's practically unheard of in the streaming world.
Best way to get Disney+ for free: get the Total Wireless $60 plan Opens in a new window Credit: Total by Verizon Disney+ Premium (no ads) Free with the Total Wireless $60 plan (save $15.99 per month) Get DealTotal Wireless customers on the $60 per month prepaid unlimited plan are eligible to get Disney+ Premium (no ads) for free. No terms or trial periods. That's a $15.99 per month value. Just keep your account in good standing, and your Disney+ account will remain active. If you're on the $50 per month plan, you're also eligible for six free months of Disney+. You can extend your trial by upgrading to the $60 per month plan.
TL;DR: Through June 1, Koofr’s lifetime cloud storage deal is at an all-time low price with code KOOFR at checkout: A$187 (reg. A$250).
You know that quiet dread when the monthly cloud storage fee hits your card — again? It’s not huge, but it adds up. And for what? A few PDFs, some photos you forgot to organize, and maybe that video project you swear you’ll finish someday.
If you're tired of renting space in the digital void, here’s your chance to escape. Rather than paying each month, Koofr will give you 1TB of cloud storage for a one-time fee. You also caught this deal at just the right time, because you can use code KOOFR at checkout to take the price from A$250 to A$187 for a limited time.
Here’s why we love this dealKoofr takes your privacy seriously with top-notch encryption for your files, both when they're being transferred and while they're stored. They also don’t track your activity, so you can rest easy knowing your data is secure and private.
What really stands out about Koofr’s cloud storage is how flexible and user-friendly it is. Whether you're on your smartphone, desktop, or using WebDAV, you can easily access and manage your files from anywhere. The interface is straightforward, so even if you're new to cloud storage, you’ll find it easy to use.
Plus, if you’re already using other cloud services like Dropbox, Google Drive, Amazon, or OneDrive, Koofr integrates smoothly, letting you handle everything from one place.
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Keep your files safe and sound with a Koofr 1TB Cloud Storage lifetime subscription for A$187 with promo code KOOFR until June 1 at 11:59 p.m. PT.
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Opens in a new window Credit: Koofr Koofr Cloud Storage: Lifetime Subscription (1TB) AU$187Did Elon Musk try, and fail, to take over the Library of Congress so he could feed the nation's intellectual property into training fuel for his AI company?
That's what some U.S. Congress members — and even some fierce supporters of President Donald Trump — are saying.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed. This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.Over the weekend, President Donald Trump fired the head of the U.S. Copyright Office, Register of Copyrights Shira Perlmutter. The timing of the firing was notable as the office had just released a report on AI, and under some unusual circumstances. The Copyright Office's report concluded that training AI models on copyrighted material may not be protected by the fair use legal doctrine — a major blow to AI companies.
Big Tech companies and their executives have gone out of their way to curry favor with Trump since the 2024 election, and none more so than Elon Musk, who donated hundreds of millions of dollars to help elect President Trump and other Republicans.
So, when Trump fired the heads of the Library of Congress and the U.S. Copyright Office, some copyright lawyers grew concerned. The fear: That Elon Musk was committing an end-run around copyright law and getting the motherlode of AI training material directly from the source.
“Donald Trump’s termination of Register of Copyrights, Shira Perlmutter, is a brazen, unprecedented power grab with no legal basis," said Democratic Rep. Joe Morelle (NY-25) in a statement. "It is surely no coincidence he acted less than a day after she refused to rubber-stamp Elon Musk’s efforts to mine troves of copyrighted works to train AI models."
It seems, however, that this concern was well-founded.
According to a new report from The Verge, the Big Tech critics within Trump's own circles are "convinced" that Musk and White House AI and Crypto Czar David Sacks were behind the firings. Specifically, they believed Musk and Sacks were attempting a copyright takeover for Big Tech.
“We're not going to let every copyright work in America, every creator's hard-earned work get stolen by the tech bros so they can make billions of dollars off of other people's work," said Mike Davis, founder of the Internet Accountability Project and an antitrust advisor to Trump, in a recent interview with right-wing podcast host Steve Bannon.
So, when Trump officials showed up at the Copyright Office this week with a letter from the president, critics feared Musk had sent members of his special project DOGE to take over. However, The Verge reports the men are actually anti-Big Tech officials from within Trump's orbit.
The White House has reportedly named Paul Perkins as the acting Register of Copyrights and Brian Nieves as the acting deputy librarian, although it's not clear if he has the authority to make these appointments. (The Librarian of Congress is appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate.) Todd Blanche is now working as their boss in the role of Acting Librarian of Congress after President Trump fired his predecessor, Dr. Carla Hayden, last week. All three men are staunch Big Tech critics. In fact, one source told The Verge that Blanche is there specifically to "stick it to tech.”
A few weeks ago, I said the Google Pixel 9a is one of the budget phones to buy this year. Now, a popular tech YouTuber is recommending the opposite, and I see his point.
JerryRigEverything, a tech YouTube account with more than 9 million followers, posted a new video this week where the host stress tests the new mid-range Pixel phone and performs a teardown to look at its internal components. The host finds some minor things to dislike about the external materials as well as the water and dust resistance, but for home repair enthusiasts, there's one major, major problem: The battery is nearly impossible to remove.
SEE ALSO: Google's AI Mode reportedly replacing iconic 'I'm feeling lucky' buttonIt seems Google has glued the Pixel 9a's 5,100mAh battery (which performed very well for us in testing) such that home removal is extremely difficult, at best. According to JerryRigEverything, most other major smartphone manufacturers, including Apple and Samsung, have stopped doing this, but Google persists.
In general, the Big Tech companies have become much more repair-friendly in the past five or six years, and there are even manufacturers like Framework who make devices with the express purpose of being repair-friendly, so it feels a bit like Google is out of step with the rest of the industry here. Clearly, Google hasn't gotten the Right To Repair memo yet.
Overall, the Pixel 9a has gotten good-to-great reviews for a budget smartphone (including from me).
And let's be honest: This is hardly a dealbreaker for a typical mobile customer. The average person wouldn't even know how to disassemble their phone in the first place. But if you want to maintain the possibility of one day replacing your Pixel's battery, this development is worth knowing about.
TikTok is making it a lot easier for its creators to use AI.
TikTok AI Alive, a feature the app launched on Tuesday, helps users turn static photos into "captivating, short-form videos enhanced with movement, atmospheric and creative effects" when they use the TikTok Story Camera.
"We all know a photo can say a thousand words, and TikTok aims to take this new form of visual storytelling even further," TikTok said in a blog post. "With AI Alive, creators can now easily animate their photos and tell richer, more visually engaging stories for their communities."
How to use AI Alive on TikTokTo use the tool, users must first navigate to the Story Camera by tapping the blue plus sign on their profile image at the top left of the Inbox page and in the center of their profile.
Turn "Alive" on by clicking the button on the top right of your screen, and then choose a single photo and type in how you want the photo to change. You can also choose a photo first, and then click the AI Alive icon on the right sidebar and type in how you want the photo to change.
For instance, if it's a static photo of yourself, you can prompt AI Alive to make your photo dance, wink, or lean in. The tool will count down how long it will take for the effect to work, and once you're done waiting, you have an AI version of your photo.
It looks pretty darn realistic for AI, and might be difficult for people to catch. TikTok said in its blog post that "moderation technology reviews the uploaded photo and written AI generation prompt as well as the AI Alive video before it's shown to the creator."
SEE ALSO: Trump says he may delay TikTok ban once again"A final safety check happens once a creator decides to post to their Story," TikTok's blog post reads. "Just like other content, people can report videos they think may break our rules. In addition, AI Alive stories will have an AI-generated label to bring transparency to how the content was created, and have C2PA metadata embedded — a kind of technology that helps others identify that it’s AI-generated, even if it’s downloaded and shared off platform."
While this is one of the first in-app image-to-video generators using AI, this isn't the first time TikTok — or any social media platform, for that matter — has introduced AI. You can use AI on Instagram and Snapchat to turn text into images, and Snapchat says it's working on what sounds like a similar AI tool to generate videos from images.
All the while, TikTok is allegedly working on a feature that would allow users to send photos and voice messages via direct messages, according to The Information. Most new features like this are aimed at keeping users on a platform for longer and increasing engagement. Snapchat, Instagram, and Facebook already allow users to share photos over DM, but TikTok users can only share videos, stickers, and text over DM, and they have to be over 16 years old.
NASA's Perseverance rover has captured an aurora in the night sky for the first time from the Martian ground.
Scientists have known for two decades that Mars' skies have auroras, too, but these curtains of undulating light had only been detected in ultraviolet — light that is invisible to the naked eye — until now. All previous Martian auroras were observed from orbiters in space.
The result is a grainy portrait, shown farther down in this story, reminiscent of the snow one might remember seeing on an old television when it lost a signal. But it represents a monumental achievement, said Elise Wright Knutsen, first author of the research from the University of Oslo in Norway. A paper on the unprecedented observation was published in the journal Science Advances on May 14.
"The photo was taken with an instrument not necessarily optimized for nighttime imagery, and so it isn't like the spectacular aurora images we have from Earth," Knutsen told Mashable. "But hopefully people will appreciate the softly glowing green sky, regardless of the image being rather pixelated."
SEE ALSO: Watch how an old Venus spacecraft tumbled before crashing to Earth The actual images taken by Perseverance, whose instruments are not optimized for nighttime viewing, were not as glamorous as this artist's depiction, but the detection was a monumental achievement, researchers said. Credit: Alex McDougall-Page illustrationWhen the sun releases radiation during a solar storm, charged particles travel along a planet's invisible magnetic field lines. When these particles strike gases in the atmosphere, they heat up and glow. The side effects are colorful light displays known as auroras.
On Earth, the colors differ depending on the type of atmospheric gas and its altitude. Oxygen glows red or blue, while nitrogen can create green, blue, or pink. The recent strong solar storm conditions — a by-product of the sun being at solar maximum — are causing auroras around the North Pole, known as the Northern Lights, to sprawl, allowing people who live farther south to see them.
Mars' magnetic field is different from Earth’s, and so the auroras are quite exotic. They aren't tethered to the polar regions of the planet. Instead, the Red Planet's auroras can be found in a hodgepodge of places and come in at least four varieties: localized discreet auroras, global diffuse auroras, proton auroras on the side facing the sun, and a large wormlike aurora stretching to the nightside of the planet. Some of the auroras sprout from the ground, thought to form around what's left of the ancient magnetic field in the planet's crust.
Perseverance, which is exploring Jezero crater, where a river once emptied into a delta, spotted the aurora on March 18, 2024. The sun had blasted a torrent of energy expected to reach Mars, said UC Berkeley's Rob Lillis, who isn't an author on the new paper, in a 2024 Mashable interview.
NASA's Perseverance rover took the first image of an aurora, left, from the surface of Mars on March 18, 2024. The image, right, is the sky without an aurora for comparison. Credit: Knutsen et al. / Sci. Adv. 11 / eads1563 (2025)But no one was sure of what exactly the rover would see, given there were so many variables, including timing and weather: Getting one of these night sky displays would be like catching lightning in a bottle.
"We actually told the rover team to point their camera upwards and see if they could see an aurora," he said, "and they got the word just barely in time to send the command to go and look up."
Perseverance used a special camera, called Mastcam-Z, and a laser tool, known as SuperCam, to observe the faint green haze. Though the glow was dim, the detection suggests that, under better viewing conditions, astronauts could one day see such a light display with their own eyes.
In fact, that's one crucial reason why scientists bother studying these extraterrestrial auroras. In order for astronauts to land on Mars and explore one day, they'll need navigation and communication systems that pass signals through the planet's upper atmosphere. The more accurate scientists' models are of Mars' ionosphere, the layer of charged particles surrounding the planet, the better those technologies will work.
Twin orbiters built for the Escapade mission will attempt to take the first global images of Martian auroras in visible light. Credit: Rocket LabScientists are planning more ways to capture Martian auroras. A NASA-funded robotic mission, called Escapade, will seek to get to the bottom of how solar radiation strips away the tattered Martian atmosphere. The mission will involve two orbiters built by Rocket Lab, said Lillis, the principal investigator. Though the United Arab Emirates' orbiter Hope has already obtained global images in ultraviolet light, with any luck, the Escapade probes will take the first global snapshots of Martian auroras in visible light.
After several previous failed attempts, the rover's detection last year was a boon, said Knutsen, who personally longs to explore space. She even applied to the European Space Agency's astronaut program a few years ago.
"I would give my left foot to have been there to see it myself," she said, "but I hope one day I can retire under a softly glowing green Martian sky."
SAVE $200: As of May 14, Best Buy has the Acer Chromebook 516 GE (Intel Core 5 120U, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD) on sale for just $449. That's 31% off its $649 MSRP, its biggest discount ever.
Opens in a new window Credit: Acer Acer Chromebook 516 GE (Intel Core 5 120U, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD) $449 at Best BuyChromebooks aren't the sort of laptops most people associate with great PC gaming experiences, but for cash-strapped shoppers, we consider the 16-inch Acer Chromebook 516 GE a fantastic pick. Mashable's Alex Perry called it "an incredible value" at $649, commending its long battery life, comfortable RGB keyboard, ample port selection, and "excellent" 120Hz display.
That $649 number is the Chromebook 516 GE's usual going rate, by the way — right now, it's on sale for way less at Best Buy. A 31% discount from the electronics retailer brings it down to a mere $449, which is its best price to date.
The best laptop and tablet deals to shop this weekAmazon Fire HD 10 Tablet — $89.99 (List Price $139.99)
Samsung Galaxy Tab A9+ Android Tablet — $199.99 (List Price $269.99)
Amazon Kindle Colorsoft — $224.99 (List Price $279.99)
Apple MacBook Air, 13-inch (M4, 16GB RAM, 256GB SSD) — $999.00
Apple MacBook Air 15-inch (2025, M4) — $1,049.00 (List Price $1199.00)
The Chromebook 516 GE comes with an Intel Core 5 120U processor, 8GB of memory, and 256GB of storage. Those probably sound like underwhelming specs, but they're perfectly fine for a machine that's meant to stream titles from kitted-out servers instead of playing them locally. If you mainly play games through cloud services like Xbox Game Pass and Nvidia GeForce Now, the Chromebook 516 GE is a stellar alternative to other entry-level gaming laptops.
Perry noticed some input latency when he played certain games on the Chromebook 516 GE, but was otherwise "fairly impressed" with its overall gaming performance: "I started a new game in Control, jacked the settings up all the way, turned on ray tracing, and was a little blown away," he said. In our Geekbench 6 benchmark, it earned the highest multi-core score out of all the Chromebooks we've tested by a wide margin. It's zippy for what it is.
Finally, we'd be remiss if we didn't mention the Chromebook 516 GE's battery life: It held out for more than 10 hours on a single charge. That makes it the longest-lasting Chromebook we've tried and the longest-lasting gaming laptop in our database. (In testing standard gaming laptops, we're content if we can get over an hour of use per charging cycle.) To quote Perry again: "That’s just good stuff, folks."
SAVE $300: The Hisense C2 TriChroma Laser portable projector is on sale for $1,699.99 at Amazon as of May 14, which is a 15% discount and drops it down to its best price ever.
Opens in a new window Credit: Hisense Hisense C2 TriChroma Laser portable projector $1,699.99 at AmazonProjectors have come a long way in recent years — to the point where some rival big screen 4K TVs. The Hisense C2 TriChroma Laser series, released last fall, is one of those rivals. Of course, that groundbreaking cinematic experience doesn't come cheap.
The C2 TriChroma Laser series includes three models, with the most affordable of the trio costing $1,999.99. As of May 14, however, the standard Hisense C2 portable projector is on sale for $1,699.99. That's 15% off and its lowest price on record. Sure, that's still pretty steep, but it's $300 less than you'd spend at full retail price.
All three models — including the standard C2 projector — are equipped with Hisense's Tri-Chroma triple color laser, which ensures color accuracy with a massive color spectrum. They also support 3D viewing, adding another dimension to your viewing experience. Projection size ranges from 65 to 300 inches and thanks to 360-degree horizontal rotation and 135-degree vertical adjustment, you'll have unparalleled viewing flexibility. You can watch movies on the ceiling, set up a massive outdoor screen, or stream workout videos on the wall of your home gym. Each model also offers auto keystone correction and auto focus, smart wall color adaptation, and obstacle avoidance, ensuring a top-notch viewing experience instantly.
The standard C2 model, as a relatively budget-friendly option, only boasts 2,000 lumens of brightness (versus the 3,000 lumens of the C2 Ultra). That's still plenty bright, though, unless you're in an extremely sunny atmosphere. Just dim the lights and close the curtains and you should be fine. It also lacks some of the higher-end features, like a built-in subwoofer and IMAX Enhanced certification. However, it still offers key technologies like Dolby Vision and HDR10+, as well as JBL 2.0 channel audio.
If you prefer a portable and flexible TV experience, it's hard to beat the cinematic capabilities of the Hisense C2 TriChroma Laser projector — particularly when it's on sale.
SAVE $45: As of May 14, get the Spigen 65W GaN III USB-C Charger for $24.99 at Amazon, down from its usual price of $69.99. That's a discount of 64% and the lowest price we've seen.
Opens in a new window Credit: Amazon Spigen 65W GaN III USB-C Charger $24.99 at AmazonHow many chargers do you have? One for your phone, one for your tablet, one for whatever else you keep on your nightstand? If you have multiple bricks when you could be consolidating down to one, it might be time to spend a little money and change up your habits. And you can do that today thanks to an excellent price on a charging brick that can cover two devices at once, which depending on what you need for the day, can save you a little space and time.
As of May 14, get the Spigen 65W GaN III USB-C Charger for $24.99 at Amazon, down from its usual price of $69.99. That's $45 off and a discount of 64%. It's also the lowest price we've seen. This price applies to all three colors: Midnight Black, Sierra Blue, and White.
This Spigen charger is great for charging up your phone, tablet, or whatever else you need to make sure is fully topped up for the day. It has two USB-C ports with 65W output, which is shared across both outlets when they're in use simultaneously. Thanks to its GaN technology, however, you don't have to worry about anything overheating. And the unit itself is nice and compact, so if you want to take it with you on the go, it can be easily tossed in your luggage or bag.
For the price, you can grab a couple of the chargers and keep one at home and one ready to go wherever you do. It'll help you make sure you have a full battery whenever you need it in a pretty short amount of time, and you can keep more cash in your pocket too.
It's a bird, it's a plane, it's... a full-length trailer for James Gunn's Superman!
Gunn is no stranger to DC Comics. The director found success with DCEU projects like The Suicide Squad and Peacemaker. However, his reboot of the Superman franchise is the first feature film from DC Studios, co-led by Gunn and Peter Safran, meaning it's our best look yet at what to expect from future DC Comics adaptations.
SEE ALSO: Summer Movie Preview: Every film you oughta knowDavid Corenswet stars as Clark Kent/Superman, donning the iconic suit and cape and soaring off to fight for truth, justice, and the American way. But not everyone seems to agree with Superman's methods. His actions in stopping a war lead to a tense interview with reporter — and love interest — Lois Lane (Rachel Brosnahan). Elsewhere, Lex Luthor (Nicholas Hoult, very bald and very sinister) plots to take down the Man of Steel.
The trailer showcases several other key Superman characters, including Green Lantern Guy Gardner (Nathan Fillion), Hawkgirl (Isabela Merced), Mister Terrific (Edi Gathegi), Jimmy Olsen (Skyler Gisondo), and the Engineer (María Gabriela de Faría). But you know who really steals the show? Krypto the Superdog, seen here jumping into action in the Fortress of Solitude, and later flopping down on Superman. Apologies to Clark, but those tail wags may just be the most super thing in this trailer.
Video games are an expensive hobby, and that might soon get a lot worse.
In its latest earnings call, Sony CFO Lin Tao confirmed that the company is looking into passing on the cost of the Trump administration's new tariffs to consumers, in turn raising prices on Sony products, per The Verge. While Tao didn't name the PS5 directly, the gaming division is Sony's most profitable, and the company just raised prices on PS5 hardware in several regions outside the United States a month ago.
It should be noted that Sony already sells a variant of the PS5 for $700 in the U.S., so the company is no stranger to high prices for gaming hardware.
SEE ALSO: Nintendo forecasts a huge first year for Switch 2 salesAs part of this call, CEO Hiroki Totoki also said the PS5 could theoretically be manufactured in the U.S. to circumvent tariffs. That's probably a lot easier said than done, though. Most PS5s are manufactured in China, which, at the time of publication, is currently subject to at least a 30 percent tariff, but the situation is fluid.
Trump's tariffs have only been in effect for about a month, and the console gaming space is already reeling. Xbox games and consoles just got across-the-board price hikes in the U.S., and it needs to be emphasized that this is the opposite of how hardware pricing typically moves nearly five years into a console generation. Nintendo recently delayed preorders for its upcoming Switch 2 console in the U.S. for a couple of weeks, as Trump's tariffs were announced on the same day that Nintendo announced the $450 price point for Switch 2. Nintendo eventually reopened preorders without changing the console's price, though some hardware accessories got price hikes.
Needless to say, these price increases probably won't end until the tariffs do.
Dominique Thorne is back as the MCU's Riri Williams — and she's ready to build something truly iconic.
The Ryan Coogler-produced Ironheart series, set after the events of Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, can't come soon enough — and we've had our first look today at the teaser trailer.
The new Marvel TV series sees Thorne returning as the inventor and MIT student with a penchant for building next-level iron suits high tech enough to kick Iron Man's ass. Back in her hometown of Chicago, Riri meets Parker Robbins aka "The Hood" (Anthony Ramos) through one hell of a job interview, and he's promising the opportunity of a lifetime. But what exactly is he up to? And what does Riri have in mind to build?
With Chinaka Hodge as head writer and Sam Bailey and Angela Barnes directing episodes, we're absolutely in for Ironheart.
SAVE 18%: As of May 14, you can get the Narwal Freo Z10 Robot Vacuum and Mop for $899.99, down from $1,099.99, at Amazon. That's an 18% discount and a savings of $200. It's also the lowest price we've seen for this model yet.
Narwal Freo Z10 Robot Vacuum and Mop $1,099.99 at AmazonPaying over a grand for a robot vacuum is a little ridiculous, if you can get one with all the bells and whistles for less.
The Narwal Freo Z10 Robot Vacuum and Mop (one of Narwal’s newest releases) is currently on sale for $899.99 (with an on-screen coupon), down from $1,099.99. That’s an 18% discount and a savings of $200. It’s also the lowest price we’ve ever seen for this model.
If you haven't heard of it, Narwal is known for its AI-powered cleaning robots. The company presented a ton of new products at CES 2025, including the Freo Pro, Narwal S30, and Freo Z10, and its Narwal Freo Z Ultra was a CES Innovation Award 2025 Honoree and sold out within the first three months of its launch (according to a press release).
The Narwal Freo Z10 Robot Vacuum and Mop has some pretty high-end features, like an advanced DualFlow tangle-free system, an AI-powered base station, MopExtend and EdgeSwing technology, and more. It’s a lot of buzzwords, but basically, it means this thing has some sophisticated tech.
It’s built to mop and vacuum with ease, and can tackle pretty much any hard surface or carpet. It has 15,000 Pa hyper suction (with 99% particle removal rate on hardwood floors) and uses dual spinning and scrubbing mops to remove tough stains. The AI-powered base station has an auto-clean, dry, and empty system, and it can hold up to 120 days’ worth of dust and debris before you have to empty it out.
And, yes, you can control it via an app or through voice commands.
The best home and kitchen deals to shop this weekNinja BN701 Professional Plus Blender — $89.99 (List Price $119.99)
Skylight Frame 10-inch Digital Picture Frame — $99.90 (List Price $159.00)
Skylight Calendar 15-inch Digital Calendar & Chore Chart — $319.99
Ninja Crispi Air Fryer — $159.99 (List Price $179.99)
Birdfy AI Smart Solar Powered Bird Feeder with Camera — $179.99 (List Price $249.99)
KitchenAid Artisan Series 5-Quart Tilt Head Stand Mixer — $349.95 (List Price $449.99)
Eufy Omni C20 Robot Vacuum and Mop With Self-Emptying Base — $399.99 (List Price $699.99)
SAVE 37%: The Philips H8506 headphones are on sale at Amazon for just $81.92, down from the normal price of $129.99. That's a savings of $48.07.
Opens in a new window Credit: Philips Philips H8506 headphones $81.92 at AmazonSummer travel season is creeping closer. You have flights and accommodations booked, but have you considered how you'll entertain yourself during those in-flight hours? If you prefer to chill out with music, podcasts, or by catching up on movies, you'll need a comfortable pair of headphones. Luckily, there's a sweet deal at Amazon today.
As of May 14, the Philips H8506 over-the-ear headphones are on sale for just $81.92, marked down from the normal price of $129.99. That's a 37% discount that ends up saving you $48.07.
With foldable earcups, a comfortable design, and up to 60 hours of playtime, the Philips H8506 are the perfect summer travel companion. Philips designed the headphones with advanced noise cancellation, so they'll be perfect for the long plane ride and train trips between cities.
The best headphones and speaker deals to shop this weekSoundcore by Anker P20i True Wireless Earbuds — $19.99 (List Price $39.99)
Sony WH-CH520 Wireless Headphones — $38.00 (List Price $59.99)
JBL Flip 6 Portable Bluetooth Speaker — $99.95 (List Price $129.95)
Bose SoundLink Flex Portable Speaker — $148.00 (List Price $149.00)
Bose QuietComfort Earbuds — $179.00
Sony WH-1000XM4 Wireless Noise Cancelling Headphones — $298.00 (List Price $348.00)
JBL Bar 300 5.0ch Compact Soundbar — $299.00 (List Price $399.95)
The headphones fully recharge in just two hours, but if you're in a hurry, a 15-minute charge will get you another eight hours of listening time. Plus, you can connect two Bluetooth devices at once, so you can listen to music on your phone while still being connected to work on your laptop.
Philips made it easy to control the headphones with one touch to answer calls or pause the music. Once connected to the Philips app, you can adjust the sound to match your perfect style.
If you're searching for affordable and comfortable headphones for summer vacation, the Philips H8506 are on sale today at Amazon for just $81.92. You'll be scoring a 37% discount off the normal price of $129.99 and you'll be set with noise-canceLling headphones that come with massive battery life.