Toyota’s Hydrogen-Powered Tacoma Concept Charges EVs And Filters Water In The Wild

Toyota's Hydrogen-Powered Tacoma Concept Charges EVs And Filters Water In The Wild
Blink and you might mistake Toyota’s Tacoma H2-Overland Concept as a regular butched-up offroad Tacoma. Shown at SEMA in Las Vegas all of this week, the truck quietly hides some cool tech at a show that is typically dominated by V8s, flashing RGBs, and blinding chrome. Developed by Toyota Racing Development (TRD) teams from California and

Microsoft AI Chief Says Only Biological Beings Can Be Conscious

Microsoft AI chief Mustafa Suleyman says only biological beings are capable of consciousness, and that developers and researchers should stop pursuing projects that suggest otherwise. From a report: “I don’t think that is work that people should be doing,” Suleyman told CNBC in an interview this week at the AfroTech Conference in Houston, where he was among the keynote speakers. “If you ask the wrong question, you end up with the wrong answer. I think it’s totally the wrong question.”

Suleyman, Microsoft’s top executive working on artificial intelligence, has been one of the leading voices in the rapidly emerging field to speak out against the prospect of seemingly conscious AI, or AI services that can convince humans they’re capable of suffering.


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Three Ways This Label Printer Helped Me Improve My Resale Business

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Back in October, I wrote about how I wanted to get a mini label printer during Amazon Prime Day so I could beef up my resale game. I am a woman of my word, and the printer arrived two short days later, immediately allowing me to print out the shipping labels I need for all the packages I sell on Poshmark.

This isn’t a necessary upgrade for any reseller, especially not someone who is casually just flipping their own clothes and goods online, as most resale platforms—Poshmark included—provide the option for you to simply show the USPS worker a QR code on your phone, which triggers the label to print at the post office. But having access to my own printer has sped up and made my process so much more efficient. Yes, I could continue printing my labels at the post office, but it was slower and more confusing that way, particularly when mailing multiple packages at once. Here are three reasons having my own printer has been better.

My label printer saves me time

When I wrote about the deals in October, I was considering getting a fancy, name-brand printer, but ended up going with the Vretti, a cheaper option at around $70, instead. I reasoned that this way, I could see if it actually benefitted my little side business before investing more money. If it didn’t work, I could resell it and recoup my minimal spend. If it did work, I could resell it, then use the earnings to upgrade to the heavier-hitting one.

Amazingly, the Vretti started proving its worth immediately. The first thing I noticed was how much time I saved. In the past, I would gather up the items that had been sold on a given day, put them all in a bag, take them to the post office, and then pack them—right there in public—into their mailing envelopes, which I had to procure at the post office itself. Then, I’d get into the line with my giant bunch of packages, wait who-knows-how-long, and finally, show the agent the QR code assigned to each package, so they could scan them, print out the label, affix it to the package, scan that, then put it in a bin ready to be shipped out. This took me 30 minutes on a good day.

With my label maker, I do most of that myself, since I also went ahead and bought some mailers. When an order comes in, I pack everything into a mailer, print my own envelope, walk over to the post office, and don’t need to wait in line at all. I just set the labeled package into a special window and walk away. The part that takes the longest is the four-minute walk to the post office, but even that can be avoided if I set up a package pickup by my mailperson the night before. I’m militant about keeping my average shipping time low, so if an order comes through in the daytime, I try to get it out same-day, which means I rarely have the chance to schedule a next-day pickup from my own home. If I cared less about that, I could easily set all my labeled packages for at-home pickup and never walk to the post office at all, meaning each sale would take me nothing more than seconds to fix up.

My label printer keeps me organized

Since I got this thing three weeks ago, I’ve made 26 sales. But because I typically sell bundles—or more than one thing at a time, offering a discount for bulk purchases—I’ve actually sold about 63 things within those 26 packages. Remember how I said that before I got my printer, I’d put everything in a bag and bring it to the post office, then pack it there? On days I had multiple bundles to ship out, that was tricky. I’d get confused about which item belonged in which mailer, have to write the contents on the mailer itself so I could remember which package corresponded with which QR code, and carefully coordinate with the attendant to make sure nothing got mixed up.

Fortunately, I never mailed anyone the wrong order or made a major mistake—but it was time-consuming, annoying, and stressful. My label printer makes that a problem of the past. When an order comes in, I build it out immediately, pulling the right items from the shelf, putting them in a mailer, and labeling them instantly. Then, even if I wait to go to the post office until I have a few more packages to send out, there’s no confusing what is what.

My label printer makes me a more appealing seller

This whole thing is very transactional and straightforward. I list my old clothes that don’t fit anymore. Someone buys them. I get money. They get clothes. That doesn’t mean there’s no customer service involved here, although you can certainly be an impersonal, brusque seller if you want to be. I do prefer to send out cute packages that make the transaction feel a little more personal, though, and the printer helps me there, too.

Because I can pack them in my own home and take my time with them, my packages are looking better and more bespoke than ever. I can write little messages on the label, take care to wrap goods in tissue paper, or otherwise spruce up my colorful mailers, all without someone in line behind me at the post office willing me to hurry up.

Ayaneo’s Next Handheld Is Actually A Phone Made For Gamers, Here’s A Sneak Peek

Ayaneo's Next Handheld Is Actually A Phone Made For Gamers, Here's A Sneak Peek
Gadgets like ASUS ROG Phones and Nubia Red Magics already blur the line between flagship smartphones and dedicated gaming handhelds (in that order). However, Ayaneo, the company best known for handheld gaming consoles, intends on dropping a device that is basically a gaming handheld in a smartphone shell.

In a teaser video, Ayaneo hints

AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT Is Finally Available For $599 With A Free Bonus

AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT Is Finally Available For $599 With A Free Bonus
It took a lot longer than we would have liked, but AMD’s flagship Radeon RX 9070 XT is up for grabs at its baseline MSRP. Same goes for the Radeon RX 9070 (read: non-XT model). We won’t go so far as to call this a deal in the true sense of the word, but it’s noteworthy, given that add-in board (AIB) partners have routinely sold these cards

Xi Quips About Backdoors During Xiaomi Phone Gift To Korea’s Lee

An anonymous reader shares a report: Chinese President Xi Jinping joked about security backdoors while presenting a pair of Xiaomi smartphones to his South Korean counterpart, a rare moment of spontaneous levity captured during a week of tense trade negotiations with Donald Trump.

Xi, in South Korea to meet Trump on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, presented the pair of devices to Korean President Lee Jae Myung. In a video circulated on social media, Lee asked: “Is the line secure?” Xi chuckled, pointed at the gadgets and replied through an interpreter: “You can check if there’s a backdoor.” The two leaders burst into laughter.

The exchange was striking because the issue of security and alleged espionage is a sensitive one and a major thorn in US-Chinese relations. American lawmakers have raised the possibility that tech companies such as Huawei build backdoors — ways to gain access to sensitive data — into their equipment or services, something the firms have repeatedly denied.


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11 Best Free and Open Source OpenAPI Linter Tools

OpenAPI is an industry standard to describe HTTP APIs. When using OpenAPI in your project, you can leverage other tools to help you generate documentation, code, tests, mock results, or even deploy your API. This article picks some useful tools to help you validate OpenAPI in your project.

The post 11 Best Free and Open Source OpenAPI Linter Tools appeared first on Linux Today.

[$] Namespace reference counting and listns()

The kernel’s namespaces feature is, among
other things, a key part of the implementation of containers. Like much in
the kernel, though, the namespace API evolved over time; there was no
design at the outset. As a result, this API has some rough edges and
missing features. Christian Brauner is working to straighten out the
namespace situation somewhat with this
daunting 72-part patch series
that, among other things, adds a new
system call to allow user space to query the namespaces present on the
system.

Calibre 8.13 Open-Source E-Book Manager Improves Library Export on Linux

Calibre 8.13 is a small update that only improves library export on Linux distros that mount /tmp in RAM by no longer using the /tmp directory when dealing with a large Full-Text Search (FTS) database, and improves virtual libraries by allowing users to define their search expressions more comfortably in a multi-line edit box.

The post Calibre 8.13 Open-Source E-Book Manager Improves Library Export on Linux appeared first on Linux Today.

OpenAI Signs $38 Billion Cloud Deal With Amazon

OpenAI will pay Amazon $38 billion for computing power in a seven-year deal that marks the companies’ first partnership. Amazon expects all of the computing capacity negotiated as part of the agreement will be available to OpenAI by the end of next year. The ChatGPT maker will train new AI models using Amazon’s data centers and use them to process user queries.

The deal is small compared with OpenAI’s $300 billion agreement with Oracle and its $250 billion commitment to Microsoft. OpenAI ended its exclusive cloud-computing partnership with Microsoft last month and has since signed almost $600 billion in new cloud commitments. Amazon Web Services is the industry’s largest cloud provider, but Microsoft and Google have reported faster cloud-revenue growth in recent years after capturing new demand from AI customers.


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Intel Holiday Bundle Gifts Battlefield 6 Or Another AAA Game With These CPUs

Intel Holiday Bundle Gifts Battlefield 6 Or Another AAA Game With These CPUs
Intel is kicking off a new holiday promotion that rewards gamers who purchase select Core Ultra CPUs and systems with a choice of a free game, plus a collection of bonus software. One of the game choices is Battlefield 6 valued at $69.99, which debuted last month to rave reviews and quickly became Electronic Arts’ most-played title on Steam.
Pick

Disruption to science will last longer than the US government shutdown

US science always suffers during government shutdowns. Funding lapses send government scientists home without pay. Federal agencies suspend new grant opportunities, place expert review panels on hold, and stop collecting and analyzing critical public datasets that tell us about the economy, the environment and public health.

In 2025, the stakes are higher than in past shutdowns.

This shutdown arrives at a time of massive upheaval to American science and innovation driven by President Donald Trump’s ongoing attempts to extend executive power and assert political control of scientific institutions.

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