“It is a painful decision”: Rapha is closing five of its clubhouses 

Rapha is closing five of its clubhouses before April this year as part of a bid to bring “greater focus” to the business, it was revealed today.

The clothing company’s clubhouses are located around the world and work as retail spaces, cafes and the bases for Rapha Cycling Club members, as well as hosting events.  

“Rapha’s Clubhouses are cultural anchors for the Rapha community worldwide, run by brilliant, hardworking teams that are our brand’s greatest advocates. They are places to belong, to be inspired, and to discover our products. So, this announcement is really tough,” Rapha’s CEO Fran Millar said in an official statement.

Rapha’s Manchester clubhouse, which opened in 2014, is set to close on 18 January and the company has informed customers and RCC members today. 

Rapha CEO Fran Millar.
Rapha CEO Fran Millar: “It is a painful decision but it is the right call for the brand and our customers in the long-run.” Tom Griffiths / Rapha

The other four clubhouses set to close are all in the USA, in Boulder, Chicago, Miami and Seattle. This is despite Rapha’s recent announcement that it’s partnering with USA Cycling ahead of the LA 2028 Olympic Games and will have a greater focus on the United States moving forward, as part of its renewed focus to reclaim the market share it has lost

But Millar said closing clubhouses will mean Rapha can focus on “richer customer experiences” at flagship locations, events and online. 

“I have been honest that we need to make changes at Rapha to bring greater focus. ‘Simpler, better’ is the guiding principle behind this decision. It is a painful decision but it is the right call for the brand and our customers in the long-run.

“A plan is in place to support local teams, customers and communities and we will share more information with RCC members directly,” Millar said. 

To support its cycling club in locations where clubhouses are closing, Rapha said local venues will become ‘RCC Partner Cafes’ and that it will deepen and expand relationships with its retail partners. 

Rapha added that its clubhouses represent a major investment for the brand, and despite having recently raised money from its investors, the five clubhouses that are closing do not make sense for the company at the current time.

But Rapha added that this does mean the company is rejecting the clubhouse concept. In November 2025, Rapha landed in China with its Shanghai clubhouse, and it is also considering new clubhouses.

AMD Enabling New GFX12.1 & More RDNA 3.5 Hardware Blocks With Linux 6.20~7.0

AMD today sent out their latest pull request to DRM-Next of new AMDGPU/AMDKFD kernel driver changes they are looking to get into the next kernel cycle, which will either be known as Linux 6.20 or more than likely be called Linux 7.0. Notable with this week’s pull request is enabling a lot of new GPU hardware IP blocks, including GC/GFX 12.1 as a new addition past the current GFX12.0 / RDNA4…

Breakthrough Sensor Could Finally Bring Blood Glucose Monitoring To Apple Watch

Breakthrough Sensor Could Finally Bring Blood Glucose Monitoring To Apple Watch
Wearable makers like Apple, Samsung, Garmin, and Google have long chased what might be the holy grail of health tech: non-invasive glucose monitoring. Recent developments suggest that Apple could be closer than ever to turning its decade-long ambition into a reality for the Apple Watch.

Blood sugar tracking has been long expected to be

Amazon Wants To Know What Every Corporate Employee Accomplished Last Year

Amazon is now requiring its corporate employees to submit a list of three to five accomplishments that represent their best work as part of an overhauled performance review process, according to Business Insider, which cites internal documents.

The company’s internal Forte review system previously asked employees softer questions like “When you’re at your best, how do you contribute?” but the new standards place greater emphasis on individual productivity and specific deliverables. Amazon’s roughly 350,000 corporate employees must also outline actions they plan to take to continue growing at the company.


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The Newest Apple Watch Is $100 Off Right Now

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I really adore my Series 10 Apple Watch. But if I hadn’t upgraded last year, I would have gone for the Series 11, just for the extra battery life upgrade. I usually like to wait for discounts before upgrading, though, and if you’re like me, Amazon has some good news: While the Series 11 only came out four months ago, it’s already down to its lowest price ever. You can get the 42mm Series 11 model for $299 (down from $399) and the 46mm Series 11 model for $329 (down from $429). That’s a discount of $100 across the board.

The Series 10 was the one with the big redesign, but the Series 11 upgrade is about the smaller, quality-of-life upgrades, the chief of which is the battery life. For the first time in 10 years, the Apple Watch’s battery life jumped from 18 hours to 24 hours. I already use some tweaks to make my Series 10 last for two days, so the Series 11 model will go even further still.

The screen is brighter at 2,000 nits peak brightness, and Apple now uses a Ion-X glass for better wide-angle viewing. It’s also twice as scratch-resistant as before, IP6X dust resistant, and swim-proof (WR50). And if you plan to go for the cellular mode, you also get 5G for the first time in an Apple Watch. There are also new software features like background hypertension notifications, and a new Sleep Score (though they’re available on the older models as well).

Overall, the Series 11 makes for a solid upgrade if you’re using an Apple Watch Series 7 or 8. PCMag gave the Apple Watch Series 11 a 4.5 star “Outstanding” rating, and an Editor’s Choice award. PCMag notes that “while the watch’s design and sensors haven’t changed much this generation, they remain at the head of the class. With top-notch lifestyle and health features, excellent performance, and almost two days of power on a charge, the Series 11 earns our Editors’ Choice award, making it the best Apple Watch for most iPhone users.”

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Hands-On: ArtQuest VR Explores What Makes A Good Museum

What entices someone to visit a virtual museum rather than a physical one? ArtQuest VR might have an answer.

ArtQuest VR is a museum app allowing users to visit halls of paintings presented in true scale. Pulling from collections of famous museums around the world, visitors can enjoy exhibits arranged by artist, movement, or preset collection.

A virtual gallery with a large mural by Keith Haring
The contemporary gallery featuring Keith Haring

Inside The ArtQuest Museum

Opening ArtQuest VR directs you to your first gallery and presents a menu for exhibit navigation. The museum has options for choosing what art you want to see, gallery customization, and movement.

You can change the color and materials of the main wall, floor, and frames of the art you’re looking at. Adjustments can be made to frame thickness with a drop-down menu for framing styles. There is also an option for a text-to-speech voice to narrate each painting’s description and information with five different voices offered.

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Customizing the gallery

Moving around can either be done smoothly with the left joystick push or “blink” teleportation using the right joystick. The only turning option currently is snap turning. You can also use the menu to recalibrate your height so each painting is positioned at eye level.

Connecting With An Art Piece

I examined a painting by Wassily Kandinsky titled “Picture With A Black Arch”.

The height offset feature in ArtQuest allows visitors to elevate their stance, as if borrowing a ladder to view paintings from a higher vantage. I floated upwards along the canvas and examined the painting. “Picture With A Black Arch” is awash with quick brushstrokes and geometric shapes. What made the artist paint this? What did the accompanying description of “musical counterpoint” mean here?

A painting by Wassily Kadinsky titled "Picture With A Black Arch"
Kandinsky’s “Picture With A Black Arch”

I pantomimed painting in the air along with the artist himself, tracing my hand over the dark outlines first. I’m a painter myself, so I recognized thick brushstrokes meant a pause, or applied pressure on the canvas. Thinner strokes meant a more delicate hand. Short, harsh, lines meant faster application, especially several in a group at once. These particular brushstrokes all lean left, indicating Kandinsky painted with his right hand. I traced the marks in the air while listening to my favorite orchestral music.

What I found were hand movements that seemed to dance in the air with purposeful direction. It felt just like someone directing an orchestra while painting on a canvas. Checking a Google cultural site later that listed more information about the artwork, I remain pretty convinced that’s what Kandinsky was doing.

What Makes A Museum Attractive?

Virtual museums can be hard to build. You immediately discover the architecture surrounding the art relates to the pieces within. These digital spaces benefit from thoughtful immersive design. That means ambient sounds and building for how someone will walk around the space you’ve designed. How about a lobby to pause and reflect on what’s been seen? Neither ambient audio nor lobby are present in ArtQuest VR, and I’d love to see these added.

Two neoclassical paintings on a virtual wall
Neoclassical paintings in ArtQuest VR

The advantage of ArtQuest VR, though a bit lonely without other visitors and plain in presentation, is that I can go and see a near-entire collection of Van Gogh or Matisse, and I don’t have to download gigabytes of information to do it nor compete with anyone else for the perfect spot. The app has the feel of a spatial website and a functioning museum with an exclusive collection of work.

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Accessing the collection menu

ArtQuest VR’s architecture is simple with a slight neoclassical style and descriptions that appear sourced from Wikipedia. The neoclassical architecture matches Wikipedia’s site design, but it still feels like something is missing without the ambient sound. You simply pop into the gallery once the app is open. At least one art collection featured missing textures. As I browsed the contemporary art wing, a recent Banksy piece returned an ugly floating pink square to indicate the sourced artwork was no longer there. A picture featuring a mural by Shepard Fairey rotated itself in the wrong direction after sitting right-side-up for a few seconds.

The avant-garde collection

I noted some additional bugs attempting to access my Quest menu and teleporting too far into the wall moving between galleries. The most notable issue, perhaps, is when paintings don’t appear at high resolution until your face is practically centimeters from the artwork. Also, sometimes, there are duplicate paintings that appear in a gallery with no explanation why.

ArtQuest VR’s Opportunity

It’s a well-held myth that art is about perfection and not the journey it takes to get there. If this were true, museums wouldn’t show the early work of artists they feature. Viewing famous paintings chronologically in an app such as ArtQuest VR can show how art is just as much about failure as it is about success. Each artist has their own story in how they reach that success, and it’s up to each visitor to reflect on that and how they can adapt this lesson to their lives.

How can ArtQuest VR keep building on this? Every museum visitor is looking for something when they visit. Can VR bring them the very human effort of outdoing oneself through practice, improvement and sudden inspiration? That’s not always present in the room with us in a physical museum. Seeing things from new angles is precisely VR’s power, and there’s an opportunity for an app like ArtQuest to help see more context around a specific piece of art each time someone walks through the front door.

CES 2026 offered a lonely vision of the future

LG opened CES 2026 by outlining its vision to reduce the physical effort and mental burden of life. Buy enough of the devices it’s presently working on and you’ll exist in an environment of “ambient care,” coddled by the machinery in your home. It sounds positively utopian: When the sensors in your bed know you’ve not slept well and are getting a cold, a robot will wake you with a glass of freshly squeezed orange juice. When you’re in a rush to get to work, the robot will make you a sandwich for you to eat on the go, sparing you the effort of making it yourself. The more I roamed the halls of the show after that, the more I couldn’t help feeling uneasy about what so many companies here were pitching. To me, the vision of the future on show here is equal parts solitary and infantilized.

There’s obvious reasons for this: AI swallowed the tech industry’s oxygen, sapping any chance of innovation in consumer hardware. The advent of Panther Lake is a win for Intel, but it’s not going to enable dramatic changes in how people work with their PCs on a daily basis. The US policy shift away from EVs and toward fossil fuel-powered vehicles, too, means that the big names in auto manufacture have similarly shied away from the show. That left CES full of various robotics startups offering early visions of humanoid robots designed to work on production lines, take care of your home and replace your pet. I saw more than a few stands where booth attendants were pretending to delight in teaching their wheeled robot pets to play fetch. At least, I hope they were pretending.

I’m painfully aware of how many devices felt like they were only a hop, skip and a jump away from the Sharper Image catalog. Gadgets that are designed to fill some perceived hole in your life that won’t actually make things better or easier in the long run. I’m leery about denigrating assistive technology that offers a vital lifeline to people with accessibility needs. I’m also leery about knocking devices that may enable people to keep working despite wrestling with long term injuries — I’ve got one eye on the raft of exoskeletons exhibited at the show which might help me work in the garden despite the weakness in my lower back. But I’m also not quite sold on how many toilet computers, massage chairs and scootcases we all need in our daily lives. 

There’s also the elephant in the room that many of these innovations seem intent on acting as a replacement, substitute or supplement for real interaction. Robotic panda bears scuttling around your home to save you the effort of caring for a real flesh-and-blood pet. Holographic AI waifus that will obsequiously respond to whatever you ask of it with nothing but flattery and agreement. The sheer volume of AI Labubus operating as friend, enemy, companion or a combination of all the above. Cuddly home robots that are little more than a tablet on a moveable base that’ll keep your kids entertained so you don’t have to. Yes, I’m being unfair, but sometimes shows like this make me sound like someone’s grandpa angrily insisting you darn kids get off your screens. 

I feel some of these gadgets are specifically designed to enable a degree of detachment from our own bodies. We’re spending so much time getting dopamine from our devices that we’re no longer able to pay attention to how our bodies are feeling. In LG’s vision of the future, moving around for ourselves and making our own food is a thing of the past, which will, surely, put a dent in our physical and mental health. We lose the ability to connect with the people around us because we’ve spent too long being flattered by our AI lackeys. We need a machine to monitor the food we eat and the crap we excrete because we’re not willing to pay attention to what we’re doing. Much in the same way that AI encourages us to take shortcuts rather than enjoy the process of being creative, the rest of the tech industry seemingly wants us to shortcut the fundamentals of life.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ces-2026-offered-a-lonely-vision-of-the-future-160000993.html?src=rss

Rocket Report: SpaceX and China led the way in 2025; Vandenberg has room to grow

Welcome to Edition 8.24 of the Rocket Report! We’re back from a restorative holiday, and there’s a great deal Eric and I look forward to covering in 2026. You can get a taste of what we’re expecting this year in this feature. Other storylines are also worth watching this year that didn’t make the Top 20. Will SpaceX’s Starship begin launching Starlink satellites? Will United Launch Alliance finally get its Vulcan rocket flying at a higher cadence? Will Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket be certified by the US Space Force? I’m looking forward to learning the answers to these questions, and more. As for what has already happened in 2026, it has been a slow start on the world’s launch pads, with only a pair of SpaceX missions completed in the first week of the year. Only? Two launches in one week by any company would have been remarkable just a few years ago.

As always, we welcome reader submissions. If you don’t want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets, as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

New launch records set in 2025. The number of orbital launch attempts worldwide last year surpassed the record 2024 flight rate by 25 percent, with SpaceX and China accounting for the bulk of the launch activity, Aviation Week & Space Technology reports. Including near-orbital flight tests of SpaceX’s Starship-Super Heavy launch system, the number of orbital launch attempts worldwide reached 329 last year, an annual analysis of global launch and satellite activity by Jonathan’s Space Report shows. Of those 329 attempts, 321 reached orbit or marginal orbits. In addition to five Starship-Super Heavy launches, SpaceX launched 165 Falcon 9 rockets in 2025, surpassing its 2024 record of 134 Falcon 9 and two Falcon Heavy flights. No Falcon Heavy rockets flew in 2025. US providers, including Rocket Lab Electron orbital flights from its New Zealand spaceport, added another 30 orbital launches to the 2025 tally, solidifying the US as the world leader in space launch.

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Comments

[$] READ_ONCE(), WRITE_ONCE(), but not for Rust

The READ_ONCE() and WRITE_ONCE() macros are heavily used
within the kernel; there are nearly 8,000 call sites for
READ_ONCE(). They are key to the implementation of many lockless algorithms and can be necessary for some
types of device-memory access. So one might think that, as the
amount of Rust code in the kernel increases, there would be a place for
Rust versions of these macros as well. The truth of the matter, though, is
that the Rust community seems to want to take a different approach to
concurrent data access.

Astronomers Discover Asteroid Spinning So Fast It Should Have Torn Itself Apart

Astronomers Discover Asteroid Spinning So Fast It Should Have Torn Itself Apart
Astronomers peering through images from the Vera C. Rubin Obervatory have discovered an unusual asteroid spinning so fast that it’s broken the record for how space rocks of its size are supposed to behave.

Designated 2025 MN45, the asteroid was identified by the international team of researchers using data from the recently-commissioned

Razer’s Project Madison Turns A Gaming Chair Into A Full‑Body Haptic Simulator

Razer’s Project Madison Turns A Gaming Chair Into A Full‑Body Haptic Simulator
Razer has made a habit of unveiling concept projects at CES each year, some of which end up becoming shipping products, and others that don’t. One that has a better-than-decent shot of falling into the former category is Project Madison. What’s hidden behind that project designation is an immersive gaming chair that aims to bombard your senses

The Secret Microsoft App That Improves How I Use Windows

I’m someone who routinely switches between Mac and Windows. It’s a hazard of being a tech writer. But the thing is, I’m so used to the user friendliness in macOS that whenever I shift to Windows mode, there are some hiccups. Windows tends to throw up walls where there really shouldn’t be any. I used to just white-knuckle through it, but that was before I fully embraced PowerToys.

PowerToys is a collection of utilities made by Microsoft itself. It’s free to download on GitHub, or a myriad of other places, and unlike with Windows 11, Microsoft actually adds useful and interesting features to it every couple of weeks. You can download and install PowerToys from the GitHub page, the Microsoft Store, or using Windows Package Manager.

Here are a few of PowerToys utilities that have become a must for me (after installing the app, you really should browse all that it offers to see what strikes your fancy). If you took them away, I wouldn’t be sure how to use my Windows PC anymore—this thing should really come pre-installed.

Command Palette

Command Palette in Windows PowerToys

Credit: Khamosh Pathak

These days, Windows Search can come across a little heavy and bloated, just like the Start menu. While it’s fine for opening apps once in a while, I can’t really use it for anything more than that. Plus, I’m a macOS user, so I’m used to Spotlight Search’s lightning-fast keyboard launcher. While you can use third-party keyboard launchers on Windows now (Raycast being the latest addition), my favorite option is actually Microsoft’s own keyboard launcher, the Command Palette that’s included in PowerToys.

Like Spotlight Search, it’s light and fast, and you can assign any shortcut to it. I use it to quickly launch apps, search for files, and even search for open windows. Command Palette even has a really helpful Bookmarks feature that I use a lot. I’ve created bookmarks for quickly opening frequently used folders like Downloads and Screenshots, and even websites. A Bookmark can be triggered by searching for a keyword, or through its own dedicated keyboard shortcut (I’ve set one up for my Downloads folder, which is really handy). For more, I’ve got a detailed guide on setting up Command Palette that you should check out.

Light Switch

Light Switch PowerToys

Credit: Microsoft

It’s mind-boggling that Windows 11 still does not have an automatic dark mode. Over the years, Windows 11’s dark theme has slowly expanded to cover all the apps you care about. But there’s no easy way to toggle it on, and there’s no way to automatically turn it on in evening, or on a schedule.

So, of course, there’s a PowerToys utility for that. The recently added Light Switch utility lets you create a global custom keyboard shortcut for turning on the dark theme. For the Schedule section in the Light Switch utility, you can set up an automated schedule based on fixed hours, or using the local sunset time, which is how I use it.

Peek

PowerToys Peek

Credit: Microsoft

I shuffle between macOS and Windows 11 all the time, and there are some creature comforts in macOS that I now have a hard time living without. One of them is the ability to quickly preview any file in Finder by pressing the Space button. There is no such option in Windows, and until now, you needed a third-party app to enable it, which wasn’t always reliable. Now, Microsoft has included a similar feature in PowerToys’ Peek utility. Once enabled, you can press the Space bar after selecting any file to preview it. You can then use the arrow keys to navigate to other files in the folder as well. Press Enter to open the file in the default app.

Text Extractor

Windows has a built-in OCR (or text extractor) feature for images that can be accessed via the Snipping Tool. But it’s really slow. When I’m in a pinch and I need to copy text from an image, I prefer to use the Text Extractor utility in PowerToys instead. It’s much faster. Use the dedicated shortcut Windows + Shift + T to see an overlay on the screen. Use the mouse to highlight the area that you want to transcribe. Once you let go of the cursor, the text will be saved to your clipboard automatically.

Image Resizer

Image Resizer utility in PowerToys

Credit: Microsoft

This is one of those PowerToys utilities that really should be a default Windows 11 feature by now. Resizing an image, or a batch of them, is something that I need to do often, as someone who writes online for a living. But you might need it too, from time to time, to compress or resize images for an online upload, or a presentation. Instead of opening a heavy image editing program and manually resizing images one by one, use this plugin instead.

Once enabled, it will show up in the right-click menu in File Explorer. Select one or multiple images, click Resize with Image Resizer, choose one of the size presets (you can add more presets from the PowerToys app) or create a custom resolution, click the Resize button, and that’s it.

Awake

I can’t imagine using Windows without PowerToys’ Awake utility. It adds a handy little tray icon that I can click to keep my PC awake longer than the default sleep settings would allow for. I have a custom-built PC with a big honking power supply, so I take my auto-sleep settings quite seriously. But there are times when I’m downloading a large file in the background, or I have a long AI task running, when I want the PC to stay on. That’s where the Awake utility really helps. You can choose to keep your PC awake indefinitely, or for 30 minutes, 1 hour, or any custom duration.

FancyZones

FancyZones utility in PowerToys

Credit: Microsoft

The built-in window management in Windows is quite impressive in its own right, but it falls short for my workflow. I usually like working with my text editor, a browser, and Slack open at all times. Because I have a large monitor, I have my writing app and Slack on one side and a browser on another. But it can take me a while to get everything set up. This is where FancyZones really helps. I can create custom zones for each app I use that helps me puts them where I want them, and resizes them, too.

To set this up for yourself, first go to the FancyZones section in PowerToys utilities. Here, open the Zones Editor and create a new custom layout. You can now use the mouse to move the zones around and to add a new zone. Once a layout is enabled, all you have to do is move a window around and hold down the Shift key. Dropping the window in any designated zone to instantly resize it.

Send To Kindle from Microsoft Word is Discontinued

Microsoft is discontinuing its Send to Kindle integration in Word, ending a feature that allowed Microsoft 365 subscribers to send documents directly to their Kindle e-readers and preserve complex formatting through fixed layouts.

The company updated its documentation to announce that beginning February 9th, 2026, the Send to Kindle feature will no longer work across Web, Win32, and Mac platforms. Microsoft has not disclosed why it’s killing the integration but recommends users switch to Amazon’s official Send to Kindle app. The feature launched in 2023 and was particularly valued by Kindle Scribe owners who could annotate the transferred documents.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.