The Verge The Verge is about technology and how it makes us feel. Founded in 2011, we offer our audience everything from breaking news to reviews to award-winning features and investigations, on our site, in video, and in podcasts. 2025-11-04T17:57:35+00:00 https://www.theverge.com/rss/index.xml https://platform.theverge.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2025/01/verge-rss-large_80b47e.png?w=150&h=150&crop=1 Charles Pulliam-Moore <![CDATA[Predator: Badlands is a lighthearted twist on the brutal sci-fi series]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=813146 2025-11-04T12:57:35-05:00 2025-11-04T12:57:35-05:00 A humanoid alien with gaping maibles.

Between Prey and Predator: Killer of Killers, 20th Century Studios' classic survival thriller franchise has been on a tear with stories that get at the heart of what makes this world of alien big game hunters great. In both films, director Dan Trachtenberg stuck to the Predator series' narrative basics and focused on crafting clever action sequences that reinforced the idea that ingenuity is often key to surviving fights to the death.

Though Predator: Badlands keeps this mean streak of monster movie bangers going, its tone is markedly different than any of its brutal predecessors. Badlands is full of gore and connections to the Alien serie …

Read the full story at The Verge.

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Emma Roth <![CDATA[Wikipedia co-founder joins editing conflict over the Gaza genocide page]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=813245 2025-11-04T12:55:10-05:00 2025-11-04T12:55:10-05:00

Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales has jumped into a conflict over the online encyclopedia’s page on “Gaza genocide.” Just days after a Wikipedia editor froze changes to the article, Wales posted a statement on a page dedicated to discussing edits, saying the article “requires immediate correction” and is part of a broader neutrality problem on the site, where “there is much more work to do.”

On October 28th, a Wikipedia editor changed the status of the “Gaza genocide” page to “protected,” meaning editors can’t make changes to the article until November 4th, or until “editing disputes have been resolved,” according to a notice at the top of the article. As noted by Wikipedia, editors typically protect pages to prevent vandalism or “edit wars,” when multiple editors disagree about an article and continuously revert each other’s changes — which some editors mentioned happening recently on the Gaza page.

Wales joined discussions about the article on November 2nd. He wrote that he has been “studying the issue of neutrality” across Wikipedia and that the Gaza genocide article “is a particularly egregious” example of the problem.

“At present, the lede and the overall presentation state, in Wikipedia’s voice, that Israel is committing genocide, although that claim is highly contested,” Wales said. He added that a “neutral approach would begin with a formulation such as: ‘Multiple governments, NGOs, and legal bodies have described or rejected the characterization of Israel’s actions in Gaza as genocide.’” Currently, the article bases its position that a genocide exists on conclusions from United Nations investigations, the International Association of Genocide Scholars, and “multiple human rights groups,” among others.

Wales referenced a recent interview with CNN, where Walter Isaacson asked him about Wikipedia’s “Gaza genocide” article. During the interview, Wales called it “one of the worst Wikipedia entries I’ve seen in a very long time” and said it “doesn’t live up to our standards of neutrality.”

In a statement to The Verge, Wikimedia Foundation spokesperson Lauren Dickinson said it’s not unusual for Wales to comment on Wikipedia entries. “In his personal capacity during interviews about his new book, Jimmy Wales has discussed multiple Wikipedia articles and topics, expressing his own perspectives and reflections,” Dickinson said. “Even as the founder of Wikipedia, Jimmy is one of hundreds of thousands of editors, all striving to present information, including on contentious topics, in line with Wikipedia’s policies.”

Wales is calling on editors to “move from debate to concrete improvements immediately.” He did not provide specific examples of what changes they should make, but referenced several Wikipedia policies, including that articles “must not declare a legal conclusion,” and should include “significant, high-quality sources from all sides,” including governments, courts, non-governmental organizations, and commentators. “No side should speak in Wikipedia’s own voice,” Wales said.

Contrary to reporting from the New York Post, however, the Wikimedia Foundation confirmed that Wales didn’t lock the article himself or direct it to be locked. “On occasion, a page can be placed under protection by volunteer editors to limit editing to the article for a period of time,” Dickinson said. “This can happen when a topic is suddenly in the news, for example, and attracts negative editing. Protecting a page can only be done by volunteer Wikipedia administrators, who are more senior, trusted volunteer editors who have been selected by the broader editor community.”

In recent months, Wikipedia has become the subject of repeated attacks from Republican lawmakers and conservatives who accuse it of having a left-wing bias. After a March report from the Anti-Defamation League found “extensive issues with antisemitic and anti-Israel bias” on Wikipedia, lawmakers sought more information from the site on how it plans to “curb editor bias.” More recently, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) sent a letter to the Wikimedia Foundation last month, questioning Wikipedia’s alleged “ideological bias.” Elon Musk, who has also been a vocal critic of Wikipedia, also launched a non-”woke” alternative called Grokipedia that adapts Wikipedia articles with — among other changes — additional racist and transphobic contents

Many members of Wikipedia’s community pushed back on Wales’ statement. One editor said it’s “a bad faith read of the community when suggesting that among the most read and debated articles on the community is poorly done,” adding that “there has been dozens of hours of discussions” and requests for comments when creating the article. Another editor says that Wikipedia “should not be sending anyone the message that they can change article content from above by pressuring the foundation,” while someone else calls Wales’ involvement an “appalling overreach.”

In response to another comment, which asked why Wikipedia should equally weigh the opinions of the “largely impartial” United Nations and human rights scholars to “the obviously partisan opinions of commentators and governors,” Wales said that the job of a Wikipedian “is not to take sides in that debate but to carefully and neutrally document it.”

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Jay Peters <![CDATA[Apple is reportedly working on a cheaper Mac laptop with an iPhone chip]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=813391 2025-11-04T12:33:41-05:00 2025-11-04T12:33:41-05:00

Apple is working on a low-cost Mac laptop powered by an iPhone chip that it plans to launch in the first half of 2026, according to Bloomberg. The laptop will also have a “a lower-end LCD display” and a screen size that’s “slightly below” the 13.6-inch screen on the current MacBook Air. The laptop will be sold for “well under $1,000,” Bloomberg reports, and the laptop’s price will “fall in a similar range” as the approximately $600 cost for an entry-level iPad and a Magic Keyboard Folio.

So far, laptops with Apple Silicon have used M-series chips. But Apple’s tests have found that the iPhone chip “can perform better than the Mac-optimized M1 used in laptops as recently as a few years ago,” Bloomberg says. The new laptop will have an “entirely new design” and will be aimed at more casual users, students, and businesses.

Earlier this year, supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo similarly reported that Apple was developing a more affordable MacBook with an A-series chip. Kuo said that the laptop would be powered by the A18 Pro chip found in the iPhone 16 Pro lineup and would come in a range of colors including silver, blue, pink, and yellow.

The company has also “finished work” on a MacBook Air powered by its recently-introduced M5 chip that it plans to release early next year, Bloomberg reports. MacBook Pros with M5 Pro and M5 Max are in the works, too. 

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Elissa Welle <![CDATA[Google Maps can tell Polestar 4 drivers when to merge lanes]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=813315 2025-11-04T11:57:50-05:00 2025-11-04T11:57:50-05:00

Google Maps is rolling out live lane guidance to drivers of the Google-powered electric Polestar 4. The company announced Tuesday that the new feature relies on the EV’s front-facing camera to “see” lane markings and road signs. That information feeds into Google Map’s AI and provides the driver with customized audio and visual cues about merging lanes in real-time. 

Google gives an example of how this might play out. Say you’re driving in the left lane of a US highway and your exit is up ahead on the right side. “With live lane guidance, just glance at your dash display to see exactly which lane you can be in at any given moment,” Google says in a blog post. (Of course, you can also look at the road to figure out this information.) The live lane guidance feature in Maps can detect that you’re several lanes to the left of your exit and remind you to merge in time. (The rest of your passengers might also remind you.) 

Polestar’s vehicles use Google’s built-in Android software to power their infotainment system. As such, Google has integrated other products into Polestar’s cars in the past five years, such as Google Chrome and high-definition maps.  

“Live lane guidance continues the path of Polestar’s driver centric UX strategy, reducing driver stress and improving safety by making missed exits and last-minute lane changes much less of a worry,” Polestar’s head of UX/UI Sid Odedra said in a statement. 

The new feature to Maps will exist alongside standard features like live traffic alerts and estimated drive times. For now, live lane guidance is only available to Polestar 4 cars with Google built-in and only in the US and Sweden, but the company says that it plans to roll out to more cars as it partners with other automakers. The company also says that it plans to add more road types in addition to highways.

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Cameron Faulkner <![CDATA[Google’s entire Pixel 10 lineup is up to 25 percent off for the first time]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=813137 2025-11-04T11:04:43-05:00 2025-11-04T11:04:43-05:00 An image showing a yellow Google Pixel 10 phone with an abstract background on its 6.3-inch screen.

If you’re going to buy a phone in the next couple of days, you might already be considering one of Google’s Pixel 10 devices. Whether you want the cheapest model, which, like the iPhone 17, is very good, or you want the better camera performance and extra AI features offered by the Pixel 10 Pro, there are some great discounts happening for the next few days. Even the Pixel 10 Pro Fold is cheaper than usual.

The Pixel 10 with 128GB of storage is $599 in multiple colors at Amazon and Best Buy, beating a previous discount that brought the unlocked version down to about $650 (originally $799). The 10 Pro with 128GB of storage in multiple colors is also cheaper than ever, selling for $749 (originally $999) at Amazon. It didn’t take long for this $300 off deal on the Pixel 10 Pro Fold to arrive. Normally $1,799 since it launched just last month, the 256GB model is down to $1,499 at Amazon and Best Buy for the first time. The Google Store indicates that these prices will last through the week. If you miss out, perhaps they’ll be back for Black Friday at the end of the month.

Google Pixel 10

This model touts a 6.3-inch 1080p OLED that supports up to a 120Hz refresh rate. It has the same Tensor G5 processor found in all Pixel 10-series phones, but with a slightly lower 12GB RAM count compared to 16GB on the Pro. Verge reviewer Allison Johnson notes in her review that those who want to take great — not just good — photos should get the 10 Pro instead.
Google Pixel 10 in front of green foliage

Where to Buy:

Google Pixel 10 Pro

In addition to have extra memory for handling tasks more swiftly than the Pixel 10, its cameras pack improvements, both in terms of hardware and AI-enhanced software, like the sometimes great, sometimes terrible Pro Res Zoom mode that’s powered by generative AI. Its portrait mode is improved, according to our review.
Google Pixel 10 Pro showing back panel on a grid of green rectangles

Where to Buy:

Google Pixel Pro 10 Fold

The only foldable available that’s IP68-rated, meaning it’s dustproof and can be submerged in water — quite the achievement, given it has a bendable hinge — but you should probably still baby it. Our Allison Johnson had a sand-related scare during her testing that turned out fine, but could have gone very badly in any other foldable.
Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold on a desk.

Where to Buy:

Other Verge-approved deals

  • Over at Newegg, there’s an alluring deal on a ATX-sized motherboard bundle that might appeal to those who are assembling parts for their next PC build. The $249.99 bundle includes MSI’s MPG Z890 Edge Ti, an Intel-based motherboard made for LGA 1851 socket processors — Intel’s Core Ultra Series 2 processors that launched earlier this year are eligible — plus 32GB of Corsair Vengeance DDR5-6000 RAM (a $184 value), and a copy of Star Wars Outlaws Gold Edition. The motherboard is packed with features, including PCIe 5.0 storage support, Thunderbolt 4, Wi-Fi 7, and DDR5 RAM support (up to 256GB). It boasts a whopping five M.2 slots, one of which is PCIe 5.0, while the rest are Gen 4.
  • If JBL’s $50 Go 4 Bluetooth speaker is the well-known, brand-name option, Anker’s Soundcore Select 4 Go is the generic alternative that seems just as good, but at a much friendlier price. At Amazon, you can grab the wireless speaker in one of several color schemes for $22.99 (originally $34.99). The Select 4 Go has a built-in strap that makes it easy to attach to carabiners or straps, and its 20-hour battery life can let it pipe tunes, audiobooks, or podcasts throughout the day. It’s a durable companion, too, with an IP67 rating (it can be immersed in water at depths of up to 3.3-feet for 30 minutes). Plus, it can float in water. Aside from toys, it’s the only other acceptable floater allowed in a pool.
  • The Nintendo Switch and Switch 2 offer plenty of Nintendo 64 games to its paid Switch Online subscribers who have its Expansion Pack tier. Nintendo’s own $55 wireless N64 controller is the most authentic way to experience those games again, or for the first time. But, for something cheaper, with the same array of buttons (arranged in a different, more modern, manner), check out 8BitDo’s 64 wireless controller. It’s available in white or black, costing $28.42 or $29.56, respectively, at Amazon. Each of these prices are just a bit more than $10 off, and they’re within a couple dollars of the lowest prices we’ve seen before.
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David Pierce <![CDATA[Your smart home questions, answered]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=813012 2025-11-04T09:18:31-05:00 2025-11-04T09:18:31-05:00

There are a couple of universal truths about the smart home. Yes, you will come to treat your robot vacuum like a member of the family, and no, you cannot escape the fact that there will always be one light that doesn't turn on even though there's simply no reason it won't. These are just the facts.

Beyond that, the only thing we know for sure about the smart home is that it's tricky to get right. You have to navigate a tangle of standards and ecosystems, optimize your control systems, and design a lot of seemingly basic features yourself. The industry seems to be on a path to a much better place! But we're not there yet.

Subscribe: Spot …

Read the full story at The Verge.

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Jess Weatherbed <![CDATA[Amazon is building Alexa Plus into its Music app]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=813102 2025-11-04T08:57:42-05:00 2025-11-04T09:00:00-05:00
Amazon Music users with access to Alexa Plus can tap the “a” symbol to start making requests.

Amazon is using Alexa Plus to bring new AI capabilities to its Music streaming service. Starting today, customers in the Alexa Plus Early Access beta will be able to access the generative AI assistant within the Amazon Music app on iOS and Android, allowing users across all subscription tiers to request obscure information or complex music recommendations.

The Alexa Plus integration can find songs you can’t remember the name of based on lyrics or shows they were featured on, for example, or provide information about chart positions, festival lineups, and the meaning behind song lyrics. The AI will also recommend music based on specific eras, moods, artists and instruments, and exclude anything you don’t want to listen to — such as asking it to play ’90s pop music from artists like Madonna, but don’t include any boy bands.

“Customers can dive deeper into genres, uncover artist influences and discographies, trace sample origins from their favorite tracks, and even ask, ‘what’s this song about?‘” Amazon said in its announcement. “Even when your requests aren’t specific, Alexa Plus connects the dots to deliver the right music.”

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Elissa Welle <![CDATA[Tech companies don’t care that students use their AI agents to cheat]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=812906 2025-11-04T08:20:33-05:00 2025-11-04T08:20:33-05:00

AI companies know that children are the future - of their business model. The industry doesn't hide their attempts to hook the youth on their products through well-timed promotional offers, discounts, and referral programs. "Here to help you through finals," OpenAI said during a giveaway of ChatGPT Plus to college students. Students get free yearlong access to Google's and Perplexity's pricey AI products. Perplexity even pays referrers $20 for each US student that it gets to download its AI browser Comet.

Popularity of AI tools among teens is astronomical. Once the product makes its way through the education system, it's the teachers and s …

Read the full story at The Verge.

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Geoffrey Bunting <![CDATA[How a bunch of hackers freed the Kinect from the Xbox]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=812803 2025-11-03T16:10:14-05:00 2025-11-04T07:00:00-05:00

In 2010, when Microsoft unveiled the Kinect, it pitched the camera as a revolutionary new gaming device. Swing an imaginary lightsaber and that would be translated onscreen. Throw a football and it would be caught on your TV. Fifteen years later, we know the Kinect as an expensive failure. Microsoft overestimated the demand for playing games with your body. But the Kinect did still turn out to be revolutionary - just not for gaming.

Now, we understand the Kinect is anything but a gaming device. It became a robotics game changer, enjoyed a brief dalliance with pornography, and is now upsold as a ghost hunting toy. None of which would have be …

Read the full story at The Verge.

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Jess Weatherbed <![CDATA[Nintendo is raising its Switch 2 sales expectations]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=813025 2025-11-04T05:46:07-05:00 2025-11-04T05:46:07-05:00
The Switch 2 console has now surpassed 10 million sales.

The Switch 2’s popularity has exceeded even Nintendo’s anticipations, with the company raising its sales forecast for the console by more than 25 percent. In its latest earnings release, covering April 1st to September 30th, Nintendo now predicts that it’ll sell 19 million Switch 2 units by March 2026, compared to its previous forecast of 15 million.

The Japanese gaming giant reports that 10.36 million Switch 2 consoles have been sold so far following its launch in June, with 4.54 million sales falling under its latest earnings period. 20.62 million Switch 2 games have also been sold since launch, though Nintendo has only raised its Switch 2 game forecast from 45 million to 48 million.

The combined hardware and software sales are driving a 110 percent surge in revenue, which increased to ¥1,099.5 billion (around $7.1 billion) between April and September, compared to ¥523.2 billion (around $3.4 billion) for the same period last year. Nintendo also increased its end-of-year sales forecast to ¥2,250 billion (around $14.6 billion), and said it’s taken US tariff measures into consideration for these revisions.

While the Switch 2 is the fastest-selling game console of all time, the first Switch console is also still creeping up in sales. The Switch has now hit 154.01 million lifetime sales, just shy of the 154.02 million total units sold for the DS, which still reigns as Nintendo’s most successful console. After dethroning the DS, the Switch then just needs to surpass 160 million sales to become the best-selling console of all time — a record set by Sony’s PlayStation 2 last year. 

By comparison, the Wii U sold just 13.7 million units over its entire lifetime, a figure that the Switch 2 is pretty much guaranteed to surpass before its first birthday.

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