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Apple’s New 2009 MacBook, iMacs, Mac Mini and More

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On the eve of Windows 7’s launch, Apple not only announced its most profitable quarter ever – the company chose to steal Microsoft’s thunder with several new product announcements. Enter a new MacBook with an LED-backlit display, longer 7-hour battery and glass multi-touch trackpad in addition to newer, faster iMacs starting at $1199 that use Intel Core 2 Duo and Core i5 and i7 quad-core processors and feature  21.5- and 27-inch LED-backlit widescreen displays. Also revealed were revamped versions of the Mac mini with more speed, storage and double the memory, as well as the Magic Mouse, which employs novel multi-touch technology. Here’s a look at these new additions to the firm’s celebrated product line.

Scott Steinberg
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Meta’s AI feed is starting to sound like a late-night internet rabbit hole
Meta’s AI app is reportedly filling up with bizarre clickbait and fake stories
iPhone showing Meta AI Support Assistant

Meta’s standalone AI app is reportedly being flooded with low-quality clickbait, fake emotional stories, and engagement-bait content, raising fresh questions about how generative AI platforms are being moderated as they become increasingly social and public-facing.

According to a Verge report, users of Meta AI’s social discovery feed have been encountering strange AI-generated posts ranging from fabricated personal confessions to misleading health claims and bizarre fictional scenarios designed to attract reactions and shares. The issue appears tied to Meta’s decision to make AI-generated conversations and prompts publicly discoverable inside the app, effectively turning parts of the platform into a social media-style content feed.

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Right to repair isn’t a hobbyist crusade. It’s a fight over ownership
A dying battery should not turn a paid-off device into company property again.
Repairing computers

The least sexy part of modern gadget design might also be the most revealing: the battery you’re not supposed to replace.

I understand the official story. Sealed phones look cleaner, feel slimmer, and can survive the kind of splash that ruins your week. Adhesives help make that possible, which is the respectable version of the argument. Nobody wants a flagship phone with the structural elegance of a TV remote from 2006.

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The hidden labor of modern tech support is turning us all into unpaid employees
Every chatbot loop, forum search, and repeated explanation adds up to a hidden tax on your time.
Bicycle, Cycling, Person

I recently tried to cancel an order from a popular food delivery app and somehow ended up playing a tiny, miserable escape room inside a chatbot. I couldn’t type my actual issue. I could only tap preset options, none of which matched what I needed. So I kept backing out and trying again, like the right answer was hiding behind one more bad menu choice.

Eventually, I Googled how to talk to a live person like an idiot who couldn’t solve a basic task. The answer, naturally, was to pretend I had a different request. I’m kidding, though. I know customers like myself aren’t exactly idiots. But the experience sure made me feel like one.

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