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Motorola’s Flagship Razr Foldables Still Stuck on Android 15 as Android 16 Ships — And It’s Becoming a Pattern

When Google officially released Android 16 to the public in June 2025, it marked one of the earliest major Android releases in recent memory. The new operating system brought a host of improvements, from enhanced security features to redesigned notification systems. But for owners of Motorola’s premium Razr foldable phones — devices that cost upward of $1,000 — the celebration was muted. Their phones hadn’t even finished receiving Android 15 yet.

BBEdit 15.5.5: The Venerable Mac Text Editor Quietly Sharpens Its Edge With Targeted Bug Fixes

For more than three decades, BBEdit has occupied a peculiar and enduring position in the software world — a professional-grade text editor for macOS that has outlasted countless competitors, platform shifts, and the rise and fall of entire programming paradigms.

The Lithium-Ion Battery Isn’t Dead Yet: How a New Cathode Discovery Could Reshape the EV Market Before Solid-State Ever Arrives

For years, the battery industry has placed its biggest bets on solid-state technology as the next frontier for electric vehicles. Billions of dollars have flowed into startups and research labs promising lighter, safer, and more energy-dense batteries that replace liquid electrolytes with solid ones. But a team of researchers may have just upended that narrative — not by reinventing the battery, but by dramatically improving the one we already have.

The Invisible Threat to Your Family: Why Data Brokers Know More About You Than You Think—and What to Do About It

For most American families, the assumption is simple: if you haven’t posted something online, it isn’t there. But the reality is far more unsettling. Hundreds of data broker companies operate largely out of public view, compiling exhaustive profiles on individuals and their family members—profiles that include home addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, estimated income, political affiliations, and even the names and ages of children living in a household. The market for this personal information is vast, profitable, and, for the most part, entirely legal.

ChatGPT Still Dominates the AI Chatbot Wars, But Google’s Gemini Is Quietly Gaining Ground

When it comes to the artificial intelligence chatbot market, the conventional wisdom has long held that OpenAI’s ChatGPT sits atop the throne. A recent poll conducted by Android Central confirms that assumption — but the details beneath the headline numbers reveal a more nuanced picture of consumer preferences that should give both incumbents and challengers reason to pay attention.

Samsung’s Quiet Push Into Multi-SIM Data Switching Could Reshape How Android Users Manage Connectivity

Samsung appears to be laying the groundwork for a significant upgrade to how its Galaxy smartphones handle data across multiple SIM cards, according to code discoveries that suggest the Korean electronics giant is developing intelligent, automated data-switching features that could give its devices a meaningful edge over competitors in an increasingly connected world.

The FCC’s ‘Pro-America’ Programming Push: How a Federal Agency Is Pressuring Broadcasters to Air the Pledge of Allegiance

The Federal Communications Commission has taken a step that has no modern precedent in American broadcast regulation: it is actively pressuring television and radio stations to air patriotic content, including a daily recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance, as a condition of demonstrating they serve the public interest.

Americans Are Tearing Down Automated Surveillance Infrastructure — And the Movement Is Growing

Across the United States, a quiet but intensifying rebellion is taking shape — not in the halls of Congress or on social media platforms, but on suburban streets, rural highways, and urban intersections where automated license plate readers, speed cameras, and other surveillance devices have been installed. Citizens are physically dismantling, vandalizing, and destroying the machines they believe represent an overreach of government authority and corporate profiteering into their daily lives.

Apple’s Secret Weapon: An On-Device AI Agent That Can Operate Your iPhone Apps Without You

Apple has long been perceived as trailing behind its Silicon Valley rivals in the artificial intelligence race, but a newly surfaced research paper from the company’s machine learning division suggests Cupertino has been quietly building something far more ambitious than another chatbot.

Rust Is Quietly Replacing the Core of Linux—And the Speed Gains Are Real

For decades, the GNU coreutils have been the invisible backbone of every Linux system. Commands like ls, cat, cp, and find are so fundamental that most users never think about them, much less consider replacing them. But a growing movement among Linux power users and developers is doing exactly that—swapping out these C-based stalwarts for modern alternatives written in Rust.