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For the residents of the place known only as "the Town," that feeling of being trapped in your small hometown is literal: Once you set foot in the place, you can never leave it. That's more than just a metaphor in the sci-fi series From: the Town is surrounded by woods inhabited by bloodthirsty creatures, a fact hapless new residents the Matthews family discover only after it is too late to leave.

While statistically, there must be plenty of people out there who are perfectly content to stick around the place where they grew up, this queer boy ain't one of them. And I can't be alone, because there are lots of other shows about the nightmarish potential of seemingly pleasant little communities, most of them featuring characters who are in some way trapped there, including these 10 standout examples. From is streaming on MGM+.

Midnight Mass (2021)

It might not be the best of Mike Flanagan's Netflix work, but it's certainly the most emotionally devastating. Riley Flynn (Zach Gilford) returns to the tiny, isolated community of Crockett Island, his arrival coinciding with that of Catholic priest Father Paul Hill (Hamish Linklater). Riley is wrestling with his justifiable guilt over a drunk-driving death for which he was responsible, while the charismatic priest is reviving the town's once-flagging religious fervor while exacerbating local tensions. The brewing conflict, involving the limits of both faith and guilt, is fascinating, while the inseparably horrific elements are rather terrifying. Stream Midnight Mass on Netflix.


Wayward Pines (2015 – 2016)

Based on a trilogy of Blake Crouch novels, this show initially, stars Matt Dillon as a Secret Service agent investigating the disappearances of two fellow agents in the Idaho town of Wayward Pines. Things go awry pretty much immediately, and he wakes up from a car accident to find one of the agents (Carla Gugino), who's also his ex, having settled down in the seemingly idyllic community—and 12 years older than when he last saw her only a few weeks earlier. Even more dramatically, the local sheriff (Terrence Howard) enforces a strict "no one ever leaves" policy, on pain of having one's neck slit—fear of being stuck in a small town being both a common theme and, apparently, an American nightmare. The mysteries pile up from there. Stream Wayward Pines on Hulu.


Dark (2017 – 2020)

Dark began as a mystery involving a missing child and evolved, over its three seasons, into a wildly complex time travel narrative exploring dark family secrets over the course of several generations. The German import has a striking look and incredibly atmospheric feel, with an ensemble cast of teens and adults whose narratives are deftly intertwined. It turns out that small towns in Germany might hold as many horrors as those of the United States. Stream Dark on Netflix.


The 'Burbs (2026 – )

By no means a tonal match for From, this fun and very loose adaptation of the 1989 Tom Hanks film finds Keke Palmer's Samira and Jack Whitehall's Rob moving back to his impossibly safe and tidy hometown. Their house happens to be across the street from a dilapidated Victorian eyesore that may or may not have been the location of a murder a couple of decades before—a murder of a girl who made the mistake of trying to get away. As Samira adjusts to new motherhood as well as life on the cul-de-sac, she learns that even the nicest of her neighbors (played by Julia Duffy, Paula Pell, Mark Proksch, and Kapil Talwalkar) have secrets, and comes to suspect that her husband knows more about the missing girl than he's letting on. Stream The 'Burbs on Peacock.


Twin Peaks (1990 – 1991, 2017)

With all due respect to every other "small towns are weird" show, I'm not sure that there's any finer example of the form than than this groundbreaking bit of weirdness from David Lynch and Mark Frost, in which teens and adults in the deceptively quiet Twin Peaks face tragedy accompanied by supernatural threats from outside of our normal space and time. I think? The mysteries here aren't really meant to be solved as much as pondered with an eye toward nebulous existential dread (and if that's not your idea of fun, I'm not sure what you're doing here). Kyle MacLachlan plays FBI Special Agent Dale Cooper, who arrives in the title town to investigate the murder of teenager homecoming queen Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee), precipitating a (very) long night of the soul as Cooper uncovers secrets and mysteries among the town's delightfully, and often disturbingly, weird residents. Stream Twin Peaks on Paramount+.


Castle Rock (2018 – 2019)

Canceled after two (rather excellent) seasons, Castle Rock was a victim of its marketing. The show was promoted as a dive into some kind of Stephen King connected universe, promising Easter eggs without suggesting much by way of storytelling. And yet! There are actual stories here, with real dramatic heft—the first season’s “The Queen,” told from the unstable perspective of a character (played by Sissy Spacek) with worsening dementia, was one of the best, and most existentially horrifying, things on television that year. The second season introduces young Annie Wilkes, (Lizzy Caplan), the Kathy Bates character we know from Misery. The cast across the two seasons is stellar, and includes Bill Skarsgård, a creepy character not named Pennywise. There’s plenty of stuff for King fans to sink their teeth into as we dive into the backstory of a different Stephen King town, but it all works rather well on its own. Stream Castle Rock on Hulu.


Haven (2010 – 2015)

A couple of Stephen King situations here, which feels entirely fair given the writer's ease in situating the most horrific events imaginable in the most seemingly innocuous locales. Based on the King novella "The Colorado Kid," this X-Files-esque procedural has got the "weird stuff in a small town" vibe down pat. Emily Rose stars as Audrey Parker, an FBI Special Agent sent to the title town of Haven, Maine on a routine case. Soon, she gets drawn into “the Troubles," a series of harmful supernatural events that have recurred throughout the town’s history—and, by no coincidence, they are happening again. A supernatural-case-of-the-week format gives way to a bigger mystery when Audrey comes to learn that this isn’t her first time in Haven. Stream Haven on Peacock and Prime Video.


It: Welcome to Derry (2025 – )

One more from King, who's not just great at situating horror in small towns, but in conveying the unique trauma of being a kid trapped in a small town. Set in the 1960s, this It prequel dives into the backstory of Derry and Pennywise the clown through the eyes of children who met him during his previous visit to the town. By the end of the first episode, it's clear that even the most adorable children aren't safe, and this is a show that will, if nothing else, go hard—and that's before Bill Skarsgård's memorably creepy Pennywise even shows up, and before we dig deeper into the secrets and lies of the adults of Derry. Stream It: Welcome to Derry on HBO Max.


The Returned (2012 – 2015)

A slow-burn French mystery, The Returned finds the dead returning to life in a tiny French town: a teenage bus-crash victim; a child killed by burglars; a groom who died by suicide on his wedding day; a serial killer. The arrival of these people—they're literally zombies, but the show veers from the usual tropes—wildly complicates life for their families, even as strange phenomena accompany them, including the reveal of a town lost beneath the local lake. Audiences were split on the ambitious second season, but the first is a masterpiece. Stream The Returned on Prime Video and Tubi.


Hemlock Grove (2013 – 2015)

One of the first of Netflix's original series, this supernatural thriller takes us to the title Pennsylvania town, where economic realities have shut down the steel mill and left residents with few options other than the two remaining employers, the Godfrey Institute for Biomedical Technologies and the Hemlock Acres Hospital. Take your pick, but do so knowing that Olivia Godfrey (Famke Janssen), head of the Godfrey Institute, is rumored to be conducting all sorts of weird experiments. When two teenage girls are murdered, a 17-year-old Romani kid, rumored to be a werewolf, is the prime suspect. And while he actually is a werewolf, that doesn't make him a murderer. Rent Hemlock Grove from Prime Video.


Teacup (2024)

Given his place in the horror-novel pantheon, it's a bit surprising that Robert McCammon's novels haven't been adapted more than just this once (though there's at least one more in development). Teacup takes the limited locale of From and shrinks it even further: here, the characters are not bounded by a town from which they can't escape, but by the borders of their rural Georgia ranch. Leaving will get you killed, and even just trying to leave is likely to leave you injured. Yvonne Strahovski and Scott Speedman lead the cast of mysteriously trapped characters, and while the show was cancelled after just one season, it builds to an effective, and ruthlessly brutal, conclusion. Stream Teacup on Peacock.


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Running gives you a lot of things: Stress relief, personal records, chafing—the list goes on. In fact, you can add "butter" to that list right now.

Running content creator Libby Cope has gone viral not for her pace or mileage, but for what she makes along the way. Her video showing how she churns butter on a train run has racked over one million likes across Instagram and TikTok. Let's dig into the science of how this works, and why this is my favorite kind of running influencer content right now. 

How to churn butter while you run

In her viral videos, Cope pours heavy cream and salt into double-bagged Ziplocs, tucks the squishy dairy parcels into her running vest alongside her boyfriend, and heads out onto the trails. By the time they're done, so is the butter. They spread it on sandwich bread and eat it right there. So, how crazy is this feat exactly?

As the Center for Dairy Research explains it, this sort of makes perfect sense. Milk is an emulsion—a mixture of fat and water molecules that don't naturally want to coexist. Left alone long enough, milk will begin to separate, with the fattier molecules floating to the top. That fatty layer skimmed from the surface is cream. And cream, it turns out, is one aggressive trail run away from becoming butter.

When cream is agitated—like with all the shaking that comes with a trail run—the fat molecules suspended within it start bumping into each other. Eventually, they begin to stick together, clustering into larger and larger clumps and pushing the remaining liquid (buttermilk) to the outside. What's left in the center of that shake-up should be butter.

The key variables are time and intensity of agitation. A casual stroll probably won't cut it, since the movement needs to be sustained and vigorous enough to keep the fat molecules colliding. A trail run, with its constant up-and-down impact, its jostling vest pockets, and its 30-plus minutes of continuous movement, is more likely to get the job done. Essentially, your body is doing the work a wooden churn or a stand mixer would otherwise do.

There are plenty of other variables to consider, of course. Cold temperatures can slow the process, while too much heat will melt the whole production. Quality and amount of ingredients, the intensity of the run, and the weather outside all play a role in refining this run-churn process.

Cope’s videos aren’t the only examples of runners using their workout to make food. Running influencer TrailswithZach posted a tutorial last fall of how he makes chocolate ice cream while running, garnering over 137 thousand likes. Here’s another example from runner Irene Choi, who took things in a more creative direction with a corn juice honey butter recipe.

Why this social media trend matters (beyond the butter)

At a time when the online running community feels plagued by unrealistic expectations, this micro-movement is a breath of fresh air. It could be easy to write all of this off as a quirky internet moment, but there’s a deeper takeaway here. Cope told Runner's World that the experience has been a grounding reminder of why she runs in the first place, and all the joy it brings her. 

That's the part that sticks, much like butter on bread. Online running culture gets daunting and discouraging, with all the pressure to buy the right shoes, post the fastest times, sign up for all the trendiest races, and so on. Churning butter while you run is a joyful reminder that running can also be playful and weird. Even if you don’t get down and dirty with buttercream yourself (something I have zero plans to do), these videos are a great way to reflect on why you run in the first place.


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A criminal group suspected of running an online fraud scheme in Germany, which defrauded victims of around €1 million, has been dismantled through judicial cooperation coordinated by Eurojust.

Germany online fraud scheme

On 10 March, German and French authorities arrested three suspects in a joint operation. The main suspect, located in France, appeared before a judge after an arrest warrant was issued and remains in custody while a French court decides whether he will be transferred to Germany.

During searches in both countries, authorities seized assets including cryptocurrencies and jewellery.

According to the investigation, the criminal group allegedly used phishing emails to obtain victims’ online banking and mobile phone login credentials. They were then able to bypass additional verification steps required to transfer and withdraw funds from the victims’ accounts. The stolen money was subsequently moved to fake cryptocurrency accounts to further conceal its origin.

“Extensive evidence that was collected during the action day will now be further analysed as investigations into the online fraud scheme continue,” Eurojust said in the announcment.

This operation is the latest in a series of actions Eurojust has carried out with other countries to combat online fraud.


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Tech companies really want you to start talking to their products. And sure, that makes sense for an Amazon Echo, or even ChatGPT's voice mode, but I'm not sure I need to talk to my apps. Google disagrees: The company is now rolling out "Ask Maps" to iOS and Android users in the U.S. and India, making Google Maps the latest such product to implement an AI assistant. It begs the question: Will you talk to your navigation app while out on the road?

Google's pitch for Ask Maps is this: Rather than search for generic stops along your route (e.g. "coffee," "gas station," or "hotel"), you can "Ask Maps" complex questions to increase your chances of finding something specific. One of Google's example questions is, "My phone is dying—where can I charge it without having to wait in a long line for coffee?" That's a tall order not usually fit for a navigation app's search feature—you want the app to find a location with public outlets that serves coffee, but isn't too busy at the time you're heading out. Type that into the typical search feature, and you'll instantly get a pop-up that reads "No results found on Google Maps."

Google says that Ask Maps can analyze information from over 300 million locations, including sifting through the reviews of its more than 500 million contributors. The results also take your past searches into consideration, as well as any saved locations you may have in Maps. In another example, Google says you could ask your Google Maps assistant to find you a spot with a "cozy aesthetic" and a table for four at 7 p.m., to meet up with friends coming from Midtown East. Ideally, the assistant would know not to pull up any Midtown East spots, since the friends are coming from that location, cross-reference restaurants with "cozy" reviews that have that availability—plus, it may know from past searchers that you are vegan, so it will only return results with vegan options.

ask maps
Credit: Google

This is Google, so, of course, Maps' assistant is powered by Gemini. In concept, it is an interesting implementation of generative AI. I certainly wouldn't have a chat with Ask Maps, but I'd be curious whether it'd really deliver on these contextual requests. If I really could tell Google Maps that I needed to find a restaurant with availability in 30 minutes that could accommodate both a gluten and peanut allergy, within a 15 minute radius of a concert venue, sure, that'd be super helpful.

But AI isn't perfect. In fact, it has a habit of making things up. It'd be a shame to walk into that restaurant and find out it doesn't have gluten free options, or that everything is fried in peanut oil, or that they don't actually have availability, or that it is indeed a 15 minute walk to a concert venue, but not the concert venue you're aiming for. If that request overwhelms the AI and returns results that don't match some (or most) of the request, or, perhaps, a "No results found on Google Maps" alert, I probably won't be using Ask Maps again.


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The boundaries between the Mac and iPad have blurred in recent years—especially with the release of iPadOS 26. Apple's tablet now has a capable windowed multitasking system, a better file management app, and powerful apps. But the software can still sometimes be a limitation. It is, after all, a sandboxed environment, and the touch-first interface can hide a lot of pro-level features. But those pro-level features are still there, if you know where to look. Whether you're a casual or a pro iPad user, you can make the most out of your tablet with these 10 hacks.

Use this hidden gesture to drag and drop multiple items at once

Drag and drop hidden gesture on the iPad.
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

You might be familiar with all the ways you can swipe and slide around iPadOS to get things done. But if you're still dragging and dropping files and photos one-by-one, you should know you can move multiple items at once.

When you tap and hold to select one item, drag your fingers out from the file to "pick" it up, but don't let go just yet. With another finger, tap to pick up as many more files, photos, or links as you wish. They'll all get collected under the finger you're holding on to. Then, use your free hand to go to the Home Screen and open the app you want to drop everything off (like Notes or Mail). Once you let go, all the files will follow suit. This works within the Files app as well, which makes it a great way to move multiple files together. If you're using the latest iPadOS version, you'll also see a progress bar for transferring files at the top of the screen.

Use "Windowed Apps" to turn your iPad into a computer

Floating windows on iPad
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

With iPadOS 26, Apple finally introduced true windowed multitasking. You can now have up to 12 apps open at the same time, all with their own free-floating windows. But it's not the default state, so if you're still using your iPad as-is, you'll have to shift gears into Windowed Apps mode. You can do this from Settings > Multitasking & Gestures, but there's a faster way from wherever you are in iPadOS. Open Control Center, tap the new Multitasking toggle and switch to Windowed Apps mode.

Now, every app on the screen, even a full-screen one, will have a little handle in the bottom-right corner, which you can pull to make the window larger or smaller. You can grab the top toolbar from any app to move it around. Apple also included the "Stop Light" controls from Mac here: Tap on them to close, minimize, or maximize the app. If you tap and hold the Stop Light buttons, you'll also get an option to move or arrange the window into a grid layout, like the Mac.

Use this gesture for quick side-by-side app views

Split View with gestures on iPad.
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

Coming from the iPhone, you might be familiar with some multitasking gestures. You swipe up to go Home, and you can swipe on the Home bar to switch between apps. These exist on the iPad too, but iPadOS adds more gestures to the mix.

One of the best new gestures added in iPadOS 26 is the flick gesture. Pick up a window when you're in Windowed Apps mode, and just flick it to the right or the left of the screen. The window will then automatically resize itself to fit to half of the screen. When two apps are docked like this, you'll see a new handlebar appear. You can drag it to resize the window split (going to a 70/30 split is a great ratio for multitasking, as one app essentially goes down to iPhone size).

There are more gestures to know about, too. Using four or five fingers, swipe left or right on the screen to switch between apps, or app pairs. Swipe up and hold to enter app switcher mode (and to see a preview of all open apps). And of course you can swipe up with four fingers to go home. You can also swipe down from the top of the screen to reveal the Menu bar at any time.

Change this setting to make the Files app more like Finder on Mac

Column view and file transfer progress in the Files app.
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

The iPad's Files app is not exactly like the Finder on the Mac, but with iPadOS 26, it's more similar than ever. You finally have background processing, so you can monitor large file transfers from the top toolbar in the Files app, or from Live Activities.

But to get the most out of the Files app, you should turn to a different view. From the top toolbar you can now switch from the default Icons view to either a List view or a Column view. Column view is like Finder, where you can drill down into a folder structure while still maintaining easy access to top folders in columns to the left. On the other hand, if you manage a lot of files, and you like to see all file information, along with sort options, you should try List view. You can sort based on name, date created, date modified, size, or tags. And you can add or remove columns to customize exactly what shows up.

Use "Sidecar" to turn your iPad into a second screen

Using the iPad as a second screen for Mac.
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

If you work on your Mac most of the time, you can still use the iPad as a copilot. Apple has a built-in feature called Sidecar that turns the iPad into a second screen—no wires or setup needed. Just make sure that Handoff on your iPad is enabled (and that you're using wifi and not tethering). To enable Handoff, go to Settings > General > Airplay & Handoff > Handoff.

Make sure the iPad is unlocked and nearby. Then, go to Control Center > Screen Mirroring and pick the iPad from your list. To use it as an external monitor, choose the Use As Separate Display option. If you want to use the iPad as a drawing surface for a Mac app, with Apple Pencil support, choose the Mirror Display option instead.

You can now move freely between the iPad screen and the Mac. To arrange the layout for the screens, go to System Settings > Displays. For more tips, take a look at our detailed guide on using Sidecar.

Use your iPad's hidden "iPhone" keyboard to type with one hand

Mini keyboard on the iPad
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

The software keyboard takes up half of the screen when you're trying to take notes in the Notes app. But it doesn't have to be that way. If you need to see more of the screen, you can turn the full-size keyboard into an iPhone keyboard using a simple gesture. Just pinch in with two fingers in the middle of the keyboard to switch to a floating mini-keyboard. You can drag it anywhere you please. (Alternatively, long-press the keyboard icon in the bottom right, then choose "Floating.")

Use Slide Over to pin a window to the top of the screen

Slide Over pinned app on top.
Credit: Lifehacker

You can pin an app to the top of the screen using Slide Over if you want to refer to something else for a task (without shifting gears into the multitasking mode). First, you need to be in either Stage Manager or Windowed Mode. Then, open an app, long-press on the Stop Lights control in the top left, then tap "Enter Slide Over." The app will shift to the side, and will always remain there, even when switching between apps. You can even resize the Slide Over window to make it as big or small as you want. You can hide the current Slide Over window by swiping the window to the edge of the screen. A small arrow button will appear in its place, which you can use to bring the window back. If you have a keyboard attached, use the keyboard shortcut Globe + Option + Right Arrow to send an app to Slide Over mode.

Edit your handwritten text with Apple Pencil gestures

Editing handwritten text using Apple Pencil on iPad.
Credit: Apple

If you're writing a note with your Apple Pencil, and you make a mistake, you might think you need to switch to the eraser mode, erase the error, then switch back to the pen mode to keep writing. There are other ways, however.

To remove an error, just scratch or scribble over a word or sentence to delete it. To rearrange handwritten text, you can draw a circle around a word to pick it up. Then, you can move the word around and place it where you'd like it to go. If two words are too close to each other, you can draw a vertical slice between them to insert some space. Similarly, just press and hold the Pencil in between two words to insert text in the middle.

Change default apps for your frequently used file types

Choosing default apps for a file type in Files app.
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

For years, when you'd open a file on your iPad, it would open in the app of Apple's choice. If you wanted to open the file in a different app, you'd have to open that app first, then select the file to open. Luckily, that's a thing of the past. The Files app now has an option to choose default apps for particular file types, just like your Mac.

Open the Files app, then find a file type that you want to change (for example, always opening PNG files in Pixelmator instead of the Preview app). Tap and hold on the file, then tap "Get Info." Here, choose "Always Open With," and switch to a different app from the list. Apple will bring up a confirmation box. Here, select "Always Open." The next time you tap on the file with the particular file extension, it will open in the app of your choice.

Add folders to the Dock to access your files anywhere

Adding interactive folders to the Dock
Credit: Apple

With iPadOS 26, Apple added a Mac-inspired folder system directly to the Dock, where a folder expands to show recently added files right on top of your screen. When multitasking on your iPad, you might routinely need to drag and drop files from Downloads or your work folder. You can add that folder directly to the Dock to quickly access the files within, without even opening the Files app.

From the Files app, press and hold any folder that you want to add to the Dock, and tap "Add to Dock." Or, you can simply drag and drop a folder to the Dock itself. Now, when you tap the folder icon in the Dock, you'll see recently added files, or folders within it. You can then drag and drop any file you see here onto any app, or you can open the folder using the Open Folder option at the top of the file's preview.


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Whether you've just unboxed your first running watch or you've been logging miles with one for years, there's a good chance you're only scratching the surface of what it can do. Beyond simply tracking your run, today's smartwatches are packed with features that, with a little know-how, can genuinely transform your training. Here are ten hacks to help you get more out of your smartwatch running companion.

Try wearing your fitness watch somewhere other than your wrist

In terms of placement, your wrist isn't the only option. Upper arm placement can actually improve optical heart rate accuracy by giving the sensor better contact with a meatier part of the body, with less wrist-movement noise. It's an underused trick that can be especially useful during rowing, strength training, or any activity where wrist movement interferes with readings.

Display lap pace instead of current pace

Current pace—the real-time speed your watch calculates from GPS—sounds like exactly what you'd want to see mid-run. In practice, your "current pace" number can jump around constantly, spiking and dropping in response to GPS signal fluctuations or brief changes in effort.

The general consensus among runners (at least in running subreddits) is that lap pace is the smarter alternative. It shows your average pace for the current lap or interval, smoothing out the noise for a more stable readout. During any kind of workout where consistency is the whole point, glancing down and seeing a steady lap pace tells you far more about how you're actually performing than a current pace figure that's bouncing every few seconds. Swap it in through your data field settings (most watches support it across all run profiles) and you'll wonder why you ever ran without it.

Use your fitness watch's hot keys and customizable buttons

Most running watches allow you to assign shortcuts to physical buttons or gestures, but not enough runners ever bother to set them up. You can assign shortcuts to bring up the weather or the stopwatch, to save your current location, to turn on a “night shift” mode, and more. If you find yourself repeatedly diving into the same sub-menus before or after a run, assigning them to a button shortcut can save time and frustration.

Let's use Garmin's features as an example. By going to the settings menu and selecting System and then Shortcuts (previously “Hot Keys”), you can assign features to long presses or combination button presses. Beth shares that on her watch, she holds the DOWN button to bring up music controls, and the BACK button to turn the touchscreen on or off.

Disable the fitness watch's touchscreen during activities

Touchscreen running watches are the norm these days, but an accidental mid-run swipe can pause your activity, skip to the next screen or—worst of all—end your session entirely. If your watch allows it, disable the touchscreen during activities. This is especially important in wet weather or when you're wearing a long sleeve top that brushes the display. This setting might be buried in the activity settings or accessibility options. Find it, switch it on, and never accidentally stop your watch at mile three of a rainy long run again.

Do a factory reset of your fitness watch if it's feeling stale

This one sounds drastic, but it's a legitimate trick that many serious runners swear by. Your watch builds its fitness models (VO2 max, training load, recovery time) from accumulated data over time. But if you've recently lost significant weight, recovered from a long injury, gone through a period of illness, or simply noticed that your HRV and sleep stats have been stubbornly poor for weeks with no explanation, that historical data can actually anchor your watch to an outdated version of you.

The fix: Log into your watch platform from a computer, export or note any data you want to keep, then factory reset the device. In Garmin, you select “Delete Data and Reset Settings” option to clear all performance metrics. You'll also need to delete the data within your companion app, since it's usually saved there as a back-up. The point of this is a running watch equivalent of rebooting a computer that's been running too long. You can wipe the slate clean and let your watch rebuild a fresh, accurate baseline from where you actually are right now, rather than where you were months or years ago.


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Fortanix announced a new multi-sourced quantum entropy capability within Fortanix Data Security Manager (DSM), enabling enterprises to diversify encryption key generation at the origin of trust.

Through partnerships with Qrypt and Quantum Dice, Fortanix integrates independent, physics-based quantum entropy sources directly into its key management workflows, enabling compliance requirements that require multiple entropy sources and extending zero-trust principles to the entropy layer.

Encryption remains the bedrock of digital security, but as AI systems, quantum computing advancements, and increasingly sophisticated threats accelerate, the quality and provenance of randomness used to generate encryption keys are becoming critical for cryptographic resilience. Regulators across financial services and government sectors are recognizing entropy source diversification as a foundational control for modern cryptographic assurance.

As quantum capabilities progress, organizations must ensure that the foundations of their cryptographic systems, including entropy, are resilient, verifiable and future-ready.

“As enterprises rethink their encryption algorithms, they need to examine the very origin of trust in their cryptographic systems,” said Anand Kashyap, CEO of Fortanix. “With multi-sourced quantum entropy integrated directly into Fortanix Data Security Manager, we’re eliminating single points of failure at the root of key generation. This innovation enables customers to strengthen compliance posture, improve defense-in-depth, and extend zero trust principles without hardware disruption.”

Diversifying the root of trust

Fortanix DSM integrates directly with independent external quantum entropy providers to augment internal entropy pools used for encryption key generation. Unlike legacy hardware security module (HSM) architectures that rely on fixed hardware-based randomness, Fortanix’s software-defined approach enables integration of multiple external entropy sources without operational disruption.

Key capabilities include:

  • Multi-sourced quantum entropy integration: Ingest entropy from independent, physics-based Quantum Random Number Generator (QRNG) providers to diversify key material at the origin.
  • Defense-in-depth at the entropy layer: Eliminate single-source dependency in key generation to reduce systemic cryptographic risk.
  • Regulatory and audit readiness: Immutable logging and audit trails demonstrate proof of entropy diversification to support compliance mandates.
  • Seamless integration and scale: Leverage existing DSM workflows and APIs to ingest quantum entropy without hardware changes, scaling globally to billions of transactions.
  • Crypto agility without disruption: DSM’s software-defined architecture allows rapid updates and algorithm adoption without overwhelming upgrades.
  • Confidential Computing protection: Encryption keys are generated and protected within Confidential Computing environments, ensuring keys are never exposed to host operating systems or cloud administrators.

By integrating multiple independent entropy sources, Fortanix enables organizations to build resilience directly into the cryptographic supply chain, ultimately strengthening assurance against both classical and emerging quantum-era threats.

“Fortanix is a critical partner in advancing modern data security, and the addition of Qrypt’s quantum entropy meaningfully strengthens that foundation for the next era of threats,” said Denis Mandich, CTO at Qrypt. “True cryptographic resilience begins with trusted randomness, and by integrating Qrypt’s quantum technology with Fortanix Data Security Manager, this collaboration delivers scalable, high-assurance randomness designed to help organizations address evolving quantum-era risks across distributed infrastructure.”

“Partnering with Fortanix, we are bringing verifiable quantum entropy into enterprise key generation, giving customers trusted randomness with enhanced auditability into the key quality,” said George Dunlop, co‑founder and director of partnerships at Quantum Dice. “By integrating our DISC™ QRNG with Fortanix Data Security Manager, organizations gain continuous assurance that their keys are built on a strong and demonstrably reliable foundation.”

With native key management, hybrid multicloud support, SaaS or on-prem deployment flexibility, and Confidential Computing protections, Fortanix DSM delivers crypto agility and future resilience as quantum computing and AI reshape the threat landscape.


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