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I've been plagued by an odd iOS bug for a while now. I couldn't tell you exactly when it started, but sometime during the iOS 26 era, I noticed that my iPhone 17 Pro Max's brightness controls were slower than usual. I found this strange: As far as I know, iPhones have had a consistent speed when changing brightness. You pull up Control Center, move the brightness slider up or down, and the brightness levels adjust accordingly, almost instantly. But not with this bug.

Since the bug, I've occasionally noticed that lowering the brightness is weirdly sluggish. Moving the slider still works, but I can see each brightness level adjust tick and tick, rather than one smooth adjustment. Plus, even when it reaches the bottom, it doesn't seem as dark as it should be. I can tell, especially when using my iPhone in a dark room, it shouldn't be this bright at its minimum level.

I wasn't sure whether this was a hardware or a software quirk. The latter, of course, would be preferable. If this was something Apple could fix with a software update, that'd be easy enough. But if there was something wrong with 17 series' displays, that could be another beast entirely. I didn't really think it was hardware, since the issue was intermittent, but still, I had no idea what was going on, or how to fix it when it appeared.

How to fix this odd iOS brightness bug

The good news is I found a solution—though one I never would have expected. I finally thought to Google the problem, and found myself on this Reddit thread, with an iPhone 17 Pro user with the same problem as me. The top comment presented the solution: Press the Dictation button on your iPhone's keyboard.

That made zero sense to me. What would dictation have to do with screen brightness? But I tried it anyway: I opened something like Spotlight on my iPhone, which activated the keyboard, and then I pressed the Dictation button. Presto: My screen immediately dropped its brightness, even though I had been on its "lowest" setting. When I tried adjusting the brightness, it worked as you'd expect: Lowering it was instantaneous. Why does this fix the problem? I have no clue, but it works. Whatever is dragging down the display brightness settings is relieved with iOS' Dictation feature, or at least by activating the mic.

That Reddit post was from January, which means Apple still hasn't patched this bug. I'm currently running the latest version of iOS as of this article (26.5.2), though I haven't yet dipped my toe in the iOS 27 beta. It's possible Apple has a patch in its next big iPhone update, but until I run it, I can't say for sure. If your iPhone also has this strange brightness bug, at least there's a solution—as unconventional as it may be.


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The Pink cyber extortion crew is tricking employees into giving them access to their Microsoft 365 accounts by faking Entra passkey enrollment requests.

The attack

The attack starts with a vishing call to an employee. The caller poses as IT and says it’s time to set up a passkey. Everything after that is theater, built to keep the victim occupied while the attacker finalizes everything.

The attackers instruct the target to visit a subdomain that mimics the Microsoft Entra ID login page, which has been customized to look like it belongs to the victim’s employer.

The target is instructed to log in to their Microsoft 365 account, enter their second authentication factor, and set up a passkey.

The specific pages with these input requests are served via a panel-controlled phishing kit, allowing the attackers to customize the authentication flow presented to the targeted users.

“The operator can use the kit to adapt the user experience to each victim’s MFA requirements (TOTP, push notification with number matching, SMS OTP) during the session,” the researchers noted.

The kit shows loading screens between the separate phishing pages, giving the attackers time to use the entered credentials and authentication factors to log in to the targets’ Microsoft 365 accounts.

Once access is achieved, they serve the targets with a page asking them to set up a passkey.

The next page shows a Microsoft-branded prompt with a list of BIP-39 seed phrase words (borrowed from cryptocurrency wallets), and tells the target to write them down:

Microsoft 365 passkey enrollment

The “Save your recovery key” phishing page (Source: Okta)

Finally, they are instructed to enter one of them to “confirm” their recovery key, and when they do, they are served a page that confirms that a passkey registration was successful.

“We are not aware of any direct applicability of BIP-39 seed phrases to Microsoft Entra or its passkey registration process. An attacker that has already gained unauthorized access to a user account can create their own recovery codes using a process that does not require any input from the real account holder,” Okta researchers noted.

“It is likely that these passkey-themed pages are available to the phishing kit operator as a sleight of hand. It is a distraction to keep a user occupied on a task while the threat actor enrolls their own passkey in the legitimate Microsoft user account.”

Why passkeys make such a good lure

Passkeys are a genuine security improvement: they are phishing-resistant and cryptographically bound to the site that issued them, which is exactly why an attacker would want to enroll one on a target’s account.

“As of May 2026, Microsoft administrators have been able to create passkey registration campaigns that remind or ‘nudge’ users to enrol in passkeys at sign-in, and in some circumstances these nudges are on by default,” Okta researchers explained.

With enrollment prompts now appearing unbidden in Entra ID tenants, and employees getting used to seeing them, they make the perfect pretext.

Okta has observed this campaign targeting enterprises in the food and beverage, technology, healthcare, automotive, construction, and aviation industries, and says that the goal is data extortion.

Palo Alto Networks researchers documented the same campaign in early June 2026. They say that the after gaining access to the victim’s account, the attackers exfiltrate data from platforms like SharePoint and OneDrive, then use the compromised account to send their initial extortion email and internal Teams messages.

They also tied this campaign to the Pink data extortion group/brand, which say is likely a threat actor affiliated with The Com, a decentralized network of mostly English-speaking and mostly young cybercriminals who organize across Discord, Telegram, and gaming platforms.

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Mad Men is a show that transcends its logline. On its face, it sounds a bit dull and mildly ridiculous—a show about Madison Avenue ad men in the stodgy early 1960s?—but Matthew Weiner and his cast delivered one of the best TV shows ever, a deep dive into the changing mores of America across the '60s, as the Consumer Age came into dominance.

If you miss the detailed recreations of the era, the fab fashions, and Don Draper’s fascinating antihero aura—and you’ve already burned through our suggestions for streamalike shows—there are still plenty of movies, books, podcasts, and even video games that can scratch that itch.

The best books like Mad Men

Mad Men was a literary show. Aside from all the overt allusions to and actual books visually referenced on the show, there’s a writerly aspect to the scripts that made it feel like a collection of short stories as much as a TV series. If you want more of that vibe, here are some great books to dive into.

The Man in the Grey Flannel Suit, by Sloan Wilson

An obvious influence on the show, The Man in the Grey Flannel Suit was a bestseller in 1955, and the title became shorthand for a certain type of middle-class American. It’s the story of Tom Rath, a World War II veteran and family man making his way up the corporate ladder while dealing with what we would now recognize as PTSD, not to mention the new pressures of affluence. Like Don Draper, Tom keeps up the appearance of a detached, confident businessman while his inner monologue is a riot of conflicting emotions and stress.

The Best of Everything, by By Rona Jaffe

Jaffe was just 26 when she wrote this, her debut novel, and it offers the perfect alternate perspective on the Mad Men era (Don Draper, in fact, is seen reading it in season one). The story follows five young women who work at a big office in Manhattan, and details their lived experience as people with dreams, as sex objects routinely harassed at work, and as willing participants in extramarital affairs and other scandalous behavior. It’s a snapshot of a bygone era with the same depth and attention to detail as the show.

Confessions of an Advertising Man, by David Ogilvy

Sure, you can (and should, because it’s hilarious) actually buy a copy of Sterling’s Gold, the fictional memoir by Roger Sterling from Mad Men. But you should also read the book that filled Sterling with so much envy—Confessions of an Advertising Man, by advertising legend David Ogilvy. It’s basically an instruction manual in which Ogilvy shares the lessons he’d learned from decades in the business, and it established him as a kind of Ad Guru for the 1960s. If you want insight into how real "Mad Men" thought, this is the book for you.

Revolutionary Road, by Richard Yates

Mad Men often feasted on the theme of affluent ennui and suburban malaise—no matter how successful or wealthy Don and everyone around him becomes, they’re desperately bored and unhappy. One of the most potent moments on the show comes late in the series: Don has reached the pinnacle of professional success and is sitting in a boring meeting when he spots a plane in the sky outside his window—and just stands up and leaves for an adventure. That’s the energy in Yates’ classic, tragic novel: Frank and April Wheeler plan to escape the trap of 1950s American drudgery by saving up to live in France and live as bohemians, but their empty lives can't support their outsized dreams.

Seconds, by David Ely

This 1963 novel should be better known (as should the 1966 film adaptation, which is perhaps the best work Rock Hudson ever did), and it’s ideal for Mad Men fans because it’s also about a successful man who can’t seem to resist the urge to flee his happy life and reimagine himself. In this case, literally: "Wilson,” as the 50-ish bank executive in this book calls himself, signs up with a company that fakes his death, remakes him into a physically younger man, and sets him up with his dream career in an all-new life, to disastrous consequences. There’s no doubt Don Draper would have done this if he had the chance.

The best movies like Mad Men

Mad Men might be literary, but it’s also a damn fine-looking show. If you want some feature-length entertainment that explores the same time period and similar themes, you can’t go wrong with these movies.

A Single Man (2009)

Based on the 1964 novel by Christopher Isherwood, this film follows middle-aged professor George Falconer (Colin Firth) on the day he has decided to commit suicide due to the unbearable grief he feels after losing his long-time partner, Jim (Matthew Goode). He initially observes everything he experiences with renewed interest, believing it will be the last time he does so, but his encounters over the course of the day impact him in unexpected ways. It’s a gorgeous glimpse of the early 1960s and the story of a man living—and ruined by—a double life. Stream A Single Man on Kanopy or rent it on Prime Video.

Inside Llewyn Davis (2013)

A 1960s-set period piece about a brilliant man who won’t get out of his own way? That’s a perfect match with Mad Men. In 1961 New York, Llewyn Davis (Oscar Isaac) is a struggling folk singer in the time just before Bob Dylan’s breakthrough. Broke and bitter, his life collapses around him as poor decisions, grief, and simple bad luck conspire to make him consider giving up his dreams. It’s a lot funnier than that sounds, and a brilliant examination of a narcissist who has the looks and talent but not the moral fortitude to make it big. Aside from the pitch-perfect recreation of the time and place, fans of the show will appreciate it as a deep character study. Stream Inside Llewyn Davis on Kanopy or rent it on Prime Video.

The Apartment (1960)

If you ever thought the rampant sexism and alcohol-soaked chicanery in your average episode of Mad Men was a bit over the top, The Apartment will set you straight. In 1960 Manhattan, C.C. Baxter (Jack Lemmon) is an ambitious clerk in an enormous insurance company who allows the executives in his division to use his bachelor apartment to stage their extramarital affairs. It’s both hilarious and heartbreaking, and a contemporaneous depiction of what office life was like, contemporaneous to the first season of Mad Men is set. Stream The Apartment on Kanopy or rent it on Prime Video.

How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying (1967)

If you were surprised to see Bert Cooper (Robert Morse)’s ghost sing and dance for Don Draper in season seven of Mad Men, you never saw How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. This 1967 film (based on a hit Broadway musical) follows J. Pierrepont Finch (Morse) as he follows the ethically dubious advice found in a self-help book to rise steadily from the mailroom to the boardroom at a huge company. It’s a funny, bright take on the 1960s business world that’s somehow more joyous and also more cynical than Mad Men. Stream How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying on Hoopla or rent it on Prime Video.

Patterns (1956)

Written by The Twilight Zone's Rod Serling, Patterns was explicitly named as a major influence on Mad Men by Matthew Weiner himself—he said he used the film to “get a sense of the real offices and to see how virtue and ambition can clash.” The story centers on an idealistic young executive who is pushed by his company’s owner to replace an older, highly respected executive who’s lost his touch. It’s a story of manipulation, ambition, and greed, and you can see the clear echoes of Mad Men’s office scenes in every frame. Stream Patterns on Kanopy or rent it on Prime Video.

The best video games like Mad Men

If, like Don Draper, you’re more about taking action, controlling your own destiny, and not having a contract, video games can give you at least a hint of that Mad Men vibe. (There actually was a kind-of-a-joke Mad Men visual novel-style game released back in 2012, but it’s no longer playable, so you’ll have to make do with these suggested substitutes.)

L.A. Noire

The obvious choice is L.A. Noire, for two basic reasons. One, the game employed a lot of Mad Men actors, starting with Aaron Staton (Ken Cosgrove) as the lead character Cole Phelps and including Julie McNiven (Hildy), Ryan Cutrona (Betty Draper’s father, Eugene), Michael Gladis (Paul Kinsley), and Rich Sommer (Harry Crane), just to name a few. And two, the game’s 1947 setting is a similarly immersive recreation, from the fashions to the gritty, noir-soaked tone.

Platforms: PlayStation, Xbox, Nintendo Switch, Steam

Disco Elysium

If you loved Mad Men, you’ll love the whole vibe of Disco Elysium. It’s set in a dreamy universe with visuals that look like an oil painting, and you play as a burned-out, amnesiac detective with substance abuse issues, so at first glance the connection to Mad Men isn’t obvious. You’ll find it not only in the antihero main character and his struggles with identity and sobriety, but in the dense, literary approach to story and character—playing the game is almost like taking Don Draper, removing his memory, and dropping him into an alternate universe mystery.

Platforms: PlayStation, Xbox, Stadia, Nintendo Switch, Steam

BioShock

On the one hand, BioShock is a demented first-person shooter set in an underwater city (and the sequel is set in a floating sky city) where insane people have overdosed on Objectivism and "plasmids" that give them superpowers, none of which is very Mad Men-esque. On the other hand, the visual design is a pitch-perfect 1960 vibe, the story is an exploration of how narcissism and consumerism destroy societies, and the questions of identity and free will the game explores slot nicely into a Draper-style narrative, questioning whether any of us truly know who we really are.

Platforms: PlayStation, Xbox, Steam

One Late Night

A recurring plot beat in Mad Men is the liminal weirdness of working late at an office. Whether it’s Don hallucinating the ghost of Anna Draper after she passes away, Harry living at the office post-affair, or Paul Kinsley, drunk as a skunk, having a creative epiphany late at night, the offices of Mad Men are a character unto themselves. One Late Night is a free-to-play indie horror game, but it captures that eerie vibe as you wander an empty office, following clues to a haunting (and probably being scared out of your wits a few times). Imagine you’re playing as Don, hungover and depressed, experiencing a long dark night of the soul.

Platforms: Steam

What Remains of Edith Finch

If you love the deep characterization and exploration of generational trauma inherent in Don Draper's story, play What Remains of Edith Finch. You take up the role of Edith, a 17-year-old girl who is the last survivor of her family. She returns to the estate where she grew up to learn the real reasons her family collapsed into chaos and tragedy. It’s a thoughtful, absorbing walking simulator-slash-mystery that offers a similar vibe to Draper’s story, as Edith struggles with the possibility that her family is cursed, and that the curse remains with her.

Platforms: PlayStation, Xbox, Nintendo Switch, Steam

The best podcasts like Mad Men

Whether you want to discuss and quote Mad Men endlessly or find an audio drama offering a similarly absorbing story, podcasts can help.

They Coined It

They Coined It
Credit: Podcast logo

Despite the fact that the podcast abruptly stopped before covering the final episode of the series (due to the hosts' health issues), They Coined It remains one of the best recap podcasts for Mad Men. Whether you’re watching the show for the first time or re-watching it for the tenth, Roberta and Dan offer up detailed, insightful analyses of every episode except the finale, making this the perfect podcast if you want to really dig in and catch every cultural reference, literary allusion, and subtle character note.

In a Snit

In a Snit
Credit: Podcast logo

Mad Men is a fascinating study of postwar America, midcentury corporate culture, and existential malaise—from a white, cis, and male perspective. In a Snit offers a feminine and feminist perspective of the show, digging into the fashion and sexual politics. It’s a refreshing change from a lot of Mad Men podcasts that concentrate almost entirely on Don Draper.

The Diarist

The Diarist
Credit: Podcast logo

If you’re looking for an absorbing audio drama with Mad Men vibes, check out The Diarist. Set at a 1950s New York advertising firm (check), the story follows Andrea Davies, a young secretary who has an affair with her handsome, charming boss (check) and stumbles into a dark web of lies and betrayal. The setting and characters might have come straight from an early episode of the show, and the tone is a perfect match for some of the darker and more suspenseful episodes.

Bronzeville

Bronzeville podcast
Credit: Podcast logo

Looking for a period story that offers a different experience with similar levels of intricate character work and literary storytelling? Check out Bronzeville. Starring Larenz Tate and Laurence Fishburne, the story is set in 1940s Chicago in the Black neighborhood known as Bronzeville. Its depiction of a specific time and age is spot-on, and the story, involving an unofficial lottery, murder, and the racial tensions of the era, is as compelling as anything on Mad Men.

Mad Men Deconstructed

Mad Men Deconstructed
Credit: Podcast logo

If you’re looking for more historical context and a deeper psychological investigation of the show, check out Mad Men Deconstructed. Although the podcast only covers most of the first two seasons, the episodes are packed with useful information that will inform your experience of the entire show. The aim is to judge everything from the perspective of the 1960s rather than our modern-day point of view, a pivot that often reveals important subtleties in various character choices and plot swerves.


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Apple's next big update for iPhones, iOS 27, is a big one. The upgrade, which is currently in beta testing, ships with features like Siri AI, new AI image editing tools, and notable updates for AirPods. We finally have a custom EQ (something users have demanded for a decade), a new way to adjust Adaptive Audio mode, among other changes. If you own AirPods, iOS 27 is going to be a major update.

As of this article, these features are available in the iOS 27 beta, and they might change or evolve before the final public release in the fall. While anyone can install the iOS 27 beta, I recommend at least waiting for the public beta release, which should be around the corner. To test the new AirPods features, you'll also have to upgrade to the AirPods beta firmware (from AirPods > AirPods Beta Updates). Once you are running the latest software, here's what you'll find:

Apple added a newly designed AirPods settings menu

The AirPods settings menu has always left something to be desired. It's a bit clunky and not particularly accessible, which means a lot of these features are likely going unnoticed by many AirPods users. That changes with iOS 27. While you still head to Settings > AirPods to find the options, the interface is now modern, easier to access, and more compact.

In iOS 27, you’ll see a visual preview of your AirPods and their battery life, along with the name, mode selector, and a volume slider. Below, all the features are now arranged in their own sections, like Audio & Routing, Hearing Health, Controls & Gestures, and so on.

AirPods finally have EQ options

EQ customization settings for AirPods in iOS 27.
Credit: Apple/YouTube

Most Bluetooth earbuds on the market come with some kind of customizable EQ—except, of course, AirPods. There's a basic EQ setting that applies to the entire Music app, but these options are barebones, and don't let you fine-tune how your AirPods sound. With iOS 27, Apple is finally planning to change this.

If you have AirPods with Apple's H2 chip, go to Settings > AirPods > Audio & Routing > Equalizer in iOS 27. Here, switch to Custom. Apple will play a preview of a recently played song, with an option to change the EQ in three sections: "Low," "Mid," and "High." From here, move the waveform that appears on-screen up and down to tune the sound how you like it.

Adaptive mode is now more easily customizable

AirPods with Active Noise Cancellation have three modes: "Transparency," "Adaptive," and, of course, "Noise Cancellation." Transparency lets in environmental noise, while Noise Cancellation blocks as much noise as possible. Adaptive sits somewhere in the middle, blending Transparency and Noise Cancellation depending on what's going on around you.

This is great in theory, but in practice, it didn’t always work for me. In my experience, Adaptive lets in too much environmental noise to be useful. For you, it might be the opposite. To mitigate this, Apple lets you control how much audio Adaptive lets in, but the option is buried in Settings, making it easy to miss. As of iOS 27 beta 3, Apple now has an easy-to-use slider to control Adaptive Audio. Under "Listening Mode" in AirPods settings, you can move Adaptive Audio's slider left or right to make it sound closer to Transparency or Noise Cancellation.

Smaller changes coming to AirPods with iOS 27

There are three additional small yet notable features for AirPods that Apple is adding to iOS 27:

  • Name Recognition: iOS 27 expanded Hearing Health for AirPods, and now supports Name Recognition. If you’re hard of hearing, this feature can let you know when someone says your name. Name Recognition is now supported globally in over 50 countries.

  • Precision Finding via Apple Watch: Your AirPods Pro 3 case supports Ultra Wide Band precision finding. And with the new watchOS 27 Find My app, it's now possible to use precise finding for your AirPods directly from your Apple Watch.

  • Talk to Siri AI directly: If you have an iPhone 15 Pro or newer, you can chat with Siri AI through your AirPods.


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If you’re looking to upgrade your listening experience at home, whether for music or underwhelming built-in TV speakers, a soundbar and subwoofer combination is one of the best-value options for mixed use. It delivers deeper bass than a standalone soundbar and brings the experience closer to a full surround-sound system without the steep price tag that often comes with it. Right now, the Samsung 3.1 Soundbar with Wireless Subwoofer is $80 off at Walmart, bringing the price down to $199 (originally $279).

This setup includes wall-mount hardware for a cleaner installation beneath a mounted TV and features a dedicated 3.1-channel soundbar. Unlike basic 2.1-channel soundbars, the extra center channel helps make dialogue clearer and easier to hear, whether you’re watching your favorite show or watching a live game. It also supports DTS Virtual:X and Dolby Audio for more cinematic sound quality than standard TV speakers.

Meanwhile, the wireless subwoofer adds extra depth and bass to music and TV shows or movies without requiring a complicated surround-sound setup. Bluetooth connectivity lets you stream music or play podcasts from your phone and other devices when the TV is off, and the setup also includes Adaptive Sound, which automatically optimizes audio based on what’s playing.

It’s not a premium Dolby Atmos system, so don’t expect overhead audio effects or rear surround speakers. But at this price, it offers a major upgrade over built-in TV speakers, which constantly require you to turn on subtitles or deliver a below-average listening experience with music. If you’re looking for a subwoofer and soundbar deal from a premium brand and you’re on a budget, this Samsung 3.1 Soundbar with Wireless Subwoofer deal gives you solid value.

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Earlier this month, Sony announced it would be ending production of physical discs by 2028. This is a devastating blow to anyone who can't download every video game they ever play, especially since Sony is shutting down some of its older digital storefronts. But it's also a blow to game archiving, which raises one very crucial question: can you rip and backup your own PlayStation discs?

The technical answer to that question is a qualified “Yes, depending on how old your games are.” And the legal answer is “No, but it's probably fine anyway.” For that to make sense, we're gonna have to go through some complicated stuff, so let's start with the legal question.

Is it legal to rip PlayStation discs?

The rules for what's permissible will depend heavily on your region, but we'll focus on the U.S. (in other North American and European regions, the rules are somewhat similar). In the U.S., there are two general, paradoxical rules:

  • You have a right to make a backup copy of any media you own. Like, say, backing up a copy of your PlayStation discs.

  • You are not allowed to circumvent any method meant to prevent copies on a piece of media. Like, say, the DRM on your PlayStation discs.

Yes, this is mildly contradictory. It's a bit like saying you can read any book in the library, but only if the door to said library isn't locked—and the door is always locked. In theory, this means you only have the legal right to back up your media if the company you bought it from says you can.

In practice, it's a bit less dire than all that. It's generally not easy (or good for public relations) to go after individuals for ripping a single disc. Instead, most legal fights will center around the tools themselves. Developing (or in some cases, even linking to) ripping tools can expose the people who make them to legal liability. There are gray areas, especially when it comes to game preservation.

What that means for most people is that if your intention is to rip PlayStation discs so you can distribute copies to a bunch of other people, you could end up in legal trouble. However, if you want to make a backup copy for yourself just in case your existing disc dies, and Sony stops making more, you're probably safer. But you still take on that risk for yourself.

Can you rip or burn PlayStation discs yourself?

Whether it's possible to rip a PlayStation disc will depend heavily on which console you're talking about. In general, the older a console is, the longer archivists and other enthusiasts have been working on the problem, so the easier it's likely to be. Older devices tend to use simpler encryption, or well-known copy-protection mechanisms that are easier for modern users to circumvent. Since it's exactly that circumvention that can trip legal liability, that's also why you'll find fewer people and groups trying to do it for the latest console. It's not impossible, but likely to be harder and less accessible.

In order to rip discs, you'll need a disc drive that can read your game, and which one you'll need will depend on which console generation it came from. 

  • The PS1 used CDs for its games (even though they looked a bit different, due to a custom black coating).

  • PS2 games were split between CDs and DVDs.

  • Starting with the PS3, and continuing with the PS4, both consoles utilized standard Blu-ray discs.

  • Finally, the PS5 added support for higher-capacity Ultra HD Blu-ray discs.

As you might be able to tell from this list, the right drive for a given console generation can range from trivially easy to find, to near impossible. Plenty of desktops and even laptops have DVD drives that can also read CDs. Blu-ray drives are a lot rarer, and there's a decent chance that the only UHD Blu-ray drive you've ever interacted with is the one in your PS5—unless you happen to have one of these.

That only covers backing up the data on your disc in the first place. If you want to write it to another disc (a process called burning), you'll need a drive that doesn't just read those discs, but write them as well. In a lot of cases, these are the same—the drive linked above can both read and write Blu-rays and DVDs, for example—but if you want to burn your own discs, make sure you don't accidentally buy a read-only drive.

Can my PlayStation play my backup discs?

Making a backup disc of your games is one thing. This can be helpful for preservation, or for storing games you'll run in an emulator later. That doesn't mean you can just pop a burned disc into your old PlayStation and run them like normal, though.

For the PS3 and older, you'll likely need to mod or at least softmod the console in order to play burned discs. This process can vary widely not just by console generation, but by specific models and even down to when the specific console was manufactured. Since copy protection is an arms race, sometimes newer models block decryption methods that worked on older devices, or, conversely, sometimes new models introduce flaws that can be exploited to jailbreak a console.

Typically, the methods that modders use to jailbreak a console are security vulnerabilities, so the ones that can be patched via software updates will be. This means that even if you have a console from the right generation and manufacturing run, it could still end up impossible to crack open if it's been updated to newer software.

This situation has led to a minor cottage industry of console resellers and modders who will offer to jailbreak existing consoles, or sell specific versions of devices that can still be modded. This market can be dicey to step into, though, as there's not typically much recourse if your complaint is “I bought a PS4, but it came with too-up-to-date software."

What are my other options for playing my ripped games?

Short of modding an existing PlayStation to run burned discs—a complicated endeavor even in the best of situations—the second best way to run your backup copies of games is via an emulator. Yes, if your goal was to keep your physical media for longer, this might be a bit of a letdown, but it's also a lot easier than modding a console to run DIY discs.

Like everything in this guide, the emulators you'll need will vary by platform. There are several options for the PS1, and at least one for the PS2 through PS4. Notably, there are currently no PS5 emulators, which tends to be typical for the current generation console, for a variety of both technical and legal reasons that should be obvious if you've read this far. 

It's worth mentioning at this point that, if you're running your own backup copies in an emulator, you're probably in the legal clear (or at least not a significant enough target for most companies to bother pursuing); downloading and playing games you didn't buy yourself can put you in a much more legally dicey situation. And given the absolute state of the gaming industry, I'd discourage you from pirating any game that you could acquire legally right now.

Is this a good way to keep physical media alive?

I'll level with you at this point: Sony killing physical media sucks. I've spent this whole piece describing a process of backing up your games and making your own discs in vague enough terms and without specific links so as to be legally defensible, all because companies like Sony want to have a monopoly on making discs for their consoles. And now they don't want to do it either. It's not quite taking the ball and going home, so much as setting fire to the ball and suing anyone who tries to make a new one.

And eventually, it won't matter. Right now, the current PlayStation 5 comes with a disc drive, but if disc production ends by 2028, there's a good chance that the PS6 won't have a disc drive at all. At that point, even if you burned a copy of a game to a disc, there'd be nothing to run it. We're approaching an era where creating your own physical media might be little more than hobbyists cosplaying a bygone era, like a hard drive disguised as a VHS tape.

But this preservation process still matters. Physical media lets games continue to work even after servers shut down; they bring games to places that might not have robust internet access; and they help ensure that lesser-known games don't disappear into the oblivion of time.

Maybe Sony will change its mind and keep making physical media; maybe it won't. If it does give up on discs, maybe it will at least let the enthusiasts who want to keep the practice alive have a go at it without having to look over their legal shoulder. A guy can dream. Until that happens, keep circulating the tapes. Metaphorically speaking, of course.


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Back in April, Samsung announced its plans to shutter its proprietary Messages app. It shouldn't have come as too much of a shock to Galaxy users: It's been a long time since Samsung Messages was the default choice on Galaxy devices. In fact, the company didn't even ship the app with newer devices, choosing Google Messages as its new messaging standard. Galaxy S26 users can't even download the app at all.

In its initial announcement, the company said Samsung Messages would shut down sometime in July, but declined to offer a definitive date. So when July 1 hit, and the app was still working, perhaps some users felt a small sense of comfort: Maybe Samsung wasn't serious about ending the app. That, unfortunately, wasn't the case. It seems the company chose July 7 as its deprecation day, as the app is officially defunct. You can still open Samsung Messages, but if you try to send a message, you'll find the text field grayed out.

What should Samsung Messages users do now?

While Samsung Messages is no longer supported, the app isn't gone forever. As I said, you can still access it, which means you can also see your message history. And, per Samsung, you can still use the app, albeit under extremely limited circumstances. If your device runs Android 11 or something older, Samsung Messages will continue to work. In addition, all users can contact emergency services from Samsung Messages, as well as their emergency contacts. If you set someone as an emergency contact, you have a workaround for continuing to use Samsung Messages.

There is another workaround here, but I don't recommend it. As Android Authority highlights, you can uninstall app updates to restore access by heading to Settings > Apps > Samsung Messages > More options and choosing "Uninstall Updates." From here, head to the Galaxy Store, then go to Menu > Updates > Samsung Messages > More options. Here, disable "Enable auto-update" to ensure that the Galaxy Store and One UI don't check in with Samsung Messages anymore. Per Android Authority, this should let you keep using Samsung Messages as if it were not shut down, but I discourage you from doing so for more than a short period. Now that the app isn't receiving new updates, any security vulnerabilities that pop up in the future will not be patched. As such, Samsung Messages users will likely be targets for phishing and hacking, putting their devices and data at risk.

Switching to Google Messages is the best course of action

Unfortunately, the best course of action for most Samsung Messages users is to switch to Google Messages. While I imagine many Samsung Messages fans are loath to switch to Google's app, it really is the easiest transition. Once you make Google Messages your default messaging app, your conversation history will automatically begin migrating over from Samsung Messages—though Samsung says there are no guarantees about how long this process can take.

That said, there are third-party apps out there you can choose from instead. Focusing specifically on SMS apps, you'll find similar features with Textra, Chomp SMS, and Handcent SMS. The issue is that your Samsung Messages history might not automatically transfer over when moving to one of these apps. You can try a third-party SMS backup too, like SMS Backup & Restore, but again, it's not clear whether you'll be able to migrate your messages over. If your main concern is moving your messages over to a new app, Google Messages may be the best move here.


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