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I've been covering e-readers and e-ink tablets for Lifehacker for a few years now, and I haven't ever encountered a product with as many enthusiastic fans as the Xteink X4, a teeny tiny, bare bones e-reader from China that has replaced my beloved phone-shaped Boox Palma 2 as my distraction-free reading device of choice—not the least because it's a heck of a lot cheaper, around $70 to the Palma 2's $250. And if you act fast, right now you can score an X4 for less than $60 during an Amazon flash sale.

As I explain in my review, the X4 is a little fiddily, a little janky, and not for everyone—but it has a huge cult following of tinkerers who share tips and tricks on Reddit, and have even written their own custom firmware to replace the (admittedly underwhelming) stock operating system. With minimal effort, you can transform it into a truly excellent, stripped-down e-reader perfect for carrying it with you everywhere you go—seriously, it's small enough that I often forget it's in my pocket.

Amazon's flash sale only lasts for a few more hours, so act fast if you're interested. But even if you miss out, the Xteink X4 is still a great buy at the regular $69 price. (Though you might want to wait for the forthcoming Xteink S4, which will add some quality -of-life improvements like a touch screen, a front light, and Android support.)


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My question about virtual reality has always been, "But what is it for?" I finally have an answer: Guassian Splatting. We've always tried to capture our past, whether it's through physical photographs, VHS tapes, or every picture you have stored in the cloud, but we've been limited to viewing our personal histories in flat media, usually from a behind a screen, and always from a single angle. But Gaussian Splatting changes that. This technology allows you to create volumetric 3D models of objects, people, or spaces, so instead of a picture of your child's favorite toy, you can have a realistic scan of it that you can examine from every angle; instead of a snapshot of Thanksgiving dinner, you can have a photorealistic diorama of the dining room that you can walk around.

What is Gaussian Splatting?

Gaussian Splatting is a technological newborn. It was first theoretically introduced in a 2023 research paper by Bernhard Kerbl, Georgios Kopanas, Thomas Leimkühler, and George Drettakis. The paper details a new rendering technique that builds 3D models out of millions of semi-transparent blobs called "Gaussians" instead of the solid triangles used in traditional computer graphics. Once calculated, the Gaussians are "Splatted" onto a 2D plane by your computer, and that is arranged and layered based on how they should look from any viewpoint within the Splat. Because the blobs are semi-transparent, they don't block each other. They blend together like brushstrokes in a painting.

Another bonus: Splatting provides a much higher level of detail for its file size compared to traditional methods of scanning. Older scans work on a the geometric principle of stretching a virtual skin made of triangles over an object. For a detailed scan, that could be billions of triangles, resulting in PC-choking file sizes. Splatting is based on mathematical probability rather than rigid geometry. Instead of a solid edge, each "blob" is a tiny cloud that tells the computer how likely a color is to exist in that spot. It only stores the position, color, and transparency of millions of relevant areas in space, as well as how they should reflect light from different angles. The result is files that are big compared to Word documents, but not so huge that you can't work with them on a phone.

Gaussian Splatting quickly went from theory to practice, and now Splats can be created and rendered with only a decent smartphone, making it more accessible than older methods that sometimes required laser scanners or specialized equipment.

Why you should start Splatting

3D scanning is already in use professionally in things like mapping real estate for virtual tours and creating photorealistic assets for video games, but Gaussian Splatting is accessible enough that anyone can future-proof their nostalgia.

Splatting gives your future self (or your kids) the ability to "visit" your current life with a level of realism that's breathtaking. It lets you digitally "bottle" the exact layout and volume of a moment in time and preserve it. If your parents had this, you'd be able to walk around your childhood bedroom, or check out every angle and detail of the first car you ever bought.

"Digital preservation" and "3D modeling" sound clinical, but the results of Gaussian Splats are anything but sterile. While photography captures a single angle of light in a room, Gaussian Splats capture the behavior of light from all angles, so the result isn't what the past looks like, but what the past feels like. It's hard to describe, but capturing the quality of light on an object or location puts you in touch with it in a way you didn't think possible. That combined with the haziness of Spats and your own memories adds up to a ethereal, dreamlike experience that isn't like anything else. (I like Splats a lot.)

How to get started Splatting

The barrier to entry for Splatting is just a little time to figure out how it works. You don't need a specialized LiDAR scanner or an overpowered PC, just a relatively recent smartphone. Here's how to get started:

Pick an app: Though the technology is new, a few apps are making it very user-friendly. Here are the two I've tried:

  • Scaniverse: Excellent for iPhone users, Scaniverse is free, and it processes Splats entirely on your device in only a minute or two.

  • Luma 3D Capture: Available on both Android and iPhone, Luma is great for beginners, with a scanning process that walks you through creating your first Splat.

Make a capture: Here are some things to think about when making your capture.

  • Before you start scanning locations or bigger objects, pick something small and simple so you get the concepts down. But not pets: Your subject has to remain perfectly still through the process. (Make an exception for your child. They won't hold still enough, but having even a blurry model of your kid is vital for future you.)

  • Place your subject in an evenly lit room with enough space to walk all the way around it.

  • Hit record and walk in a slow, steady circle around your object, keeping your camera pointed at its center.

  • Do two passes, one from a high angle looking down, another from a low angle, looking up.

  • Gaussian Splats hate uniformity. They struggle with plain white walls, so think in terms of textures. Also, avoid clear glass and mirrors that confuse the depth calculations.

Have a banana: Now that you've captured your Splat, take a break so the computer can do its thing. How long it will take depends on the app you're using, your phone, and how detailed your scan is. Scaniverse processes Splats right on your phone. For something simple like the guitar below, it took about two minutes of rendering on an iPhone 17 Pro. Luma 3D Capture processes files in the cloud, so how long it takes depends on how many people are in front of you in the queue. It might be a couple minutes. It might be a couple hours—the app sends an alert when your image is finished cooking. The video below took several hours.

Enjoy your creation: Once the math is finished mathing, you can view your creation right on your smartphone screen or computer. Pinch to zoom, drag to rotate, and marvel at how perfectly the scan captured the vibe of the object or space.

Share your creation: These apps give you a couple of easy ways to share your volumetric memory:

  • Video: You can plot a camera path through your Splat to export a smooth, 2D "fly-through" video. Below is my first scan on YouTube using Scaniverse (it's sloppy; I was new), and my second try with Luma.

  • Web Link: You can generate a simple web link and text it to your friends or family through both apps. When they tap it, it opens an interactive 3D viewer in their browser—no special apps, accounts, or heavy downloads required.

How to step inside your Splats

Viewing a 3D scan on your phone or PC is kind of cool, but you can't really understand how mind-blowing these things are until you check them out in a virtual reality device, where you can physically walk around that Thanksgiving table or lean in to inspect the texture on the couch. Here is how you can do it on the two biggest headsets right now.

Apple Vision Pro

The powerful Apple Vision Pro was built to do this. Apple included "Spatial Scenes" right in the OS. It gives a slight 3D pop to 2D photos, but you can take that a little further with apps like Splat Studio that will generate a deeper 3D scene from 2D photos and let you change settings to improve it. But you can get deeper with Spatial Media Toolkit. It lets you make 2D videos into stereoscopic 3D videos. But the final boss is viewing full Splats you made yourself with apps like Luma 3D Capture or Polycam.

If you follow the steps above, you should be able to export the Splat file you created (.ply or .spz) right from your phone to your Vision Pro and step inside the Splat or walk around the object you scanned. You can also check out Splats other users have uploaded.

Meta Quest 3 and 3S

Meta has embraced the Gaussian Splat revolution. Apps like AirVis (also on the Vision Pro) let you check out Splats you made on your phone, and there are even 4D Splats available on the Quest (more on that below). Meta is also taking the first steps toward cutting out the middleman of your phone altogether. Hyperscape Capture is a still-in-beta app that uses the Quest's existing cameras to scan your room, then save a 3D version of your space. Meta promises that soon you'll be able to send a link to a friend with a headset so they can "come visit."

The future of 4D Splatting

As hyped as I am for Gaussian Splatting, the technology is in its "version 1.0 era." Capturing a decent Splat takes time and patience and requires the subject to stay absolutely still, and the result isn't always perfect, but the technology is evolving fast enough that the next thing is emerging already. The cutting-Gaussian-edge is 4D Splatting—the fourth dimension is time. 4D Splats are 3D volumetric videos, moving scenes you can view from any point inside or outside the scene. Unlike stereoscopic 3D movies that let you watch from a single point, these are true holographs. At least they are inside a VR rig.

The technology is already in use commercially, most notably in A$AP Rocky's music video "Helicopter," in which performers were captured by 56 cameras and the footage converted to 4D Splats, allowing any angle or impossible camera movement to be used. Check it out:

And there are some 4D Splats you can check out in your headset too. Quest 3 app Gracia has a few volumetric videos that are very impressive. Gracia lets you stream or download 4D Splats of people, and place them anywhere you like in augmented reality. Then you can hit "play" and look at them from any angle, or even move all the way around them. To see what I mean, check out this video I made showing my view from within a Quest 3 headset, of singer Amy May performing a song on my front lawn (with a cameo from my no-doubt confused neighbor).

You probably don't have an array of 20 or so GoPros to create content like Gracia's, but there are some experimental tools out there for consumers to create 4D Splats. KIRI Engine uses Apple's open-source ML-Sharp tool to turn a standard single-lens video into a 4D splat. It doesn't create an AI-aided approximation of stereoscopic 3D like Splat Studio, but converts each individual frame into a separate Splat. It's too technical for me to really mess with and the 3D is guesswork not actual 3D, but I would be surprised if a way of taking volumetric video with only a few smart phone angles wasn't in the works somewhere.

Gaussian Splats are as much of a revelation as I imagine instantly developing snapshots were in the 1960s. Like early Polaroids, it's a bit of a pain, and the results are sometimes grainy, "dreamy" and reminiscent of pointillism, but the emotional impact of a new way of seeing the past is so strong. So get started Splatting now; your future self will thank you.


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iPhones and Macs work together seamlessly in all kinds of ways, whether you want to control your Apple phone from your Mac or use it as a webcam. Apple calls this suite of features Continuity, and it extends to iPads and Apple Watches too—so if you stay inside the Apple ecosystem you're guaranteed to get devices that play nicely together.

Features like those offered by Apple Continuity aren't quite as easy for Google, Samsung, and Microsoft to implement, but everyone who isn't Apple is busy trying to improve the cross-device experience. Pixels and Chromebooks now offer several useful integrations, as do Samsung Galaxy phones and Galaxy Book laptops.

Those Samsung features, managed by the Galaxy Connect app, have just been expanded to non-Samsung Windows 11 computers, so far more people can now take advantage of them. As long as you've got a PC running Windows 11 and fitted with an Intel or AMD chip, this is now available to you (ARM-based PCs aren't yet supported).

The expansion was quietly announced in the release notes of version 2.1.6.0 of the Galaxy Connect app available on the Microsoft Store. Once you've got the app installed, here's what you can do with it.

Getting started with Galaxy Connect

After downloading and running Galaxy Connect, you'll see a prompt to sign in with a Samsung account. You're going to need one of these to use Galaxy Connect, and presumably you've already got one you use with your Galaxy phone. Once that's done, you'll get to the front page of Galaxy Connect, which has four main sections.

The first is Continue on other devices. This primarily means copy and paste, so if you copy something on your PC you can then switch to your Galaxy phone and then paste it there (or vice versa). Like all Galaxy Connect features, both devices need to have Bluetooth turned on, and to be on the same wifi network.

Galaxy Connect
The Galaxy Connect app. Credit: Lifehacker

Enabling this feature via the toggle switch also means wifi network information gets synced. If you've previously connected to a wifi network with your Windows 11 laptop, for example, then when your Samsung phone comes across it, it'll already know the password—you just need to tap to connect.

Camera continuity is another included feature: Samsung says it lets you "take pictures or scan documents on your phone or tablet, then continue working on them in apps like Samsung Notes on your computer." However, it's not clear how this works, and I couldn't figure it out—something for Samsung to work on, perhaps.

Galaxy Connect
Enabling cross-device communication. Credit: Lifehacker

The next item in the Galaxy Connect menu is easier to understand, and called Storage Share. Go into this section, turn on the toggle switch, and you'll get an extra Storage Share entry in File Explorer in Windows 11. (If your phone doesn't appear, check that Connected devices > Storage Share is enabled in Settings on your Galaxy phone).

This gives you easy access to everything on your phone, and means you can transfer files between both devices without messing around with syncing apps or cables. This is exactly how straightforward it should be to swap files between computers and phones, in fact—it took us a few years, but we got there in the end.

How "multi control" and "second screen" work in Galaxy Connect

The other two sections in Galaxy Connect are a little more complex, and require extra downloads. They're not just on/off toggle switches, and have some additional configuration required. As soon as you select them, you'll be directed to the relevant download from the Microsoft Store.

First is Multi control, which essentially lets you operate your phone from your laptop or desktop: You get to arrange your phone and PC, as you would a secondary display, and then you can send your Windows 11 cursor to and from the Galaxy phone just by moving it off screen in the appropriate direction.

When the cursor leaves your computer screen and arrives on your phone screen, you can use your mouse and keyboard to control the Galaxy handset. It makes typing and selecting much easier, and if you need to bring any text, links, or images back to your PC you can simply drag them across the edge of the screen back to the desktop interface.

Galaxy Connect
The Multi control window. Credit: Lifehacker

The final Galaxy Connect feature is Second screen, and as you might be able to guess from the name, this lets you use a Galaxy device as a secondary display for your computer—though it only works with tablets, not smartphones, so I haven't tested it out directly. Again, you have the ability to position your two screens in relation to each other.

You get all the benefits that usually come with having a second screen, like more room to put apps and windows away from your main desktop until you need them. It's also handy for having something on in the background, like a video or a social media feed, without it taking up room on your main display.

Galaxy Connect
The second screen requires an extra download. Credit: Lifehacker

Microsoft Phone Link

If you're familiar with Windows-and-phone synchronicity, you might be wondering where Microsoft's own Phone Link app fits in here. You can use it as well as or instead of Galaxy Connect (if you can't get the Samsung app to work for whatever reason). This duplicates some of the features you'll find in Galaxy Connect, including the quick swapping of files, and the clipboard syncing.

There are extra features in Phone Link as well, such as the ability to mirror your phone's screen on the Windows desktop, and to manage notifications, texts, and calls from your computer. (saving you from constantly switching between devices). Search for Phone Link from the taskbar or Start menu to find it, then follow the instructions to connect your handset.


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For the past several years, multiview has been one of YouTube TV's best features, especially for sports fans like myself. Multiview allows you to watch up to four livestreams at once and toggle between them (and their audio) when something exciting happens. At its initial launch for March Madness in 2023, multiview was restricted to certain preselected channel combinations, but YouTube confirmed in January of this year that a fully customizable multiview was on the way. It's now available to some subscribers—myself included.

Trying out YouTube TV's multiview

With customizable multiview, you can select up to four channels across content categories, so you're not limited to just sports, news, or a preset view. As Reddit users have pointed out, this update allows you to mix sports networks that previously couldn't be watched side-by-side or weren't available in all combinations—something I'm particularly excited about. Plus, because you can choose anywhere from two to four streams, you don't have to keep additional channels included in preset views for things you don't want to watch or after programming ends (like when a sports broadcast transitions to local news).

I tried it out and was able to create a variety of random views. First, I combined ESPN with CNN, NFL Live, and TNT; then, the Golf Channel plus AMC, Fox Sports, and the SEC Network. The only snag I hit was with a local news channel: When I tried to add it to my multiview, I got a "video unavailable" error, even though it was available for selection. I'm still most likely to use custom multiview for sports, especially during seasons like college basketball and college football when lots of games are being played at once and often across channels owned by different networks and to select just the two or three things I want to see rather than a full four-stream view.

How to use YouTube TV's multiview

To build a custom multiview, open a livestream in full screen, then press the down button on your remote—on mobile, tap the player—and select Multiview. If your account has the option, tap Your multiview to choose up to four live programs from different content categories, including sports, news, movies, shows, and "other." YouTube TV will also show you recommended streams. To remove and/or replace channels, press the down button again and tap Change multiview > Your multiview. The current streams will be at the top of the Recommended section. From here, you can click to remove them.

As Android Authority reports, this feature may not be available to all YouTube TV users yet. Make sure your app is up to date, but know that the rollout could take time.


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Google Meet's "Take Notes for me" feature is one particularly useful implementation of AI. When you're on a video call, Gemini can dictate what's being said, offering summaries and highlights of the conversation. That way, your attention doesn't need to be split between the conversation at hand and writing down notes to remember key points later: You can just check the notes that are automatically generated as a Google Doc once the meeting is over. It's the kind of feature that sells me more on the whole "AI assistant" thing, rather than something trying to order me a coffee.

Of course, video conferencing isn't the only time dictation can be useful. An in-person meeting can benefit from the same perks as a virtual one: Why bother with scribbling down notes on paper or typing away on a laptop when your phone can transcribe the chat on your behalf? I've started using the Voice Memos app on my iPhone for the task, for example, since it's easy to record both audio and an automatic transcription of the conversation. If you're a regular Google Meet user, however, you now have a similar option in your app of choice: Meet's Take Notes for me feature now supports live, in-person meetings as well.

How "Take Notes for me" works in person

As noted by 9to5Google, here's how it works: You open the Google Meet site or app on your device, but rather than start a call, you can use the new "Take Notes for me" option to task Gemini with transcribing and summarizing your discussion. You can hit "Pause" at any time to pause dictation, and "Stop" followed by "Stop taking notes" to end it altogether. You can also transition to a video call if you want to conference in someone who isn't in the same room as you. And, just as with a Google Meet call, Take Notes for me will automatically save the meeting notes in a Google Doc.

This feature started as an Alpha-only option but is now rolling out to more Workspace plans. Your admin may need to activate it on their end, but following that, you should be able to start recording your own conversations.

Try an alternative to Google Meet's in-person dictation

This feature won't appear for any Google account not tied to a Workspace plan. Of course, there are plenty of alternatives out there if you don't have "Take Notes for me" available to you in Google Meet. It won't be a perfect match, since Google Meet integrates with your Google account and does more than just transcribe the call, but there are other options worth considering.

As I mentioned, I really like using Apple's built-in tools: Voice Memos can generate automatic transcriptions, which you can save to Apple Notes. But if you don't have an Apple device or you prefer another option, PCMag has a series of recommendations, including Otter.ai, GoTranscript, and Rev.


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Sometimes we love to hate serial killers, and sometimes we just kinda love 'em—a charming, sexy killer seems to be a contrast that's too juicy and entertaining for us to pass up. Late-stage capitalism, the climate crisis, and the insurance industry are far more likely to kill us, which is probably why we'd rather face the statistically less-likely threat of a cute and cunning murderer like Penn Badgley's Joe Goldberg in You, which came to a planned conclusion after five seasons in 2025. But he's not the only one! Here, we're on the hunt for series leads who are at least morally ambiguous, if not downright evil.

The Fall (2013 – 2016)

Jamie Dornan's sexy young serial killer Paul Spector isn't the protagonist of The Fall, strictly speaking, but he co-leads with Gillian Anderson's police Superintendent DSU Stella Gibson across all three seasons of this crime drama. Much like Joe, Paul is, outwardly, a normal guy, and a family man, whom you might not suspect of being a stalker and a serial killer of professional women in Belfast. DSU Gibson is sent from London to help with a stalled investigation that leads her on a hunt for the clever Spector through physical dangers, mind-fuckery, and bureaucratic complications. Stream The Fall on Peacock and Prime Video.


Chloe (2022)

Erin Doherty is Becky Green, a complete nobody (at least in her own mind), who becomes obsessed with her estranged childhood friend Chloe, who died, seemingly, by suicide. Lonely Becky comes up with a completely new identity with which to infiltrate Chloe's friend group, finding her life far more fulfilling than back when she was boring ol' Becky—even kicking off an affair with Chloe's widowed husband. Turns out, though, that there was more to Chloe's life and death than most people knew, and husband Elliot might just be keeping some secrets. Stream Chloe on Prime Video.


Ripley (2024)

The Patricia Highsmith Tom Ripley novels have an impressive record of successful adaptations going back to the '50s, from René Clément's Purple Noon to Anthony Minghella's The Talented Mr. Ripley—which itself inspired Tommy Wiseau's cult "classic" The Room. Andrew Scott is perfectly cast in this series that doesn't reinvent the narrative, but gives it room to breathe over eight hours of deliberately paced neo-noir, in sumptuous monochrome, as poor, orphaned, but ambitious, Tom ingratiates himself with the wealthy Dickie Greenleaf (Johnny Flynn) and his girlfriend, Marge (Dakota Fanning). His obsession with the good life soon becomes indistinguishable from his obsession with Marge and Dickie themselves, his studied nonchalance always ready to give way to everything boiling under the surface. Stream Ripley on Netflix.


Dexter (2006 – 2013)

The show that dares to ask: What if a serial killer were kind of a nice guy who mostly wants to be helpful? Michael C. Hall stars as Dexter Morgan, a Miami-based forensic technician with bloody, murderous impulses. Fortunately (usually), he's learned to focus those impulses on dismembering baddies rather than the more sympathetic innocents who typically wind up in the crosshairs of this type of killer (looking at you, Joe Goldberg). So lovable is our Dexter that he led eight seasons of this show, popping up again in New Blood, Original Sin, and the ongoing Dexter: Resurrection. Stream Dexter on Paramount+.


Hannibal (2013 - 2015)

By 2013, it really felt as though we'd seen more than enough of Hannibal Lecter and co., a series of Silence of the Lambs spin-offs and sequels having become increasingly tiresome. Still, producer Bryan Fuller went back to the source material here, once again adapting Thomas Harris's first Lecter novel with grand, operatic style and a visual flair unmatched on network television (you're still unlikely to find more gorgeously constructed scenes of carnage). What's more, the deeper, sexier relationship between the Doctor (Mads Mikkelsen) and profiler Will Graham (Hugh Dancy) adds some brilliant subtext as the two work together to hunt serial killers. It ended a bit too early, but the three seasons still make for a satisfying meal. Stream Hannibal on Prime Video.


The Glory (2022)

There are at least a couple of different levels to The Glory, a justifiably well-received South Korean import, rather remarkably holding together despite some wild shifts in tone. Most obviously, it's a revenge drama, with a relatively simple set-up: Song Hye-kyo plays Moon Dong-eun, an elementary school homeroom teacher who's playing a very, very long game: her school bullies are grown up now, and their kids (some of them, anyway) are now in Dong-eun's care. Right where she wants them. Smartly, the show makes clear the extent of the past violence faced by Dong-eun (much of it hard to watch), and the resulting post-traumatic stress that's consumed her life. The parents of her tormentors were all far too wealthy for the girls to face any consequences for their actions, so Dong-eun feels like she has no choice. It could have been a revenge fantasy, or a straight horror show about a woman carrying out a questionable revenge, but, while it's hard to get behind Dong-eun, it's also hard to condemn her completely. Stream The Glory on Netflix.


Candy (2022)

The real-life Candy Montgomery has been portrayed by Barbara Hershey, Jessica Biel in this Hulu miniseries and, just a year later, by Elizabeth Olsen over on HBO Max. Jessica Biel is so good here, though, that this one earns enough extra points to rise to the top of the Candy heap. In 1980, Montgomery was accused of murdering her neighbor, Betty Gore (Melanie Lynskey), following the woman's affair with Candy's husband, Allan (Pablo Schreiber). And with an axe, no less. Was it cold-blooded murder, self-defense, or a surprising combination of both? Stream Candy on Hulu.


Bates Motel (2013 – 2017)

Freddie Highmore stars here as Norman Bates, the Robert Bloch character based on Ed Gein, with Vera Farmiga as his mother Norma in her pre-dessicated-corpse days. Like a lot of media spun-off from Alfred Hitchcock's seminal Psycho, it's better than it has any right to be, with impressively compelling character development and several surprises, even if we already know more or less where it's all heading. Stream Bates Motel on Prime Video.


The Devil’s Hour (2022 – )

Jessica Raine (Call the Midwife) joins Peter Capaldi (The Thick of It, Doctor Who) for a slightly convoluted but haunting series that throws in just about every horror trope that you can think of while still managing to ground things in the two lead performances. Raine plays a social worker whose life is coming apart on almost every level: She’s caring for her aging mother, her marriage is ending, her son is withdrawn, and she wakes up at exactly 3:33 a.m. every morning. She’s as convincing in the role as Capaldi is absolutely terrifying as a criminal linked to multiple killings (sometimes revealed in flashbacks) who can, seemingly, "remember" the future—shades of Silence of the Lambs, but with supernatural overtones. Stream The Devil's Hour on Prime Video.


The Creep Tapes (2024 – )

Swinging back around from some of these more morally ambiguous (or at least potentially helpful) protagonists to a pure (charismatic) baddie, The Creep Tapes picks up from the two Patrick Brice-directed Creep found footage films, with writer/star Mark Duplass returning to the role of Josef, or Peachfuzz, or whatever the hell he's calling himself at any given time. Nearly an anthology, the show finds the charming, funny, forlorn-looking lead giving generally well-meaning people reasons to come and interview him on film, such that they tend to wind up documenting their own deaths. The show maintains the movies' sense of humor, as well as the constant conviction that we'd very likely be taken in by this compellingly manipulative sad-sack. Stream The Creep Tapes on Shudder.


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France Titres, a French government agency, has disclosed a data breach that may have exposed user data from its online portal.

France Titres data breach

France Titres, also known as the Agence nationale des titres sécurisés (ANTS), operates under the French Ministry of the Interior and manages systems for official identity and registration documents, including driver’s licences, national ID cards, passports, and immigration documents.

According to the agency, the incident was detected on Wednesday, April 15, and remains under investigation, with multiple data types potentially exposed for an undisclosed number of individuals.

Exposed data may include login ID, name, email address, date of birth, and a unique account identifier, with some records also containing postal address, place of birth, and telephone number. ANTS confirmed that affected individuals have already been notified.

“The disclosure of data does not include additional data submitted during the various procedures, such as attachments. This personal data does not allow unauthorized access to the portal account,” ANTS said in the announcement.

Despite this, the agency advises caution against potential phishing attempts.

“No action is required from users. However, we recommend that they exercise extreme caution regarding any suspicious or unusual messages they may receive (SMS, calls, emails, etc.) that appear to originate from ANTS.”

ANTS notified the CNIL, France’s data protection regulator, as required under GDPR. It also reported the incident to the Paris public prosecutor to open a criminal investigation and informed the ANSSI, the country’s national cybersecurity authority.

The agency stated that it has implemented additional security measures to maintain portal operations and protect user data. It warned that any sale or distribution of the data is illegal.


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