Wednesday, 8 September 2021

Microsoft Option

Surface Duo

$700 at Microsoft Store

Pros

  • Dual displays for easy multi-tasking
  • Separate screens are likely more resistant to wear-and-tear
  • Far more affordable after price cuts
  • Works with the Surface Slim Pen for note-taking

Cons

  • Thicc bezels for weak body-to-screen ratio
  • Weak camera setup
  • Performance is average
  • Low customization
  • No wireless charging, and no 5G
  • Nowhere to store the pen
  • Terrible microphone and middling sound
  • Bluetooth signal strength is very bad

While there is a Surface Duo 2 just coming into view on the horizon, this is the only Duo on the market right now and one of the few true competitors to the Galaxy Fold 3. After price cuts, it is probably the most affordable foldable on the market, making it a great entry point for tech enthusiasts who fancy something different. Is it good enough to be your daily driver, though?

Samsung Option

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3

$1830 at Amazon

Pros

  • Impressive performance with good cameras
  • Flexible display technology finally gives us a pocketable single-screen tablet
  • Great multitasking experience
  • Mature Samsung One UI OS with themes and mountains of additional features
  • Works with the new Galaxy S-Pen for note-taking
  • Impressive and loud speakers with Dolby Atmos

Cons

  • Flexible screen tech is worryingly fragile, even with regular use
  • A bank account-busting price tag
  • Nowhere to store the pen

The Galaxy Z Fold 3 brought folding display tech to the masses, and while the implementation isn't perfect, after three generations, the Fold 3 has overcome many of its gen-1 criticisms. The Fold 3 beats the Surface Duo in practically every aspect, and honestly, it should, considering it costs almost triple the price.

Honestly, the Surface Duo isn't much of a contender for the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3. The Duo is an older phone at the time of this comparison, making it a bit unfair in many respects. The Galaxy Z Fold 3 has the Duo beat, obviously, in almost every spec category, with better chips, displays, cameras, alongside a more polished operating system. The Fold 3 also has mountains of sought-after features missing on the Duo, like wireless charging and 5G.

However, we're going to focus on the implementation of the folding display. The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 also costs a truly enormous $1800, while the Surface Duo has come down heavily in price, resting at around $700 as of writing, which is far more respectable for its spec sheet.

Surface Duo vs. Galaxy Z Fold 3: Spec showdown

Here are the specs for reference, but to be fair to the Surface Duo, it's a far older handset than the Galaxy Z Fold 3. We'll have a much better, more up-to-date picture of how these approaches to foldables stack up with the Surface Duo 2 is revealed.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 Surface Duo
Device name Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 5G Surface Duo
Operating System Android 11, One UI 3.1.1 Android 10
Dsplay (Cover): 6.2 inches, 25:9, 2268x832 (387 ppi) resolution, Super AMOLED, 120Hz refresh rate.
(Inner) 7.6 inches, 22.5:18, 2208x1768 (374 ppi) resolution, Dynamic AMOLED 2X, 120Hz refresh rate
(Single): 5.6 inch (1800x1350), 401 ppi, 4:3 aspect ratio.
(Open): 8.1 inch (2700x1800), 401 ppi, 3:2 aspect ratio
Type: AMOLED, Wide color gamut: 100% SRGB and 100% DCI-P3, Corning Gorilla Glass
Chipset Snapdragon 888 Snapdragon 855
Memory 12GB 6GB RAM
Storage 256GB or 512GB 128GB or 256GB
Expandable Storage No No
Rear Camera 12MP, ƒ/1.8, 1.8μm (wide-angle)
12MP, ƒ/2.2, 1.12μm (ultra-wide)
12MP, ƒ/2.4, 1.0μm, 2x optical zoom (telephoto)
None
Inside Front Camera 4MP, ƒ/1.8, 2.0μm 11MP, ƒ/2.0 1.0um, PDAF, 84.0-degree diagonal FOV
Optimized with AI for front and rear
Cover Camera 10MP, ƒ/2.2, 1.22μm None
Security Side-mounted fingerprint sensor Side-mounted fingerprint sensor
Battery 4400mAh
25W Fast Charging
10W Wireless Charging
4.5W Reverse Wireless Charging
3,577mAh
Fast Charging using 18W in-box power supply
Dimensions Folded: 158.2 x 67.1 x 16.0mm
Unfolded: 158.2 x 128.1 x 6.4mm
Folded: 145.2mm (H) x 93.3mm (W) x 9.9mm (T at hinge)
Unfolded: 145.2mm (H) x 186.9mm (W) x 4.8mm (T)
Weight 271g 250 grams
Price $1800 $700

With all the details in order, let's see how these folds match up.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 vs. Surface Duo: What the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 does better

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3, as its name suggests, is the third entry in Samsung's foray into folding phone tech. Where it differs massively from the Surface Duo is how it has implemented its fold, using "Ultra Thin" flexible glass. The Duo, for comparison, has two separate displays connected with an innovative hinge mechanism, which comes with advantages and some downsides.

Indeed, this comparison is less about specs, given that the Surface Duo 2 is just around the corner, and the Duo is quite old at this point.

First, I'll address the elephant in the room. Yes, the Galaxy Z Fold 3 has better specs across the board. It's faster, the cameras are better, and the screens are brighter. It has 5G, while the Duo does not. It has wireless charging, too. It supports 120hz (although your battery life won't thank you for turning it on), and it has an impressive under-screen selfie camera, which disappears when it's in your peripheral vision. The Duo only has a single camera, which can be reversed backward and used either as a normal camera, or a selfie camera, depending on how you orient the displays. The trade-off is massive bezels which give it a very dated-looking body to screen ratio that I just can't get over. You do have to pay a premium for what Samsung is offering here, though, given that it's roughly $1800~ depending on where you buy it from.

Indeed, this comparison is less about specs, given that the Surface Duo 2 is just around the corner, and the Duo is quite old at this point. This is more about how the folding form factor is implemented. Honestly, both styles have pros and cons, but here's what the Galaxy Z Fold 3 does better.

Obviously, the Galaxy Z Fold 3 provides you with a true tablet experience. While there is a crease (which I found myself getting used to incredibly quickly), you get a large continuous display. It's a true tablet-like experience that you can fit firmly in your pocket. I've always been a fan of the smaller tablets since they balance media consumption with portability. I hate playing games on a small phone screen. Plus, you lose so much detail watching shows and movies on a phone unless you're holding it right up to your face. The Galaxy Z Fold 3 gives you the best of both worlds, and it works wonderfully.

I will admit that I wasn't sure if I liked it at first. Moving from a standard Samsung One UI device to the Galaxy Fold 3 took some getting used to. It was the first time I actually bothered to use the Tips app on a device like this to get a better handle on how multi-tasking actually works. To get the most out of the Fold 3, you need to use the edge display taskbar. From here, you can drag and drop apps, snapping them into place much like you can with apps on Windows by dragging an application to the edge of your display. It works intuitively, and a quick tap on the space between apps lets you switch them around, rotate them horizontally or vertically, and even set them to float in a window-like way.

For games and movies, having the full span of the screen in landscape is an obvious boon. Unlike the Surface Duo, you don't get a massive split down the middle of your video or game, obscuring details and even UI elements. The practicality comes with downsides, though, giving the Surface Duo a few advantages.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 vs. Surface Duo: What the Surface Duo does better

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 is a tablet on the inside, and a phone on the outside, giving you the best of both worlds in a costly package. The Surface Duo thinks of foldable tech a little bit differently, though.

Unlike the Fold 3, the Surface Duo falls back on more conventional display technology, dropping flexible glass in favor of a standard display setup consisting of dual screens. The Surface Duo has an incredible hinge mechanism to allow the screens to communicate, which is an oft-overlooked and underrated feat of engineering. This configuration lets the Duo rotate 360 degrees creating various positional modalities, which are a bit clunky on the Galaxy Z Fold 3 by comparison. There's a subtle, underrated elegance about the Surface Duo, which feels far more at ease being folded into different shapes than its more expensive counterpart.

The Galaxy Z Fold 3 is "aware" of different folding states, but apps generally expect to either be running in a tablet size mode or a phone size mode. Most apps don't know what to do if the screen is folded upwards at a 90-degree angle. Furthermore, the Fold 3's aspect ratio doesn't exactly lend itself well to folded scenarios. Folded down the middle, you're creating a very narrow 25:9 aspect ratio, which crushes 16:9 apps into near-uselessness. Generally, you'll want the Galaxy Z Fold 3 folded out completely flat for its more tablet-like experience, but the Duo has some interesting, unique use cases as a dual-screen phone.

For example, the Surface Duo's Xbox Cloud Gaming implementation is truly great, displaying the touch controls on the lower portion of the screen. This removes touch elements from the display, giving you a better, fuller view of the game you're playing. Apps like Outlook span intelligently across displays and don't need to be dragged and dropped like on the Galaxy Z Fold 3 to take advantage of their multi-tasking capabilities. For productivity, the Duo feels invariably more intuitive as a result. I don't need to configure my screen for specific scenarios or adjust my keyboard for folded modalities. The Duo more often just knows what I'm trying to do, based on how I've oriented the screens, which is a productivity win.

While the Galaxy Z Fold 3 does offer a much larger screen for gaming, of course, your touch controls overlay all over the screen, which can be problematic in some games. There are a few games designed to work natively on the Galaxy Z Fold 3, however, like Genshin Impact, that take advantage of the full-screen space offered — and they look amazing.

For productivity, the Duo feels invariably more intuitive.

For me personally, though, the vast majority of my mobile gaming is going to be on games that force a 16:9 aspect ratio, complete with forced on-screen controls. The Surface Duo has potential as a dual-screen device, letting you split controls across screens or other UI elements, but the vast majority of games and apps probably won't take advantage of the setup. The Galaxy Z Fold 3 just behaves like an Android tablet and will most likely enjoy better support in that area as a result.

Despite all of this, there remains a big elephant in the room. I'd be lying if I said I wasn't overly concerned about the Galaxy Z Fold 3's "Ultra Thin" display glass. The tech used in the screen is identical to last year's Fold 2, despite improvements to the body itself. Yes, it should be safer from drop collisions, but colleagues like Mr. Mobile over on YouTube have reported that the Fold 2's crease eventually starts to split for no real reason, based on regular usage alone. That's not the kind of risk you want in an $1800 phone.

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 vs. Surface Duo: Which should you buy, if any?

The Surface Duo is a truly remarkable piece of tech, with award-worthy engineering wrapped in an uncompromising and sleek body. Impossibly thin, light, and versatile, the Surface Duo was betrayed only by its middling specs, inflated launch price, and poor OS, which sadly still suffers many of the annoyances and quirks today as it did when it launched. All too often have I had the UI get stuck as I shifted between modalities. Although the experience has gotten better over time, it simply can't compete with Samsung's mature One UI, with its rich array of features and customization capabilities. The big thing that killed the Surface Duo, for me, was the very weak Bluetooth antenna, which effectively stopped me from being able to use it for music.

The Surface Duo's dual-screen implementation does have some advantages, potentially, if they can get it right. It's more intuitive for side-by-side productivity scenarios, with a larger landscape folding capability for pseudo-laptop word processing and handheld gaming. The folded screens on the Galaxy Z Fold 3 are incredibly narrow by comparison, meaning that you'll generally want to use it in its flat tablet state the vast majority of the time.

Indeed, while the Duo offers some potential with its modal plurality, it will rely on app developers to really realize its full potential. Samsung's solution effectively makes it a regular single-screen tablet, which offers big benefits for media consumption that the Duo simply can't compete with unless it can shrink those bezels down in the future.

Ultimately, it boils down to price, like anything else. You get a whole heap of phone for $1800 with the Galaxy Z Fold 3, with standard modern features and updated performance. The Surface Duo, while more elegant in some ways, still feels like a prototype. It relies on stock Google Android features for telephony and lacks many basic features you'd expect of a modern smartphone.

I hope that future Surface Duo iterations can bring the heat to Samsung in the future because there is just something magical about the Surface team's engineering.

To buy the Galaxy Z Fold 3, you ultimately have to expect this to be your daily driver, and for a long time, most likely. It's for heavy phone users, heavy media consumers, and people who ultimately enjoy living on the cutting edge of tech. I traded in my Galaxy Note 20 Ultra for the Fold 3, and thus far, I have absolutely no regrets whatsoever, despite the huge hole I just blew in my savings account. The Galaxy Z Fold 3 is the ultimate Jez phone, although I can totally envision a future where the Duo 2 or Duo 3 could supplant Samsung for me someday.

I think the Surface Duo could offer some value at its $700 price point as a Surface enthusiast's device for those who don't see themselves spending more for a phone. The Surface Duo is about to be replaced by the Duo 2, but Microsoft is still supposedly planning to support the first Duo with updates for the foreseeable. I don't think it's good enough, or capable enough, to be a full daily driver for most, however, with a camera that lacks versatility, Bluetooth that doesn't work, and microphones that sound like they came from the 90s.

Either way, I hope that future Surface Duo iterations can bring the heat to Samsung in the future because there is just something magical about the Surface team's engineering. But today, the clear winner — despite the price tag — is the Galaxy Z Fold 3.

A less fragile option

Surface Duo

The first Surface phone

$700 at Microsoft Store

The Surface Duo misses the mark in a lot of ways, but its new price point makes it a far more attractive mid-range option for tech enthusiasts who want to dabble in folding devices without completely blowing up the bank.

The real (expensive) deal

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3

Break the bank

$1830 at Amazon

I say the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 3 is the best phone I've ever owned, but I'd be lying if I didn't have a heap of concerns about the flexible display's long-term quality.



Related Posts:

0 comments:

Post a Comment

ShortNewsWeb

Blog Archive

Categories

'The Woks of Life' Reminded Me to Cook With All the Flavors I Love (1) 10 Scary Podcasts to Listen to in the Dark (1) 11 Ways to Automate Your Life (and Get Back More Free Time) (1) 13 of the Best Spooky Episodes From (Mostly) Un-Spooky Shows (1) 13 Spooky Movies Set on Halloween Night (1) 16 of the Best Ways to Declutter Your Home (1) 1Password Now Generates QR Codes to Share Wifi Passwords (1) 2024 (15) 21 Thanksgiving Movies About Families As Screwed-Up As Yours (1) 30 Movies and TV Shows That Are Basically 'Competence Porn' (1) 30 of the Most Obscenely Patriotic Movies Ever (1) 31 Spooky Movies to Watch Throughout October (1) 38 of the Best Queer Movies of the Past 100 Years (1) 40 Netflix Original Series You Should Watch (1) 55 Box Office Bombs Totally Worth Watching (1) Active Directory (1) Adobe's AI Video Generator Might Be as Good as OpenAI's (1) AIX (1) and I'd Do It Again (1) and It's Not Worth the Price Hike (1) and Max Bundle Isn't a Terrible Deal (1) and the Dreo Solaris Is the Best Space Heater I’ve Tried (1) and These Are My Favorite Tech Deals From Walmart’s Black Friday Sale (1) and These Water-Resistant Running Shoes Are a Game Changer (1) and They're All on Sale for Black Friday (1) Apache (2) Apple Finally Made the New AirPods Max Worth Buying (1) Apple Intelligence Is Running Late (1) Apple Intelligence's Instructions Reveal How Apple Is Directing Its New AI (1) Apple Passwords Is Now on Firefox (but Not for Windows Users) (1) Apple's Latest Update Might Have Opted You Back Into Apple Intelligence (1) Apple’s Password Manager Had a Major Security Flaw (1) August 18 (1) August 4 (1) August 5 (1) Avoid an Allergic Reaction by Testing Your Halloween Makeup Now (1) Backup & Restore (2) best practices (1) bleepingcomputer (118) Blink Security Cameras Are up to 68% Off Ahead of Prime Day (1) Bluesky Has Trending Topics Now (But You Can Disable Them) (1) CentOS (1) CES 2025: Asus' Zenbook A14 Is the Lightweight Laptop My Back Wishes I Had (1) CES 2025: Govee’s New Pixel Light Will Remind You of a Lite Brite (1) Configure PowerPath on Solaris (1) Congress Might Ban DeepSeek (1) Documents (2) Don't Buy the New iPad Air (1) Don't Fall for This 'New' Google AI Scam (1) Don't Rely on a 'Monte Carlo' Retirement Analysis (1) Eight Cleaning Products TikTok Absolutely Loves (1) Eight of the Best Methods for Studying so You Actually Retain the Information (1) Eight Unexpected Ways a Restaurant Can Mislead You (1) Elevate Your Boring Store-Bought Pretzels With This Simple Seasoning Technique (1) Even Steam Has Malware Now (1) Everything Announced at Apple's iPhone 16 Event (1) Everything I'm Seeding in February (1) file system (6) Finally (1) Find (1) Find a Nearby ‘Gleaning Market’ to Save Money on Groceries (1) Five Red Flags to Look for in Any Restaurant (1) Five Ways You Can Lose Your Social Security Benefits (1) Flappy Bird's Creator Has Nothing to Do With Its 'Remake' (1) For Years (1) Four Reasons to Walk Out of a Job Interview (1) Four Signs Thieves Are Casing Your House (1) gaming (1) Gboard for Android Finally Gets Undo (1) Goldfish Crackers Have a New Name (for a Little While) (1) Grok Is Now Available Without an X Account (1) Hackers Now Have Access to 10 Billion Stolen Passwords (1) Here’s Why (and When) Gemini Is Replacing Google Assistant (1) How I Finally Organized My Closet With a Digital Inventory System (1) How I Pack Up a Hotel Room So I Don’t Forget Anything (1) How Opening Multiple Bank Accounts Helped Me Manage My Money Better (1) How to Buy Residency in Another Country With a 'Golden Visa' (1) How to Cancel Your Amazon Prime Membership After Prime Day Is Over (1) How to Choose the Best Weightlifting Straps for Your Workout (1) How to Do Fartlek Runs (and Seven Different Kinds to Try) (1) How to Enable (and Turn Off) Apple Intelligence on an iPhone (1) How to Get Free Car Maintenance and Repair Work (1) How to Get Started With Bluesky (1) How to Keep Squirrels Off Your Bird Feeders (1) How to Mute Words and Phrases on Your Bluesky Feed (1) How to Protect Your Kids From Identity Theft (1) How to Remotely Control Another iPhone or Mac Using FaceTime (1) How to Set Up Your Bedroom Like a Hotel Room (and Why You Should) (1) How to Speak With a Real Person at Target Customer Service (1) How to Take a Screenshot on a Mac (1) How to Take Full Control of Your Notifications on a Chromebook (1) How to Track Your 2024 Federal Tax Refund (1) How to Use Picture-in-Picture Mode on an Android Phone (1) How to Write SMART Goals That Actually Help You Reach Your Fitness Dreams (1) Hulu (1) I Chose the Beats Fit Pro Over the AirPods Pro (1) I Tested Grok 3 (1) I'd Recommend These Seven Outdoor Security Cameras I've Tested (1) I'm a Runner (1) I'm a Shopping Writer (1) I’m Always Cold (1) If You Got a Package You Didn't Order (1) If You Hate Running (1) Important Questions (17) Install and Configure PowerPath (1) interview questions for linux (2) Is ‘Ultra-Processed’ Food Really That Bad for You? (1) Is Amazon Prime Really Worth It? (1) It Might Be a Scam (1) July 14 (1) July 21 (1) July 28 (1) July 7 (1) June 30 (1) LifeHacker (221) Linux (36) Make and Freeze Some Roux Now for Easy Turkey Gravy (1) Meredith's Training Diaries: How I Crushed My Marathon Personal Record (1) Meta Releases Largest Open-Source AI Model Yet (1) Monitoring (3) music (688) My Favorite 14TB Hard Drive Is 25% Off Right Now (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: Apple AirPods Max (2) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: Apple Pencil Pro (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: Google Nest Mesh WiFi Router (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: Google Pixel 8 (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: PlayStation 5 (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: Samsung Odyssey G9 Gaming Monitor (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: SHOKZ OpenMove Bone Conduction Headphones (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: The 13-Inch M3 Apple MacBook Air (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: The Beats Pill Portable Speaker (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: The Garmin Forerunner 955 (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: The Garmin Venu 3S (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: The Google Pixel 9 Pro (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: The Kindle Colorsoft Signature Edition (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: The Microsoft Surface Pro (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: The Samsung Galaxy Buds 3 Pro (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: The Sonos Era 100 (1) My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: These Bose QuietComfort Headphones (1) My Favorite Tools for Managing Cords and Cables (1) Nagios (2) Newtorking (1) NFS (1) Now Is a Good Time to Buy a Refurbished M-Series MacBook (1) OMG! Ubuntu! (688) OpenAI Just Introduced More Ways to Use ChatGPT on WhatsApp (1) Opera’s New Browser Is Built to Break Your Doomscrolling Habit (1) Oracle Linux (1) oracleasm (3) osnews (34) Oura’s Readiness Score Finally Takes Menstrual Cycles Into Account (1) Password less communication (1) Patching (2) Pixel Studio Is the Easiest (If Not the Best) Way to Make AI Art on Your Pixel 9 (1) Poaching Is the Secret to Perfect Corn on the Cob (1) powerpath (1) Prioritize Your To-Do List By Imagining Rocks in a Jar (1) Red Hat Exam (1) Redo Buttons (1) register (131) Rsync (1) Safari’s ‘Distraction Control’ Will Help You Banish (Some) Pop Ups (1) Samba (1) Samsung Just Announced the Galaxy S25 Series (1) Save Time and Air Fry Your Pumpkin Pie (1) Scrcpy (1) September 1 (1) September 15 (1) September 2 (1) September 22 (1) September 23 (1) September 30 (1) September 8 (1) Seven Home 'Upgrades' That Aren’t Worth the Money (1) Seven Things Your Credit Card’s Trip Protection Won’t Actually Cover (1) Six of the Most Common Tax Myths in 2025 (1) Six Unexpected Household Uses for Dry-Erase Markers (1) Six Ways to Prevent a Contractor From Damaging Your House During a Renovation (1) ssh (1) Stop Your iPhone From Sharing Photos' Data With Apple (1) Swift Shift Is the Window Management Tool Apple Should Have Built (1) System hardening (1) Tailor Your iPhone's Fitness Summary to Your Workouts (1) Target’s ‘Circle Week’ Sale Is Still Going After October Prime Day (1) Target’s Answer to Prime Day Starts July 7 (1) Tech (9588) Tech CENTRAL (49) Technical stories (205) technpina (12) The 30 Best Movies of the 2020s so Far (and Where to Watch Them) (1) The 30 Best Sports Movies You Can Stream Right Now (1) The Beats Solo 4 Are 50% Off Right Now (1) The Best Deals on Robot Vacuums for Amazon’s Early Prime Day Sale (2) The Best Deals on Ryobi Tools During Home Depot's Labor Day Sale (1) The Best Early Prime Day Sales on Power Tools (1) The Best Last-Minute Valentine's Day Gift Ideas for Under $30 (1) The Best Movies and TV Shows to Watch on Netflix This Month (1) The Best October Prime Day Deals If You Are Experiencing Overwhelming Existential Dread (1) The Best Places to Go When You Don't Want to Be Around Kids (1) The Best Places to Order Thanksgiving Dinner to Go (1) The Best Strategies for Lowering Your Credit Card Interest Rate (1) The Best Way to Clean a Microwave (1) The Best Ways to Prevent Countertop Appliances From Damaging Your Kitchen (1) The Best Ways to Store All Your Bags and Purses (1) The Boox Note Air 4C Is a Color E-Reader and Digital Notebook in One (1) The Easiest Way to Free Up Disk Space on Your Mac (1) The Latest watchOS Beta Is Breaking Apple Watches (1) The Marshall Emberton II Speakers Are $70 Off for Black Friday (1) The New Disney+ (1) The Ninja Crispi Is Changing How I Make Party Dips (1) The PowerSchool Breach May Have Compromised Over 70 Million Users' Data (1) The Real Cost of Using a Nespresso Machine (1) The Samsung Galaxy Buds 3 Pro Are $60 Off for Black Friday (1) The Two Best Times of Year to Look for a New Job (1) the X Rival Everyone's Flocking To (1) There's a Fix for Apple Mail's Weird Archiving Behavior (1) These Anker Soundcore Sport X10 Earbuds Are Cheaper Than Ever (1) These Bissell Vacuums Are on Sale Ahead of Black Friday (and They're All Great) (1) These Googly Eyes Will Help You Find Your Mac's Cursor (1) These Meatball Shots Are My Favorite Football Season Snack (1) These Milwaukee Tools Are up to 69% off Right Now (1) This 2024 Sony Bravia Mini-LED TV Is $400 Off Right Now (1) This 75-Inch Hisense ULED 4K TV Is $500 Off Right Now (1) This App Lets You Create Automations Your Mac Usually Doesn’t Support (1) This Google Nest Pro Is 30% Off for Prime Day (1) This iPhone and Mac App Lets You Edit Your Bluesky Posts (1) This MagSafe-Compatible Power Bank Is 40% Off for Black Friday (1) This Peanut Butter Latte Isn’t As Weird As It Sounds (1) This Safari Extension Gives You More Control Over Your Reddit Feed (1) This Tech Brand Will Get the Biggest Discounts During Prime Day (1) This TikTok Upholstery Cleaning Hack Actually Works (1) Three New Things We Know About the Nintendo Switch 2 (1) Three Quick Ways to Shorten a Necklace (1) Three Services People Don't Know They Can Get From Their Bank for Free (1) TikTok's '5x5' Cleaning Method Is Great If You're Short on Time (1) Today’s Wordle Hints (and Answer) for Monday (4) Today’s Wordle Hints (and Answer) for Sunday (11) Try 'Pile Cleaning' When Your Mess Is Overwhelming (1) Try 'Pomodoro 2.0' to Focus on Deep Work (1) Try 'Rucking' (1) Ubuntu News (352) Ubuntu! (1) Unix (1) Use the ‘Organizational Triangle’ to Keep Your House Neater (1) Use This App to Sync Apple Reminders With Your iPhone Calendar (1) Use This Extension to Find All Your X Followers on Bluesky (1) Use TikTok's 'Rage Cleaning' Trend to Get Your Place Spotless (1) veritas (2) Videos (1) Warner Bros. Is Uploading Classic Movies to YouTube for Free (1) Was ChatGPT Really Starting Conversations With Users? (1) Watch Out for These Red Flags in a Realtor Contract (1) Wayfair Is Having a '72-Hour Closeout' Sale to Compete With Prime Day (1) We Now Know When Google Will Roll Out Android 15 (1) What Is the 'Die With Zero' Movement (and Is It Right for You)? (1) What Not to Do When Training for a Marathon (1) What to Do When Your Employer Shifts Your Pay From Salary to Hourly (1) What to Look for (and Avoid) When Selecting a Pumpkin (1) What to Wear to Run in the Cold (1) What's New on Max in December 2024 (1) What's New on Netflix in March 2025 (1) What's New on Prime Video and Freevee in September 2024 (1) Where to Stream Every Nominated Movie Before the 2025 Oscars (1) Why the Apple TV App Is Better on Android Than iPhone (1) Why You Can't Subscribe to Disney+ and Hulu Through Apple Anymore (1) Why You Might Want to Avoid the Latest Chromecast Update (1) Why Your Home Gym Needs Adjustable Kettlebells (1) Windows (5) You Can Easily Add Words to Your Mac's Dictionary (1) You Can Fight (and Avoid) Your Landlord's Cleaning Fees (1) You Can Get 'World War Z' on Sale for $19 Right Now (1) You Can Get a Membership to BJ's for Practically Free Right Now (1) You Can Get Beats Studio Buds+ on Sale for $100 Right Now (1) You Can Get Microsoft Visio 2021 Pro on Sale for $20 Right Now (1) You Can Get This 12-Port USB-C Hub on Sale for $90 Right Now (1) You Can Get This Roomba E5 Robot Vacuum on Sale for $170 Right Now (1) You Can Hire Your Own Personal HR Department (1) You Can Search Through Your ChatGPT Conversation History Now (1) You Can Set Different Scrolling Directions for Your Mac’s Mouse and Trackpad (1) You Need Beneficiaries for More Accounts Than You Think (1) Your DeepSeek Chats May Have Been Exposed Online (1) Your Verizon Bill Just Got a Little More Expensive (1)

Recent Comments

Popular Posts

Translate

My Blog List

Popular

System Admin Share

Total Pageviews