My Favorite Apps to Make Studying Less Painful

My Favorite Apps to Make Studying Less Painful

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While it's true that hand-writing helps you retain more of what you're studying, it's also true that the convenience of a phone or computer just can't be beaten. Taking your study materials with you wherever you are and having digital access to them can be a major benefit, whether you're preparing for a test in school or memorizing points before a big work presentation. Here are my favorite study apps to help do exactly that.

For flashcards: Anki

Anki app on iOS
Credit: Anki

Anki, which can be downloaded and accessed across all kinds of devices from MacBooks to Android phones, is my top pick for for a flashcard app—it actually hews close to the Leitner system, the best way to use real-life flashcards.

Unlike other apps, this one doesn't always show you every card in your deck. Rather, it shows you the ones you get wrong more often, so you go over those more and deal with the material you're more familiar with less. You can put audio, video, and picture files on your cards, too, so you can use them for a wide variety of tasks, like learning a language or memorizing people's names. You answer a few questions about yourself—like whether you're a student, parent, or trivia enthusiast and what times of day you prefer to study, as well as how long you plan to study each day—and the app creates a plan for you.

To use features like customized cards and the Leitner system, as well as flip unlimited cards per day, you'll pay $4.99 per month or $29.99 per year after a free three-day trial. You can add your own cards, of course, but there are plenty of pre-made decks to choose from.

For mind maps: Xmind

Xmind on iOS
Credit: Xmind

Oh, you like studying with mind maps more than flashcards? No problem. Download Xmind, which is free on the iOS App Store, but will cost you $99 per year after your two-week trial. You can make a blank mind map to organize your notes—it also comes with a ton of templates for mind maps that focus on problem-solving, business plan creation, project management, or whatever else. They're color-coded, easy to create and edit, and can be accessed by multiple accounts, so you can work on them in tandem with others on your team. (Perfect for group projects!)

To minimize distractions: Flora

Flora on iOS
Credit: Flora

Flora, available on iOS and Android or via Chrome extension, isn't actually a study app so much as a focus app—but when you're studying, that matters a lot. It's similar to some other apps on the market in that you grow "trees" in a virtual forest, but they only grow as long as you don't interrupt them by using your phone.

What I like about this one, though, is that it's free to download and use. You have the option to donate if you want to plant real-life trees based on your own forest and the option to bet actual money on the fact that you won't kill your tree, which will only happen if you abandon your focus during the preset time you scheduled the app for focusing. For instance, I grew a tree successfully by telling the app I wanted to work for 10 minutes straight, then take a five-minute break. You can pick the kinds of trees you grow, how long you spend working, how long your breaks are, and whether your app keeps data on your focus times and/or resets after a week or a month. It's easy to use and very relaxing.

To stay organized: MyStudyLife

MyStudyLife on iOS
Credit: MyStudyLife

I like MyStudyLife as a planner because it's specially designed for school, while apps like iCal and Google Calendar aren't (although you can import your iCal data on here, too).

Available on iOS and Android, this tool is free but extremely customizable: You can enter in assignments, tests, and course details right down to the room the class is in and the name of the professor who teaches it. The app will remind you whenever you have something coming up and keeps it all organized in a very simple calendar. It's got a bare-bones interface that is super easy to use and navigate and, for $4.99 per month or $29.99 per year (after a free one-week trial), you can access additional features like grade tracking, widgets, and dark mode. It works absolutely fine on the free version, though, which is why it's the best planner on the market right now.

For note-taking: Evernote

Evernote on iOS
Credit: Evernote

Evernote basically always wins in a battle of note-taking apps, but that's because it really is excellent. You get a planner, docs that you can access from anywhere, and a load of note-taking tools so you can jot down everything important, which the app will then help you organize.

With excellence, however, comes a price: The "Best of Evernote" package is $4.99 per week or $169.99 per year while the "Essentials" package is $3.99 per week or $129.99 per year. The free version, though, still lets you create 50 notes, upload up to 250 MB of media and attachments per month, search images and documents, and use features like Tasks, Calendar, and Web Clipper, which lets you save online content to your account.

A feature I love is the ability to take a photo of text and have the app transcribe it so it's editable. It's easy to use and fits into way more elements of daily life than just studying and note-taking, so it's ideal to have around. Go to class, take notes, and head to the grocery store with a to-buy list, then make it home in time for your scheduled phone call at 7 p.m., all without leaving the app. (You can leave, though; Evernote will send you push notifications about what's coming up.)



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The Best TV Series to Stream This Week

The Best TV Series to Stream This Week

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If you're looking for a new show to watch this week, I've got your back. I've scoured the schedules of Netflix, Prime, Max, Hulu, and other streaming platforms to bring you the best and most notable shows streaming this week.


Running Point

Kate Hudson stars in this basketball-based comedy series created by the always inventive Mindy Kaling. Hudson plays Isla Gordon, whose family owns storied Los Angeles basketball team the LA Waves. When her brother is forced to step down as president, Isla takes over, setting up a classic culture-clash of a woman entering a massively male-dominated space. Will she win over skeptical players, fans, investors, and her own brothers? I'd bet on "yes," now that sports betting is allowed in the U.S.

Where to stream: Netflix


House of David

No matter what you think of this "God" person, the Bible contains a lot of great stories, including that of David, who, like Madonna, needs no last name. House of David is a faith-based series that starts with the fall of King Saul and the anointing of his successor, David, a teenage outcast who seems to have no business being king of anything. But David embarks on a personal journey of discovery and eventually (spoiler alert) becomes the greatest king of Israel. God, as they say, works in mysterious ways.

Where to stream: Prime


Grosse Pointe Garden Society

Black comedies about rich people committing crimes are generally awesome, and Grosse Pointe Garden Society's creators have a track record in the space: Bill Krebs and Jenna Bans created Good Girls. The suburban "garden society" of the title is made up of a real estate agent, a socialite, a high school teacher, and a single dad, and they share a secret: a body buried under the hydrangeas. They have a pact to never tell a soul, but I have a feeling someone's gonna break that promise.

Where to stream: Peacock


Shoresey, season 4

I have a confession to make: I'd never heard of Shoresey before today, and I can't believe I haven't been watching this show. Why wasn't I informed? This Canadian sports comedy series is excellent and totally deserves the 100% fresh rating it has on rotten tomatoes. Shoresy follows the adventures of Shoresy, a foul-mouthed, fan-favorite hockey player on the Sudbury Bulldogs in Sudbury, Ontario, known as the dirtiest player in the game. Hockey comedy hasn't been this funny since the original Slap Shot!

Where to stream: Hulu


Last week's picks

Zero Day

This is the first time Robert De Niro has starred in a TV series, so Netflix is going big with Zero Day, a political drama/thriller series detailing the aftermath of a deadly cyberattack. De Niro plays respected former President George Mullen, who's heading up the investigation of an information attack that killed thousands of Americans. Mullen must navigate a world of shady tech moguls, government power brokers, and his own past if he's going to prevent a second, even deadlier cyber-disaster.

Where to stream: Netflix


The White Lotus, Season 3

Mike White's Emmy-winning series The White Lotus is the best. Its mix of biting commentary on wealth and privilege, well-drawn (but nearly always reprehensible) characters, and pitch-black humor add up to a nothing-else-like-it TV series. Season 3 sees a new group of pampered Americans arriving at a White Lotus luxury resort in Thailand. I can't say for sure, but I'm guessing they'll have unexpected and troubling times instead of a restful vacation. Season 3 also see the return of Natasha Rothwell, who played the spa manager from season one—one of the few sympathetic characters in the show's run. Other notable cast members include Walton Goggins (The Ghoul in Prime's Fallout series), Carrie Coon, Scott Glenn, Leslie Bibb, Michelle Monaghan, and Parker Posey.

Where to stream: Max


1923, Season 2

Harrison Ford and Helen Mirren return for the second, and reportedly final, season of critically lauded drama 1923, a show that aims to tell a story as big as its stars. In this prequel to Yellowstone, Ford and Mirren play Jacob and Cara, matriarch and patriarch of the Dutton family, proud ranchers from Montana whose lives are shaped by drought, pandemics, and war, and who must face off against and a cadre of evil moguls who have their eyes on the ranch. Big drama!

Where to stream: Paramount+


Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, season 12

There's a new season of Last Week Tonight premiering this month, and I'm pretty sure sardonic host John Oliver will to have a lot to talk about in 2025 America. Oliver promises to ask the hard questions, like "Have two presidents ever kissed?" and "Did Tucker Carlson's mom really leave him $2 in her will?" (She actually left him $1.) Don't miss it if you like pointed political humor, because who knows how long pointed political humor will remain legal.

Where to stream: Max


A Thousand Blows

Created by Steven Knight, the genius behind Peaky Blinders, this British boxing drama is made for fans of hardcore Victoriana. A Thousand Blows takes viewers to the mean streets of London in the 1880s where we follow Hezekiah (Malachi Kirby) and Alec (Francis Lovehall), two friends from Jamaica who immigrate to the UK only to find themselves fighting for their lives in the crime-ridden East End. The pair run afoul of criminal kingpin and pugilist Sugar Goodson (Stephen Graham) and find a friend in Mary Carr (Erin Doherty), head of an all-woman shoplifting gang known as the Forty Elephants.

Where to stream: Hulu


Reacher, season 3

Universally praised action series Reacher returns for a third season. Based on Lee Child’s seventh Reacher novel, Persuader, season 3 sees former military operative Jack Reacher going undercover for the DEA in New England and facing off against a character played by Olivier Ritchers, the seven-foot bodybuilder called “the Dutch Giant" in muscle-show circles, and Zachary Beck, played by Anthony Michael Hall, the six-foot tall American actor called "The Geek" in 16 Candles.

Where to stream: Prime



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The Best New Movies to Stream This Week

The Best New Movies to Stream This Week

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Looking to settle in with a good movie? Me too. That's why I've pored over release schedules to bring you the best original and new-to-streaming movies you can watch on Netflix, Prime, Max, Hulu, and other streaming platforms this week.

Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (2024)

Based on everything we know about movies based on video games, Sonic the Hedgehog 3 shouldn't even be watchable—a third movie based on the 1990s Sega mascot?—but somehow, Sonic 3 is good, even if you don't feel nostalgic for the games. It's surprisingly complex for a kids' movie about a blue hedgehog that runs fast, but it doesn't stray from manic energy and over-the-top vibe of the source material. Jim Carrey deserves special praise: He plays a dual-villain role as both Eggman and Robotnik, and manages to more than hold his own with his frenetic, CGI co-stars.

Where to stream: Paramount+


Matthew Perry: A Hollywood Tragedy

It may be distasteful to root around in the dirty laundry of dead celebrities, but it's so entertaining. Matthew Perry: a Hollywood Tragedy is of high-enough quality that you won't feel that bad as you learn about the ring of shady Los Angeles drug dealers and Dr. Feelgoods who (allegedly) provided Friends star Matthew Perry the horse tranquilizer that led to his death. We also get a window into Perry's childhood, his mental health struggles, and his meteoric ascension to the top of the Hollywood dungheap.

Where to stream: Peacock


Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves

Dungeons and Dragons, the game, owes a lot to Tolkien, but Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves shines most when it's least like The Lord of the Rings. Unlike other direct and indirect D&D adaptations, Honor Among Thieves respects the source material while not taking itself too seriously. It captures the lighthearted anarchy and laughs of a good game of D&D with your pals, and makes you feel like this ragtag band of adventurers' quest for a powerful relic is in imminent danger of going off the rails hilariously if someone rolls a one.

Where to stream: Netflix


The Wrong Track

I've been watching a lot of foreign language original Netflix content lately, and man, is it good, so I have high hopes The Wrong Track, a comedy from Norway about the long-distance Birkebeinerrennet ski race. Main character Emilie's life has fallen apart, so she decides to rebuild by joining her brother in a long distance skiing adventure. It's not the most original premise, but the possibilities are endless, and I can't wait to see what people in Norway think is funny.

Where to stream: Netflix

Last week's picks


Grand Theft Hamlet (2024)

Back in the bad old days of the full-lockdown pandemic, British stage actors and gamers Sam Crane and Mark Oosterveen had the audacious, ridiculous idea of staging a production of Hamlet within the video game Grand Theft Auto V Online. Composed entirely of footage captured in-game, Grand Theft Hamlet features all the backstage drama of a "let's put on a show" documentary, but it's punctuated by the chaos and violence of online gaming—other players break up rehearsals with gunplay, the NPC police arrive ready to kill the cast and crew, etc. Grand Theft Hamlet is funny, but it's also shot through with glimpses of the lives behind the avatars, and it defiantly asserts that Art still matters, no matter how absurd the world becomes, online and off.

Where to stream: Mubi


Nosferatu (2024)

Robert Eggers's remake of Nosferatu doesn't rethink the source material. Instead, Eggers raises the original film's dark, corrupted imagery from the dead to terrify another generation. The new Nosferatu hits the same basic plot beats as F. W. Murnau's 1922 expressionist masterpiece: Thomas Hutter, an unsuspecting young lawyer, travels to the Carpathian Mountains for some routine business with a new client, but quickly learns that Count Orlock is actually Nosferatu, an elementally evil vampire who is has dark plans for Hutter and Humanity. If you like your vampires un-sexy and truly monstrous, don't miss Nosferatu.

Where to stream: Peacock


Ladies & Gentlemen... 50 Years of SNL Music

Peacock is a must-subscribe for fans of Saturday Night Live. Viewers can stream all 50 seasons of the show, the 50th anniversary special, a multi-part behind-the-scenes docu-series, the SNL concert at Radio City Music Hall, and more. But, because music ages better than comedy, my must-watch piece of SNL 50th anniversary content is Ladies & Gentlemen... 50 Years of SNL Music. Directed by Questlove, this documentary chronicles the ludicrously deep lineup of emerging geniuses, one-hit-wonders, and musical legends who have performed on the show, including David Bowie, Prince, Radiohead, Adele, Run DMC, Beyonce, The Replacements, Nirvana, and basically everyone else who is awesome.

Where to stream: Peacock


Memes and Nightmares

LeBron James and Maverick Carter executive-produced Memes and Nightmares, a quirky comedy documentary that takes viewers inside the world of NBA Twitter (or NBA X now, I guess). When a beloved meme (J.R. Smith Squinting) disappears from the internet, Josiah Johnson, former college baller and current king of NBA Twitter, embarks on a quixotic quest to uncover what happened. Featuring interviews with terminally online fans, NBA players, techies, and many other possible suspects, Memes and Nightmares is as much about the bonds we form and the communities we build in a digital world as it is about a missing meme.

Where to stream: Hulu


Things Will Be Different

In this inventive puzzle-box thriller, first-time director Michael Felker deftly blends sci-fi, action, and horror into a movie with more twists than 1950s dance party. Adam David Thompson and Riley Dandy play Joseph and Sidney, a brother and sister who use time travel to escape after a bank robbery. But the pair learns that the punishment for breaking state and federal laws is child's play compared to the punishment for breaking the laws of Space and Time.

Where to stream: Hulu




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OpenAI Is Leaning on Paid Users to Test ChatGPT-4.5

OpenAI Is Leaning on Paid Users to Test ChatGPT-4.5

In a livestream today, OpenAI finally announced the launch of its GPT-4.5 model, but with a twist: For now, using it requires a $200 per month ChatGPT Pro subscription.

That’s because the new large language model, or LLM, is still technically in a “research preview” state. This is all apparently shorthand for “please pay us for the privilege of being a beta tester.”

Jokes aside, the company is promising GPT-4.5 provides more “natural conversation,” and performs better when it comes to programming, pattern recognition, writing, and “solving practical problems.”

Note that GPT-4.5 isn’t intended as a reasoning model, meaning it won’t have the self-correcting or deep research capabilities of OpenAI o1, o3-mini, or the upcoming full version of o3. In a leaked document, the company said it’s not considering GPT-4.5 a “frontier” model, but it is OpenAI’s largest LLM yet, which should make it ideal for everyday queries, as the large database of training material should make for quicker answers.

GPT-4.5 performance charts
Credit: OpenAI

In internal tests, OpenAI says the new model hallucinated about 24.7% less frequently than GPT-4.0, and was about 34.3% more accurate. Around 57% of internal human testers reportedly preferred GPT-4.5 to 4.0.

GPT-4.5 performance charts
Credit: OpenAI

In other words, GPT-4.5 isn’t exactly at the cutting edge of AI, but it should be an improvement on other non-reasoning models, providing a nice middle ground between cheaper, more traditional LLMs and their frequently paywalled successors. The only major omissions seem to be multimodal features like AI Voice Mode and video input, although OpenAI says its working on updating its user experience, which seems to hint some version of these capabilities might come to the model in the future.

That makes sense, given that, once again, this is technically an early release, with OpenAI saying it’s “still exploring” GPT-4.5’s limits and how people can use it. To that end, the LLM is set to expand to all paid ChatGPT plans over the next two weeks, before presumably reaching free users as a replacement for GPT-4.0 once it leaves its preview state.



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Other Browsers Need to Steal Opera’s Multitasking Sidebar

Other Browsers Need to Steal Opera’s Multitasking Sidebar

I'm a full-screen apps guy on my Mac. I love sending each app to its own workspace and swiping between them to use the one I need. When I'm writing, it helps me focus on the task at hand, and it's not hard to use three and four-finger swipes on my trackpad get to my other productivity apps as I need them. However, messenger apps like WhatsApp and Slack are an exception. I need to be able to check these out at a moment's notice, like when I'm using my browser in full-screen. Luckily, that's where the Opera sidebar comes in. This handy tool is home to social media apps, messengers, and even some streaming services, keeping them from getting lost in separate tabs and letting me easily glance at them when I'm working on something else. It's a lifesaver, and other browsers desperately need to adopt it.

What is the Opera sidebar?

You can think of the Opera sidebar as a way to bookmark crucial services to your Opera browser's left pane. By default, it'll just show icons, but clicking one will open the bookmarked tool in a small popover tab. This is ideal for tasks you want to work on without losing focus on your currently active tab. While I would normally go to a secondary tab to search the web or switch to a different app to reply to texts, this sidebar lets me stay on the current tab, attend to other tasks quickly, and then get right back to work.

How to set up Opera's sidebar

Sidebar settings in Opera.
Credit: Pranay Parab

The sidebar is enabled by default, but you should take a moment to tweak it so that your favorite services show up on it. Just click the three-dots button in the bottom-left corner of the Opera window and the sidebar settings pane will open up. Go through the sections for AI services, messengers, and special features. Just click the check box next to the services you wish to use and disable the ones you don't need. After this, your selections will show up in the left pane and you can click them to use them in the sidebar.

You can't add any random app to the sidebar, unfortunately, but there is a reasonably well-populated list for you to choose from. You can pick AI services such as ChatGPT, messengers (WhatsApp, Slack, etc.), or social media sites (Instagram, Bluesky, etc.). The most recent additions are Bluesky, Discord, and Slack, so at least Opera is always adding more options. The sidebar also supports music streaming services such as Apple Music, Spotify, and YouTube Music.

Why I prefer the Opera Sidebar over tabs

I'll admit it: I have a problem of opening too many tabs and then losing track of them. I've been guilty of opening the same website in multiple tabs or sometimes even running the same search query in more than one tab. With the sidebar, I've found a solution to these problems. When I need to reply to a message, I can open the messenger app from the sidebar and dismiss it the moment I'm done. And if I need to access it for longer, I can pin the app, which puts it in a neat split-screen view. This lets me work faster than when I have multiple open tabs, or when I need to switch between apps. 

While a Mac does let you easily place two apps side-by-side, the browser sidebar feature lets me quickly swap new apps in as I need them. This is a level of flexibility that's otherwise hard to find. It's also worth noting that Opera is not the only browser to offer a sidebar, but it is one of the few that runs your browser extensions within the sidebar. If my preferred browsers—Safari and Firefox—were to adopt this feature, I'd even be compelled to delete the official apps for some of these services.

I don't see myself using Opera as my primary browser because I'm attached to the unique privacy benefits in Safari and Firefox, but the company has been doing a few interesting things as of late. It's built a browser that can break your doomscrolling habit and its Aria AI is actually quite useful. Other companies would do well to keep up.



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Pixel Phones Are Getting a New Scam Detection Tool

Pixel Phones Are Getting a New Scam Detection Tool

Pixel users will soon get an extra layer of protection against malicious calls and texts, as Google's AI-powered, real-time scam detection is rolling out widely next month.

The Gemini Nano feature, which is coming to both Google Messages and Phone by Google, runs in the background and will alert you mid-call if it identifies "conversation patterns commonly associated with scammers." You'll hear a beep at the beginning of possible scam calls to indicate that the conversation is being monitored, with subsequent beeps sounding every few minutes. You'll also see an on-screen prompt when suspicious activity has been detected, with options to "End call" or mark "Not a scam." For messages, possible scam texts will be automatically moved to your Spam & blocked folder.

Google says that the feature works on-device only and will not save or record any call or message content.

Google rolled out live threat detection for spotting malicious apps on your Pixel late last year (the same time that Scam Detection launched in a public beta). That feature alerts you to suspicious apps—specifically, "stalkerware" that scrapes your personal data—in real time so you can evaluate and delete them if needed.

How to enable scam detection on your Pixel

Once scam detection is widely available in March, you can activate the feature for calls in your settings. Open Phone by Google Settings > Scam Detection and toggle scam detection on. To enable detection and filtering for spam texts in Google Messages, go to Messages Settings > Spam protection.

Of course, threat and scam detection features don't absolve users of the responsibility to follow basic security best practices when it comes to calls, messages, and apps. Be wary of calls and texts from numbers you don't know, and don't engage with anyone requesting urgent action, such as providing sensitive information, sending money, or downloading software or apps to your devices. Don't click links in suspicious texts or emails, and always go directly to the website for the bank or institution to locate contact information.



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The Pixel Watch 3 Will Be Able to Detect If You Lose a Pulse

The Pixel Watch 3 Will Be Able to Detect If You Lose a Pulse

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Google just announced that its “loss of pulse dectection” feature for the Pixel Watch 3 has received FDA clearance and will be available to U.S. users by the end of March. Read on for more on what this feature does, how well it works (according to one early study), and how you’ll be able to enable it.

The feature has been available in several European countries since late 2024. According to a Google help page on the feature, it’s currently available in “Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom.” 

What is “loss of pulse detection”? 

According to documents from Google, the feature is meant to sound an alarm and contact emergency services whenever the person wearing the watch loses their pulse. This could be from a heart attack, poisoning, overdose, or other cause of respiratory or circulatory failure, according to Google’s documents on what they had in mind when developing the feature. 

When the watch detects a “loss of pulse event” (it thinks you are wearing the watch but cannot detect a pulse with the regular heart rate sensor), the watch is programmed to do the following, in order: 

  1. Perform additional checks (taking about 20 seconds) to be sure that it’s not detecting movement or a pulse. For example, it can use brighter lights in the optical heart rate sensor, and check for movement from accelerometers.

  2. Buzz your wrist and ask if you are OK. You can tap an “I’m OK” button to clear the alert. This phase lasts for 15 seconds.

  3. Play an audible alarm while displaying a 20-second countdown stating that it will place an emergency call (“No pulse detected / Calling 911 in…”)

  4. Call 911 through the watch’s LTE connection, or through a connected phone, and play a recorded message to them (not audible to you or to bystanders). The message states that your watch detected a loss of pulse and that you are unresponsive, and it gives your approximate location.

  5. While the call is ongoing, there is a “talk to 911” button displayed on the watch. You (or a bystander) can tap that button to interrupt the recorded message and speak to emergency services as a regular phone call.

What is (and isn’t) loss of pulse detection good for? 

The loss of pulse detection feature is promising for what are sometimes called “unwitnessed” cardiac arrests, as a group of Italian healthcare professionals wrote in the journal Resuscitation. I wasn’t able to find any real-world accounts of this feature saving someone’s life, but to be fair it’s only been available for a few months. 

Google emphasizes that the feature is not intended to provide any treatment or be expected to save your life, and definitely cannot replace medical monitoring devices that may have been prescribed or recommended to you by your provider. It can’t prevent a loss of pulse, or determine the cause of a loss of pulse, and it can’t even be sure that its emergency calls will go through. 

Importantly, the loss of pulse detection process has not been tested in a variety of real-world situations that may increase the risk of false alarms, or of missing a real event. These are some of the people who might be most interested in this feature, so it’s worth noting that the feature has not been tested for people identified as high risk for sudden cardiac death, or for people who are pregnant, under 22 years of age, who have chronic pain, poor blood flow to the wrist, peripheral nerve conditions, cognitive impairment, sickle cell disease, or who have a tattoo on their wrist that may interfere with the sensor. 

How well does loss of pulse detection work on the Pixel Watch 3?

Google has published a brief summary of the results of their testing from the watch, as part of this document that gives instructions for use. They tested the feature on 135 volunteers, including—according to a press release—stunt actors who simulated falls while wearing a tourniquet.

The sensitivity in a clinical trial was 69.3%, meaning that the feature was activated 69.3% of the time that a person had an actual loss of pulse. The other 30.7% of the time, it didn’t activate. That’s not great, but the idea seems to be that it’s a lot better than nothing. 

The other metric of accuracy, specificity, Google described as amounting to “1 false positive call over 7.75 user-years” with 131 of their users. (That would be compatible with 131 users wearing the watch for about three weeks each, resulting in one person getting a false positive, but Google didn’t release the full results so we can’t say whether that’s exactly how the study went, or how their use compared to what you might be doing with your watch over the next 7.75 years.) 

If you do get a false positive, you’ll have a few chances to cancel the alert before it gets as far as calling emergency services. If you tap that “I’m OK” button, the watch will ask if you were doing anything innocuous that may have triggered it. Sleeping on your arm is one of the options; so are a loose fit on the watch band, and not wearing the watch at all. Google also notes that other factors like ambient light, or pressure on the skin, may sometimes result in false positives.

How to enable (or disable) loss of pulse detection on the Pixel Watch 3

Once the feature is available here, it will be an option when you're setting up a new watch. (So far it hasn't been announced for any Fitbit models or older Pixel watches, just the Pixel Watch 3 in both sizes.) To turn on loss of pulse detection for the Pixel Watch 3 that you already have, go into the Pixel Watch app, tap Safety & Emergency, and look for Loss of Pulse Detection. There is a switch that allows you to turn the feature on or off.



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Nine Items That Clean Your House for You (That Aren't Robot Vacuums)

Nine Items That Clean Your House for You (That Aren't Robot Vacuums)

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While it can be fulfilling to put in the work and make your home spotless, we simply don't always have the time.

You might already have a robot vacuum zooming around to collect dust and dirt on your behalf, but there are a surprising number of lesser-known—and equally convenient—cleaning gadgets that could also be pitching in. From window cleaners to toilet scrubbers, here are some tech tools you can buy to outsource whatever chore you most despise.

Automatically clean your glass

Let’s start off with windows, which can be tedious to clean and still end up infuriatingly streaky when all is said and done. The Hobot-298 window cleaning robot is certainly a splurge at $299 on Amazon (though price-tracking tool Camelcamelcamel says that's lower than its average price of $435), but it's effective: Fill it with water, attach it to a window, and let it mist and polish away. It's particularly useful if your home has large, tall windows that are hard to reach. There is a cheaper option, too: The FMART T9Pro Window Cleaning Robot for $134.79.

You can also consider this cordless window vacuum from Sharper Image. It sprays down the glass and removes the water, sorting it into a separate reservoir so the clean and dirty water never mix. It's just $63.99.

Automatically clean hard floors

Yes, you likely know all about robot vacuums, but what about robot mops? The iRobot Braava Jet, $309 on Amazon, uses a precise jet spray to make your floors gleam, and it connects to your phone or smart home devices, learns the layout of your house, and can work in concert with Roomba robot vacuums to, per the company, “team up to vacuum to mop automatically in perfect sequence.”

Then again, try a robot that does it all for the ultimate automatic experience. There are some great robot vacuum/mop combos on the market, though they can be pretty expensive, so it might be worth it to start small and see how you like a cheaper version. Consider one from ROPVACNIC for just $139.98.

Finally, if you sweep a lot (I'm looking at you, people with long hair or fluffy pets) it might be worth it to upgrade to a stationary dust pan. It's kind of like a big vacuum that sits in the corner and you use your broom to direct dirt to it. From there, it just sucks it up. It's not fully automatic, since you still have to sweep, but it's more convenient than what you're doing now, isn't it? It's $149 on Amazon.

Automatically clean the toilet

Consider the beautifully named Fluidmaster 8300 Flush 'n Sparkle toilet cleaning system. You stick it in your tank and it disperses a little bleach whenever you flush. It can last up to three months, which is a long time to go without having to scrub your bowl, and it's only $10.59.

Automatically take care of the trash

The future is now, baby, because you can even have a robot take care of the trash for you. The Airdeer automatic trash can ($219) packs your trash, seals the bag, and adds a new bag to the container with the touch of a button—basically, it does everything besides actually taking out the trash. It comes with six refill rings, each of which holds 20 trash bags. 

Automatically clean up after the cat

For the most part, cats are the most self-cleaning pet you can get, but that doesn't mean it isn't annoying and nasty to deal with their litter boxes. Some self-cleaning litter boxes are on the spendy side, but you can find quality alternatives on Amazon. For instance, the Autoscooper 11 not only has a fantastic name, but is just $179.99. It is open on the top to not only reduce odors, but help your cat with the transition from regular litter box to fancier model, as other litter robots on the market fully enclose your kitty and might be a little too stressful.

Automatically clean your dishwasher

Again, you can do this yourself, but you shouldn't have to (or that's what I think, anyway). Clean your dishwasher by stuffing a cleaning pod into the space you'd normally put a detergent pod, then let it rip. It's just $8.99 for six tablets on Amazon.



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Nine Worthwhile Fire TV Stick Apps You Should Try

Nine Worthwhile Fire TV Stick Apps You Should Try

However you watch your Fire TV Stick, you probably have the same assortment of apps as most people: Netflix, YouTube, Prime Video, Disney+, the list goes on. But there are some useful apps beyond the mainstream you should definitely consider using. And, because Amazon Fire TV Stick is ultimately an Android device, you can even run specialized Android apps on it to truly unlock the power of this small little streaming device.

Downloader

Downloader app
Credit: Amazon

Underneath Fire TV OS lies Android, which means your Fire TV Stick is capable of running any verified Android APK. But to get there, you'll need to do two things. First, enable developer access (I have a guide on that here), then download Downloader.

Downloader can help you download any app using its built-in browser. You can navigate to any trusted APK site, like APK Mirror or apps hosted on Github, to directly download APKs to your Fire TV Stick.

Kodi

kodi on fire tv stick
Credit: Khamosh Pathak

Kodi is an all-in-one media center, and it's immensely customizable. It's free, open source, and its library of plugins enable features like live TV and cloud syncing. You can use Kodi to stream movies and TV shows from your own home server, or use the integrated plugins to stream free content online.

Kodi isn't officially available on the Amazon Appstore, but it's quite easy to install the Kodi app using the APK. I have a detailed guide on how you can use Downloader to install and setup Kodi.

If Kodi seems like a lot, I recommend you look into Plex and Jellyfin. Plex is a mainstream media center. It's really well designed, but a lot of its cross-device features are behind a paywall. Jellyfin, on the other hand, is completely free and open source, and while the interface is basic, it's fast and feature rich.

VLC

VLC app.
Credit: Amazon

Even though I prefer to use IINA on the Mac, VLC is an undeniable classic. VLC is a video app that will play anything you throw at it, and that's true even for VLC for Fire TV Stick. The app will stream content online, or play locally hosted media. VLC will even download subtitles, and sync them up for you.

SmartTube

SmartTube app
Credit: SmartTube

SmartTube is one of the few ad-free third-party YouTube clients available on Fire TV Stick. (NewPipe is a great option for Android smartphones). Like Kodi, SmartTube is not in the Amazon Appstore, so you'll have to download it using Downloader. That said, it is hosted on Github, and the app is open source, so it can be checked for security issues.

SmartTube is 100% ad-free, and even integrates SponsorBlock to automatically skip over sponsored sections of videos. It supports 4K and HDR content, customizable buttons, and live chat, but the app doesn't support voice search.

AirScreen

AirScreen app
Credit: Amazon

AirScreen adds AirPlay to your TV, without the need to buy an expensive Apple TV. The AirScreen app can turn the Fire TV Stick into a wireless display receiver for many platforms like AirPlay, Miracast, and even Chromecast, so you can share your screen from your iPhone, Mac, or Android phone.

ProtonVPN

If you're looking for a private and secure VPN app, I recommend Mullvad VPN for it's simple pricing (and the fact you don't need an account to use it). Mullvad VPN isn't on the Amazon Appstore (though you can always use Download to install the Android version). If you want a VPN designed for Fire TV Stick, I recommend Proton VPN. It has a generous free plan (no data cap, but limited to three servers, and one connection per account), and a paid upgrade if you need more, like streaming content from other countries in 4K.

Tubi

Tubi app
Credit: Amazon

Tubi offers a little of everything, including movies, TV shows, and live TV. There's a huge catalog of content, with over 50,000 movies and TV shows. The upside is the app is completely free to use. The only downside is, of course, ads.

If you don't mind sitting through the ads, though, it's a great way to access some free entertainment. Lifehacker sibling site PCMag loved Tubi in its full review of the service.

The Roku Channel

The Roku Channel
Credit: Amazon

You don't need a Roku device to enjoy The Roku Channel. The Fire TV Stick version offers a vast library of free to watch movies and TV shows, even if it's not all the latest and the greatest content on the market. You also have access to live TV, live sports, kids shows, news, and more. Plus, it's actually quite easy to use as well—given it's a Roku app.

Airy TV

Airy TV
Credit: Amazon

Airy TV is yet another free TV channels app, especially useful if you don't want to spend money on services like YouTube TV. It's completely free, and doesn't even require you to sign up for an account. Boot up the app, and you're streaming live TV. Of course, you have to sit through ads, but that's standard for apps like this. Airy TV has a good collection of channels for streaming movies, TV shows, and even live sports—including MMA.



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The Best Sites to Find Affordable Dupes

The Best Sites to Find Affordable Dupes

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We’ve all been there: You find the perfect product, the chair or skin cream that will solve all your problems through the liberal application of capitalism—but it doesn’t fit into your budget. You have three choices: You can spend the next few months (years?) saving diligently toward the glorious day when you can afford to pull the trigger; you can put that purchase on a credit card and deal with the interest charges—or you can find a dupe.

Dupes—short for “duplicates”—are having their moment. While knockoffs are nothing new, as anyone who has ever bought a “designer” handbag on the streets of New York City can attest, dupes are a little different. Knockoffs are trying to fool people that they’re the name-brand product, but dupes are their own thing—they’re not pretending to be the expensive item, they just replicate its look and function at a lower price point.

Finding dupes can be as easy as a Google image search or a quick trip to Target or Lidl—but it can sometimes be a challenge. Thankfully, there are a variety of apps you can use that make locating dupes a lot easier, and companies that make their own dupes for specific items.

How to scour the web for dupes

If you’re looking for duplicate furniture and housewares, you could spend hours digging through subreddits and Facebook pages, but luckily there tools and sites that make it a lot easier. Some of the most useful include:

  • TikTok. The social media behemoth is kind of dupe central these days. You can type the name of what you’re looking for with hashtags like #dupe or #dupefinder to see what’s out there. What’s good about using TikTok is that most of the results will show people actually using and discussing the dupes, which can help you figure out if they’re truly worth buying.

  • Dupe.com has been getting a lot of press of late thanks to the love it gets from social media. Its interface is pretty simple: You paste in the URL of an item (furniture, housewares, or clothing) or drag an image into the search bar, and Dupe searches the internet for lookalikes. For example, if you want an Eames Lounge Chair and Ottoman from Herman Miller—which sells for anywhere from $6,000 to $8,000 new—Dupe.com quickly leads you to Walmart, where you can buy this leather lounge chair with a very similar look and vibe. (There’s also an app.)

  • Spoken.io works very similarly: Paste in a URL or drag/upload a photo, and it will scan the web and point you to a list of discounted dupes. For example, it turned up this $1,899 Eames-like chair—not quite as cheap as the Walmart version, but still a significant savings over the original.

  • Dupeshop focuses on skincare and makeup products, and it doesn’t just point you at purchase links—it pulls together detailed comparisons, reviews, videos, and other information so you can feel confident that the dupe product will perform as expected.

  • SkinSkool distinguishes itself by offering a list of potential dupes organized by a similarity score and labeled with a dollar sign icon indicating how expensive the dupe is. This makes it easy to cross-reference your budget with the available options. The site explicitly states that it bases its choices solely on the publicly available ingredient lists of the products, so it doesn’t offer any kind of hands-on review.

A few companies that make their own dupes

Some companies have made a name for themselves because they make and sell their own high-quality dupes, so you don’t have to search the entire internet trying to find them. A few examples include:

  • Brandefy was founded to exploit the fact that name-brand beauty and skincare products at every price point are largely manufactured in the same facilities using the same ingredients. It creates “inspired by” products that are often indistinguishable from the pricier versions. Brandefy is more oriented toward its app than the website, however, so it’s a good choice if you want to check something on your phone while you’re out shopping.

  • The Essence Vault and Dossier both offer up perfume dupes. Perfumes are expensive to develop, to manufacture, and to package—but you can’t actually copyright a fragrance, so dupe perfumes tend to be uncannily like the expensive brand they’re copying. That being said, you may notice a quality difference between the good stuff and the dupes. But if your budget is dupe-sized, both The Essence Vault and Dossier offer scents explicitly inspired by designer fragrances (Dossier also sells their own original scents).

  • Element Brooklyn offers soaps, lotions, and other products that dupe brands like Aesop or Le Labo with an environmentally friendly twist: Its products are refillable, so you aren’t dumping plastic bottles into landfills all the time.

  • Quince takes the same approach as Brandefy, but for clothing, claiming to use the same factories and manufacturers as the high-end luxury brands it's replicating.

  • Italic is a Los Angeles-based company that sells clothing, jewelry, and accessories that closely resemble luxury brands. Its prices aren’t as low as literal dupes, but you can still find fashion that looks just like the top-tier brands at a much lower cost.

Some caveats to keep in mind

Keep in mind that it can be difficult to judge whether a dupe is going to be worth buying even at a drastically lower price point. It can be very difficult to tell from a photo whether a piece of furniture or clothing is going to be anywhere near the quality of the real thing, for example. That’s where apps like TikTok that offer endorsements from folks who have actually used the dupes can be super valuable.

Another option for doing your dupe due diligence on beauty and skincare products is SkinSort, which has a useful comparison tool. You can compare a dupe to the brand it’s replicating and SkinSort will show you a list of ingredients in each (along with explanations for what each does) and reviews from people who have actually used the dupe.

Finally, if you want to save some money without risking a downgraded experience, you can also look for name-brand items at secondhand places like Poshmark, which sells clothes, skincare, perfume, and beauty products. A lot of sellers on these platforms have access to name-brand stuff (some work for retailers where they get deep discounts, giving them room for resell profits, for example—look for folks who have a lot of a specific product on hand and you’re probably looking at a hustling sales associate) and you can find some real bargains that way. This gives you the main benefit of a dupe (lower prices) without compromising in any way.



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