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Amazon updated 2023’s Fire HD 10 tablet with 4GB of RAM

A person holds the Amazon Fire HD 10 tablet in two hands while multi-tasking on screen.

The Fire HD 8 that launched in 2024 was the last new addition to Amazon's budget-minded tablet lineup, but the company has quietly updated the Fire HD 10 that debuted the year before. In 2023 it was offered with multiple storage configurations that each came with 3GB of RAM, but the 32GB version now ships with 4GB of RAM, and a small price bump from $139.99 to $154.99.

The Fire HD 10 with 64GB of storage still only comes with 3GB of RAM and the other specs for both tablets remain the same, including a 10.1-inch, 1,920 x 1,200 display, a 2GHz eight-core processor, a 13-hour battery, and expandable storage through a microSD card. The refreshe …

Read the full story at The Verge.

While you’re watching the World Cup, the feds may be watching you

Various security cameras sitting on the floor.

It's a big year for America. It's the semiquincentennial, otherwise known as America250, and the United States is cohosting the World Cup. But spectators at these events - and the millions of people who live in the cities hosting them - may not realize that they, too, are being watched.

From Kansas City to New York, the US cities hosting the World Cup have been ramping up their surveillance capabilities in the months leading up to the tournament. Security measures are at an all-time high in Washington, DC, which isn't hosting the World Cup, but is home to a series of spectacles this summer. The Fourth of July festivities in the nation's cap …

Read the full story at The Verge.

This slim camera has a transparent LCD screen for a viewfinder

A hand holds the Godox C100 digital camera with a blue cloudy sky in the background.

Despite the fact that smartphones have become impressively capable shooters, standalone point-and-shoot cameras are enjoying a renaissance. The tiny Kodak Charmera is still wildly popular, while influencers are scrambling to find aging Canon cameras on eBay. Godox, a company best known for its photography lighting products, is the latest to join the simple camera craze, but its new C100 stands out from the crowd by skipping a color preview screen for a transparent LCD that doubles as an optical viewfinder.

Although the C100 product page on Godox's website is thin on technical details, including its sensor resolution and video capabilities, …

Read the full story at The Verge.

I finally got my Trump phone

Photo of Trump Mobile T1 Phone with included accessories
Unlike most phones, the T1 still ships with a charger. Trump Mobile seemingly isn’t too worried about e-waste.

Where's the Trump phone? We're going to keep talking about it every week. One year on, our phones have finally arrived.

12 months, 16 days, 21 hours, and 54 minutes after I first heard about Trump Mobile's T1 Phone 8002 (gold version), I'm finally holding one in my own hands.

That's right, The Verge's Trump phones have arrived. And yes, I do mean phones - we have three of them: We ordered two, paid for two, and received three, all of which were sent to the wrong address. You can't beat service like that.

My phone came with a free Trump Mobile SIM card, even though I've not signed up to the company's mobile plan, plus an A4 quick start gui …

Read the full story at The Verge.

Hydration isn’t complicated: Just drink water

A billboard reading “Time for Powerade Hydration break” in the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round Of 32 match between Germany and Paraguay at Boston Stadium on June 29, 2026 in Foxborough, Massachusetts.
Powerade is appropriate for World Cup athletes, but unless you’re also sweating buckets, water is usually enough. | Photo: Megan Briggs / Getty Images

This is Optimizer, a weekly newsletter sent from Verge senior reviewer Victoria Song that dissects and discusses the latest gizmos and potions that swear they're going to change your life. Opt in for Optimizer here.

Europe is melting, the eastern US is currently trapped in a "heat dome," the Midwest has the corn sweats to look forward to, and if you've never felt the oppressive, sticky misery of monsoon season in Asia - consider yourself blessed. But as folks duke it out on social media about who has it hotter (and whether air conditioning is ethical), it's time to address a nonnegotiable truth of surviving summer: hydration.

Surely, stayi …

Read the full story at The Verge.

Anthropic wants to develop its own drugs

At the event "The Briefing: AI for Science" earlier this week, Anthropic announced Claude Science, a new "AI workbench for scientists" that pulls fragmented tools and datasets into one environment, and generates figures and visuals. Anthropic, already dominating the industry with its popular coding tools and powerful AI models, framed the launch around what it says is AI's potential to "dramatically accelerate the pace of scientific discovery and the development of healthcare interventions," and touted a long list of biotech and pharma customers already using Claude.

Anthropic also went a step further, saying it would develop drugs of its …

Read the full story at The Verge.

Jon Prosser responds to Apple lawsuit by blaming the other guy

YouTuber Jon Prosser has finally filed a formal response to Apple's lawsuit made against him and another defendant over allegedly stealing iOS secrets. In his response, Prosser denied that he "planned or participated in any conspiracy or coordinated scheme" for the "purpose of injuring Apple." However, Prosser admitted to recording a FaceTime call showing unreleased iOS software and sharing revenue from his YouTube videos about the leaks with the person who showed him the information. Prosser also argued that the other defendant "is completely responsible" for the alleged disclosure of trade secrets.

Last July, Apple claimed in its lawsuit

Read the full story at The Verge.

The Verge’s annual summer ‘in’ and ‘out’ list

a thumbs up and a thumbs down popping out of a door on a pink background

In the AI slop-loaded, algorithm-powered modern reality, trends come and go - and the tech industry is no different. For the last few years, The Verge staff has compiled a selection of things that are IN for summer and OUT for summer - and each time there are some strong feelings. (Here are the last two years' predictions.) Let's do it again!

Mia Sato, senior report

INOUT
Motion sickness glassesAI "pervert" glasses
FiberProtein
Bootleg sports merchOfficial tech company merch
Floating in waterTouching grass

Meredith Haggerty, editor

INOUT
The great New York renaissanceThe Great American State Fair
The Knicks garbage canTaylor Swift's MSG weddi …

Read the full story at The Verge.

Apple TV is hitting its stride

A still photo from the TV series Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed.
Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed. | Image: Apple

Since its inception, Apple TV, née Apple TV Plus, has built a reputation on quality over quantity. It has far fewer shows and movies than the likes of Netflix or Disney Plus, but generally speaking, the projects it does put out are quite good. It's a strategy that has brought comparisons to the HBO of old, and 2026 has featured a particularly strong mix of new hits and returning favorites. It took a few years, but Apple TV seems to be finally hitting its stride.

In terms of brand-new series, this year's offerings have been fairly spread out across genres. Leading the way has been the delightful Widow's Bay, which skillfully manages the diff …

Read the full story at The Verge.

A behind-the-scenes look at Midjourney’s medical scanner leaves many questions unanswered

Midjourney Medical 3D scans of a “phantom” body
A scan of an imaging phantom, segmented to validate how cleanly structures separate under controlled conditions. | Image: Midjourney Medical

Midjourney has shown more of its futuristic medical scanner. It still hasn't shown much proof it works.

The AI startup, best known for generating images, released a behind-the-scenes video of its dunk-tank ultrasound scanner, which it plans to deploy in spas and hopes will transform medicine with cheap, detailed, radiation-free imaging. The nearly 20-minute tour comes from tech YouTuber Marcin Plaza, who also happens to be an engineer at the company.

Plaza frankly describes the scanner as scores of ultrasound probes "hacked apart and slapped on a glorified hot tub with an elevator in it," connected to off-the-shelf computers and Raspberry …

Read the full story at The Verge.