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CNET NewsMar 31, 2026
Only a Few Hours Left to Take Nearly 50% Off the Anker Solix C800 Solar Bundle at Amazon's Spring Sale
It's not every day you can save over $500 on a portable power station and solar panel combo, but you'll want to act quickly before the sale ends tonight.

CNET Most Popular ProductsMar 31, 2026
The FCC Just Banned All New Foreign-Made Routers. Everything You Need to Know to Keep Your Network Safe
The ban applies only to the sale of new routers manufactured outside the US. Americans with existing foreign-made routers can continue to use them.

GizmodoMar 31, 2026
Source Code for Anthropic's Claude Code Leaks at the Exact Wrong Time
The company has some secrets that are now public.

CNET How ToMar 31, 2026
Eggs Stay Fresh Longer Than You Think. Here's How to Tell if They're Still Good
You don't actually have to toss your eggs after the best-by date. This is everything to know about egg freshness.

EngadgetMar 31, 2026
Tesla's robotaxis are reportedly remotely driven by humans, sometimes
In a letter shared with Senator Ed Markey (D-Mass.), Tesla admitted that its robotaxis are sometimes driven remotely by human operators, Wired reports. Competing self-driving car companies sometimes rely on human operators to tell robotaxi software how to get itself unstuck, but letting operators actually drive those cars remotely is more unusual.

"??As a redundancy measure in rare cases … [remote assistance operators] are authorized to temporarily assume direct vehicle control as the final escalation maneuver after all other available intervention actions have been exhausted," Karen Steakley, Tesla's director of public policy and business development, shared in a letter to Markey. In those situations, operators are reportedly able to take over Tesla's robotaxis when they're moving at speeds around 2mph or less, and then drive the car at up to 10mph if software permits it.

Engadget has contacted Tesla to confirm the details shared in Steakley's letter. We'll update the article if we hear back.

As Wired notes, that's a bit different than how other self-driving car companies handle human intervention. For example, Waymo's Driver software can call on human help — Waymo calls them "fleet response" — to offer context and answer questions to help it navigate complicated driving situations. The company claims these workers never drive the robotaxi themselves, but they are able to see the car's environment through its sensors to help it get unstuck. Self-driving car companies typically avoid remote operation, Wired writes, because technical limitations like latency and the limited perspective of a robotaxi's s


Mac RumorsMar 31, 2026
iOS 27 Siri Update Will Let Users Make Multiple Requests at Once
The updated version of Siri that Apple plans to release in iOS 27 may be able to handle multiple commands in a single query, reports Bloomberg. With the feature, users would be able to make multi-step requests that ?Siri? would carry out, such as getting directions to a location and then sending those directions to someone in a message.


Mac RumorsMar 31, 2026
AirPods Max 2 Review: Better Sound and ANC, Same Design Frustrations
The $549 AirPods Max 2 are set to launch tomorrow, and ahead of the debut of the new over-ear headphones, Apple sent a pair for MacRumors videographer Dan Barbera to check out.


EngadgetMar 31, 2026
SpaceX loses contact with one of its Starlink satellites
SpaceX has lost contact with Starlink satellite 34343 after it suffered an unspecified anomaly on March 29 while it was in orbit, the company has announced on X. The event happened while the satellite was approximately 348 miles above our planet. Since that is a relatively low altitude, SpaceX's analysis showed that the remains of the satellite pose no risk to the International Space Station or the upcoming launch of the Artemis II mission. It also won't affect the company's Transporter-16 mission, which launched with small satellites from its clients on March 30.

In its statement, SpaceX also said that it will monitor any trackable debris, indicating that the satellite is no longer in one piece. LeoLabs, an American company tracking satellites in Low Earth Orbit, said it detected a "fragment creation event" involving Starlink 34343 on March 29. It also mentioned that this event is similar to another incident that happened on December 17, 2025. SpaceX had lost Starlink satellites to events like geomagnetic storms in the past, but it doesn't seem like these two recent incidents were caused by external factors. The company has yet to announce what led to the anomalies, but LeoLabs believes that both of them were "likely caused by an internal energetic source rather than a collision with space debris or another object."

At the moment, the Starlink team i


CNET Most Popular ProductsMar 31, 2026
Best Home Security Systems for Renters in 2026: Hassle-Free, No Contracts
You can equip your rental with personalized security options. My picks can fit nearly anywhere -- no screws required.

Mac RumorsMar 27, 2026
5 Things to Know About the Siri Chatbot Coming in iOS 27
We're less than three months away from our first look at Apple's smarter, redesigned version of Siri. iOS 27, iPadOS 27, and macOS 27 will focus on ?Siri? updates, and rumors about what we can expect are picking up.


PC World Latest NewsOct 15, 2025
Hate Windows 11's centered taskbar? Here's how to change it

I actually like it in the center position, because it's easier to orientate my searches without having to drag my mouse pointer all the way to the side of the screen. That said, not everyone feels the same way. It bugs some long-time users of Windows 10 who are used to the far left-hand side placement. But fret not, because you can change it back to the left in just a few clicks.

What to do: Right click on the taskbar and select Taskbar settings. Find the submenu "Taskbar behaviors" and click the dropdown arrow next to it. Now next to "Taskbar alignment" change Center to Left. Close the window and watch your taskbar magically shift position.
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