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It was time to die.
My 2014 iMac, outfitted with a 3TB drive and maxed out RAM, was a dream machine. For years, I fired it up and got to work, transcoding video, recording podcasts, and writing books. It was almost too much machine. It had a massive, beautiful screen one of the first Retina models, if I recall great speed, and amazing performance. And it lasted for almost seven years, a record given my habit of upgrading at every major Apple update.
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Once I installed macOS Big Sur, however, things went downhill. I’d open multiple tabs in Safari and get a spinning beachball that resulted in a crash so hard that I was embarrassed for Apple CEO Tim Cook. Everything would freeze and spin for a solid two minutes before the Grey Screen of Death appeared. I’d have to restart almost daily. Apple had reduced my once-capable machine to rubble.
Screenshot: John Biggs/Gizmodo
Teespring, a Silicon Valley e-commerce site that lets people create and sell customized T-shirts, sweaters, and other apparel, is having a heck of a month.
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Two weeks ago the company apologized to the Polish Auschwitz Memorial Holocaust museum after Internet sleuths discovered a Teespring user was selling “Camp Auschwitz” shirts identical to the now-infamous hoodie sported by a Virginia terrorist who stormed the U.S. Capitol on January 6.
Now a prolific hacker group called ShinyHunters has just leaked over 8 million user records from the company, dumping them onto a publicly accessible cybercrime forum called RaidForums. The data, which apparently came from a June Teespring hack, includes email addresses, “usernames, real names, phone numbers, home addresses, and Facebook and OpenID identifiers users used to log into their accounts,” but not email passwords. Gizmodo has independently verified these claims.
These Ultralight Carbon Fibre Headphones Are Perfect for Travelling Again, Whenever That Might Be
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Photo: John Biggs/Gizmodo
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Carbon fibre, the high-tech material that now makes up everything from car hoods to iPhone cases, is light and strong. When Bowers & Wilkins designed a Carbon Edition of its PX7 headphones, the goal was to create a pair of headphones that were rugged and streamlined with solid audio quality. They pulled it off.