Best Rice Cookers of 2024

A rice cooker can help you make the perfect pot of rice with minimal effort. Here are the best rice cookers — all tested by CNET’s kitchen experts.

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Author: David Watsky

You can now try Microsoft’s more modern Windows Hello UI

Microsoft’s new Windows Hello UI
Image: Microsoft

Microsoft is modernizing how its Windows Hello authentication, which includes facial and fingerprint recognition, works in Windows 11. The revamp to the Windows Hello experience is now in beta testing with Windows Insiders, and includes visual changes, new iconography, and improvements to passkeys.

Not only will this new UI appear on the Windows 11 login screen, but also when you’re using passkeys to sign into websites and apps. “We redesigned Windows security credential user experiences for passkey creating a cleaner experience that supports secured and quick authentication,” explains the Windows team. “Users will now be able to switch between authentication options and select passkey / devices more intuitively.”

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Author: Tom Warren

Intel’s future laptops will have memory sticks again

A woman giving a presentation on stage holding a processor, with a background displaying specs for the Intel Lunar Lake chip.
Image: Intel

Intel is rolling back one of the biggest changes to its laptop chips in years. Remember how this fall’s Lunar Lake laptops ditched the idea of memory sticks, putting a fixed amount of RAM on the processor package instead? Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger now says that turned out to be a financial mistake, and Intel won’t do it again. Oh, and he may be axing desktop GPUs, too.

Future Intel generations of chips, including Panther Lake and Nova Lake, won’t have baked-on memory. “It’s not a good way to run the business, so it really is for us a one-off with Lunar Lake,” said Gelsinger on Intel’s Q3 2024 earnings call, as spotted by VideoCardz.

“We’ll build it in a more traditional way with memory off-package, and the CPU and I/O capabilities in the…

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Author: Sean Hollister

These bookmarking apps can organize all of that content you’re saving for later

Front page of Pocket app.
Screenshot: Pocket

It’s hard to keep up with everything you come across on the web, such as an article you don’t have time to read at the moment or a video you’d like to run again later. Years ago, I started getting the better of this issue with Pocket, a well-known app that allows you to bookmark an article to a separate server and then retrieve it to read at your leisure. Since then, a number of similar services have appeared, offering a variety of features — and a variety of prices.

What follows is a description of Pocket and some of the available apps. Most offer free versions and sync across a number of devices, including web browsers, Android devices, and iPhones.

Pocket

Screenshot: Mozilla

Pocket has developed an attractive…

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Author: Barbara Krasnoff

How to watch Fortnite’s Remix: The Prelude event

A promotional image for Fortnite’s Remix: The Prelude event.
Image: Epic games

Epic Games is about to host big in-game event ahead of its next throwback season — and it could be pretty musical.

The event’s title suggests the music theme — “Remix: The Prelude” — and a post from Epic suggests to be at the event with “the volume UP”. Fortnite is already famous for bombastic musical events, so this event to wrap up the latest Marvel-themed season could be quite a show.

But the “Remix” title is also pointing at Epic bringing back and remixing elements of its Chapter 2 seasons, kind of like it did with the Chapter 1-themed “OG” season last year, The company has already teased what some of those remixes might look like, including a character that combines Meowscles, a swole cat (yes), with Midas.

If you want to watch the…

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Author: Jay Peters

My first DIY phone fix made me a self-repair believer

HMD Skyline phone with back panel removed.
Turns out, taking things apart is still just as much fun as when you were a kid. | Photo: Allison Johnson / The Verge

My first DIY smartphone repair project was off to an inauspicious start.

I’d successfully removed the back of the HMD Skyline, but the next instruction called for a T3 screwdriver bit. I had a T4 bit, which worked well enough to turn the screw that popped the corner of the phone’s back panel up. But a T4 was just too big for the tiny screws holding the battery connector cover in place. I needed that T3.

The Skyline is one of HMD’s latest user-repairable phones. It’s a midrange phone, one of the first Android phones with Qi2 wireless charging, plus a 6.55-inch OLED panel, three rear cameras, and a big 4,600mAh battery for $449. In my limited use, the Snapdragon 7s Gen 2 seems prone to lagginess, and the 1080p screen resolution really…

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Author: Allison Johnson