The Namibian fairy circle debate rages on: Could it be sand termites after all?

Study offers four-point rebuttal to 2022 claim that they’re a kind of eco-Turing pattern.

Fairy circles in the Namib Desert.

Enlarge / Bare, reddish-hued circular patches in the Namib Desert known as "fairy circles" are also found in northwestern Australia. (credit: UHH/MIN/Juergens)

Himba bushmen in the Namibian grasslands have long passed down legends about the region's mysterious fairy circles: bare, reddish-hued circular patches that are also found in northwestern Australia. In the last 10 years, scientists have heatedly debated whether these unusual patterns are due to sand termites or to an ecological version of a self-organizing Turing mechanism. Last year, a team of scientists reported what they deemed definitive evidence of the latter, thus ruling out sand termites, but their declaration of victory may have been premature. A recent paper published in the journal Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics offers a careful rebuttal of those 2022 findings, concluding that sand termites may be to blame after all.

As we've reported previously, the fairy circles can be as large as several feet in diameter. Dubbed "footprints of the gods," it's often said they are the work of the Himba deity Mukuru, or an underground dragon whose poisonous breath kills anything growing inside those circles. Scientists have their own ideas.

One theory—espoused by study co-author Norbert Jürgens, a biologist at the University of Hamburg in Germany—attributed the phenomenon to a particular species of termite (Psammmotermes allocerus), whose burrowing damages plant roots, resulting in extra rainwater seeping into the sandy soil before the plants can suck it up—giving the termites a handy water trap as a resource. As a result, the plants die back in a circle from the site of an insect nest. The circles expand in diameter during droughts because the termites must venture farther out for food.

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Lilbits: Samsung’s new foldables and AMD’s new security vulnerability

Samsung’s newest Galaxy Z foldable phones are up for pre-order. Prices start at about $1000 for the Galaxy Z Flip5 and $1800 for the Galaxy Z Fold5, although various retailers are offering free storage upgrades, gift cards, or other perks to swe…

Samsung’s newest Galaxy Z foldable phones are up for pre-order. Prices start at about $1000 for the Galaxy Z Flip5 and $1800 for the Galaxy Z Fold5, although various retailers are offering free storage upgrades, gift cards, or other perks to sweeten the deal before the phones are generally available on August 11. Meanwhile, I […]

The post Lilbits: Samsung’s new foldables and AMD’s new security vulnerability appeared first on Liliputing.

The US government is taking a serious step toward space-based nuclear propulsion

“NASA is looking to go to Mars with this system.”

Artist concept of Demonstration for Rocket to Agile Cislunar Operations (DRACO) spacecraft, which will demonstrate a nuclear thermal rocket engine.

Enlarge / Artist concept of Demonstration for Rocket to Agile Cislunar Operations (DRACO) spacecraft, which will demonstrate a nuclear thermal rocket engine. (credit: DARPA)

Four years from now, if all goes well, a nuclear-powered rocket engine will launch into space for the first time. The rocket itself will be conventional, but the payload boosted into orbit will be a different matter.

NASA announced Wednesday that it is partnering with the US Department of Defense to launch a nuclear-powered rocket engine into space as early as 2027. The US space agency will invest about $300 million in the project to develop a next-generation propulsion system for in-space transportation.

"NASA is looking to go to Mars with this system," said Anthony Calomino, an engineer at NASA who is leading the agency's space nuclear propulsion technology program. "And in this test is really going to give us that foundation."

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The US government is taking a serious step toward space-based nuclear propulsion

“NASA is looking to go to Mars with this system.”

Artist concept of Demonstration for Rocket to Agile Cislunar Operations (DRACO) spacecraft, which will demonstrate a nuclear thermal rocket engine.

Enlarge / Artist concept of Demonstration for Rocket to Agile Cislunar Operations (DRACO) spacecraft, which will demonstrate a nuclear thermal rocket engine. (credit: DARPA)

Four years from now, if all goes well, a nuclear-powered rocket engine will launch into space for the first time. The rocket itself will be conventional, but the payload boosted into orbit will be a different matter.

NASA announced Wednesday that it is partnering with the US Department of Defense to launch a nuclear-powered rocket engine into space as early as 2027. The US space agency will invest about $300 million in the project to develop a next-generation propulsion system for in-space transportation.

"NASA is looking to go to Mars with this system," said Anthony Calomino, an engineer at NASA who is leading the agency's space nuclear propulsion technology program. "And in this test is really going to give us that foundation."

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Google says it will start downranking non-tablet apps in the Play Store

Google’s push for big screens will include a (hopefully dramatic) Play Store redesign.

The Play Store on tablets is mostly just two big thumbnails.

Enlarge / The Play Store on tablets is mostly just two big thumbnails. (credit: Google)

Following the release of the Pixel Tablet and Pixel Fold, Google wants developers to take big-screen apps more seriously. Asking nicely rarely works, so Google is changing the Play Store ranking algorithms to increase the visibility of apps that better support large screens.

Google's blog post says:

Apps and games that adhere to our large screen app quality guidelines will now be ranked higher in search and Apps and Games Home. This helps users find apps that resize well, aren't letterboxed, and support both portrait and landscape orientations. Editors’ Choice and other curated collections and articles will also consider these criteria going forward, creating new featuring opportunities for optimized apps.

The large screen app guidelines have various tiers, but they recommend keyboard, mouse, and stylus support, a two-pane tablet layout, drag-and-drop support, and foldable display awareness. The post also reiterates some improvements that Google has already rolled out, like showing tablet screenshots to tablet users and downranking apps that crash a lot.

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Google says it will start downranking non-tablet apps in the Play Store

Google’s push for big screens will include a (hopefully dramatic) Play Store redesign.

The Play Store on tablets is mostly just two big thumbnails.

Enlarge / The Play Store on tablets is mostly just two big thumbnails. (credit: Google)

Following the release of the Pixel Tablet and Pixel Fold, Google wants developers to take big-screen apps more seriously. Asking nicely rarely works, so Google is changing the Play Store ranking algorithms to increase the visibility of apps that better support large screens.

Google's blog post says:

Apps and games that adhere to our large screen app quality guidelines will now be ranked higher in search and Apps and Games Home. This helps users find apps that resize well, aren't letterboxed, and support both portrait and landscape orientations. Editors’ Choice and other curated collections and articles will also consider these criteria going forward, creating new featuring opportunities for optimized apps.

The large screen app guidelines have various tiers, but they recommend keyboard, mouse, and stylus support, a two-pane tablet layout, drag-and-drop support, and foldable display awareness. The post also reiterates some improvements that Google has already rolled out, like showing tablet screenshots to tablet users and downranking apps that crash a lot.

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OpenAI discontinues its AI writing detector due to “low rate of accuracy”

Research shows that any AI writing detector can be defeated—and false positives abound.

An AI-generated image of a slot machine in a desert.

Enlarge / An AI-generated image of a slot machine in a desert. (credit: Midjourney)

On Thursday, OpenAI quietly pulled its AI Classifier, an experimental tool designed to detect AI-written text. The decommissioning, first noticed by Decrypt, occurred with no major fanfare and was announced through a small note added to OpenAI's official AI Classifier webpage:

As of July 20, 2023, the AI classifier is no longer available due to its low rate of accuracy. We are working to incorporate feedback and are currently researching more effective provenance techniques for text, and have made a commitment to develop and deploy mechanisms that enable users to understand if audio or visual content is AI-generated.

Released on January 31 amid clamor from educators about students potentially using ChatGPT to write essays and schoolwork, OpenAI's AI Classifier always felt like a performative Band-Aid on a deep wound. From the beginning, OpenAI admitted that its AI Classifier was not "fully reliable," correctly identifying only 26 percent of AI-written text as "likely AI-written" and incorrectly labeling human-written works 9 percent of the time.

As we've pointed out on Ars, AI writing detectors such as OpenAI's AI Classifier, Turnitin, and GPTZero simply don't work with enough accuracy to rely on them for trustworthy results. The methodology behind how they work is speculative and unproven, and the tools are currently routinely used to falsely accuse students of cheating.

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RIAA Urges NTIA to Keep .US Domain WHOIS Info Public to Deter Online Piracy

The U.S. Government’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) is considering whether to make it harder for the public to access information about the owners of .US domain names. This is a bad idea, according to the RIAA, which prefers the status quo. Public access to WHOIS information helps to deter piracy, the music group notes, adding that potential privacy concerns are overblown.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

.us domain nameHistorically, the domain name WHOIS system has been an important tool to track down the operators of pirate sites and services.

While WHOIS data is not always accurate, it is still helpful in holding site operators accountable, at least when the information is available for access.

In recent years, access to domain registration information has often been restricted. This change is in large part the result of EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), a privacy law that limits the availability of personal information in public databases.

In response to the law, domain name oversight body ICANN implemented a measure to restrict access to personal WHOIS data for gTLDs, unless explicit permission is granted. This was a welcome privacy upgrade for many domain registrants, but anti-piracy groups were not happy.

.US WHOIS Restrictions

Copyright holders have complained about the stricter privacy rules but were pleased to see that these didn’t apply universally. The .US ccTLD, for example, which falls under the oversight of the United States Department of Commerce’s NTIA, remains publicly accessible.

Public access helps enforcement efforts but also has some drawbacks. Since anyone can access the private details of domain registrants anonymously, the information can be used to spam, phish, or dox people.

To reduce the potential for abuse, NTIA and its contractor GoDaddy are proposing to limit anonymous access to .US registrant data and make information seekers accountable too.

“In response to concerns about the potential for abuse of usTLD registrant data, NTIA is considering a proposal from its Contractor to create an Accountable WHOIS Gateway System to provide public access to usTLD registrant information,” NTIA noted.

“The System would require those seeking access to the usTLD registration data to provide their name, an email address, and to accept the Terms of Service (TOS).”

NTIA summary

RIAA Opposes WHOIS Shield

Earlier this year, NTIA asked the public for input on this proposal. As expected, that triggered opposition from various parties including the music industry’s anti-piracy watchdog, RIAA.

In response to the proposal, RIAA points out that EU privacy regulation and proxy registration services for many top-level domains have made it virtually impossible to obtain accurate registrant data for anti-piracy purposes.

The .US TLD is a rare exception, which is also apparent in the abuse numbers. Pirate sites tend to avoid .US domain names, presumably because WHOIS data is publicly available.

“We have seen much less copyright infringement on sites with .us domains than on those in the gTLD space,” RIAA writes.

This statement is backed up by figures showing that copyright infringement through .US domain names is trending down in recent years, while it has increased on .COM domain names.

riaa domain infringement

WHOIS data is not only important to catch pirates, RIAA writes. It can also be helpful to other investigators, including law enforcement agencies, who also deal with online harms.

At the same time, RIAA suggests that the harm faced by registrants is minimal. At least, the organization is not aware of any concrete examples where public .US WHOIS information has caused any problems.

“[W]hile we have heard of anecdotal evidence of harm to registrants generally, we don’t know of any documented, verifiable, widespread, pervasive harm to .us registrants caused by publicly available registrant data.”

Why Change?

NTIA doesn’t propose to make it entirely impossible for rightsholders and other interested parties to obtain WHOIS data. Instead, it wants to hold WHOIS data seekers accountable, by asking them for their information as well.

This shouldn’t prevent RIAA and other rightsholders from accessing WHOIS records, but the RIAA sees no reason to change the status quo.

“Given the steep rise of cyber problems since the WHOIS data for gTLDs was masked, and the challenges such masking has caused to those combatting those problems, we don’t understand why .us would change its current policies.

“Accordingly, the current system of access to usTLD domain name registration data should remain unchanged, and we do not support efforts to create unnecessary gates around registrant data,” RIAA adds.

If NTIA decides to block unlimited and anonymous access to WHOIS data, RIAA notes that copyright holders should be granted free and immediate access. In addition, WHOIS data should be vetted through ‘know-your-customer’ requirements, while corporate domain registrations should remain publicly accessible.

A copy of RIAA’s full response to the NTIA’s proposal was published this week and is available here (pdf)

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Man open-sources the self-repairable AirPods Pro case that Apple won’t make

The AirPods Pro “could have been easily made repairable with minimal effort.”

Consumer tech has faced scrutiny over the years around "planned obsolescence": making devices so difficult to repair that shoppers have to buy new products and toss devices sooner than they'd like. Now, one do-it-yourself-er is on a mission to prove that it doesn't have to be this way. And he's starting with the (original) Apple AirPods Pro.

Ken Pillonel is no stranger to tweaking popular designs in the name of user convenience and sensibility. We've covered other projects of his, like a $38 part for making the AirPods Pro case self-serviceable and support USB-C, and adding Apple's Lightning port to a Samsung Galaxy A51. He has also modded the iPhone to use USB-C.

Today, the technologist revealed his latest concoction: an AirPods Pro case with a user-replaceable battery, USB-C port, and open source designs.

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Dealmaster: Save on laptops, vacuums, and back-to-school supplies

From pens and school supplies to laptops, save on your back-to-school shopping list.

House full of kids got you down? Fear not, school's coming soon!

Enlarge / House full of kids got you down? Fear not, school's coming soon! (credit: Flatiron School)

Whether you need a new laptop to catch up on some work this summer or you're prepping for your kid's return to school, we have plenty of deals for the summer. From storage boxes to noise-canceling headphones, and SSDs to pens and supplies, there are plenty of savings on our curated back-to-school shopping list.

Bose headphones

  • Bose QuietComfort 45 Wireless Bluetooth Noise Cancelling Headphones for $279 (was $329) at Amazon | $229 at Lenovo
  • Bose QuietComfort Earbuds II, Wireless Earbuds for $249 (was $299) at Amazon | Lenovo | Dell

Laptops, desktops, and PC peripherals

  • ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 6 (14-inch Intel Core i7-1185G7) for $999 (was $3,649) at Lenovo
  • Chromebook Duet 3 (11-inch) for $290 (was $430) at Lenovo
  • IdeaPad Flex 5i (16-inch Intel Core i5-1335U) for $555 (was $860) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 10 (14-inch Intel Core i7-1270P) for $1,624 (was $3,609) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11 (14-inch Intel Core i7-1365U) for $1,825 (was $3,319) at Lenovo
  • Yoga 7i (14-inch Intel Core i7-1355U) for $1,010 (was $1,350) at Lenovo
  • Legion Slim 7i Gen 8 (16-inch Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX 4060) for $1,460 (was $1,770) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 6 (14-inch Intel Core i7-1185G7) for $1,099 (was $3,869) at Lenovo
  • Yoga 7i (16-inch Intel Core i5-1340P) for $855 (was $1,140) at Lenovo
  • ThinkBook 13s Gen 4 (13-inch Intel Core i5-1240P) for $900 (was $1,579) at Lenovo
  • ThinkBook 15 Gen 4 (15-inch Intel Core i5-1235U) for $854 (was $1,499) at Lenovo
  • Legion Pro 5i Gen 8 (16-inch Intel Core i7-13700HX and RTX 4070) for $1,700 (was $2,000) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad T14s Gen 3 (14-inch Intel Core i7-1270P) for $1,448 (was $3,219) at Lenovo
  • ThinkBook 15 Gen 4 (15-inch AMD Ryzen 5 5625U) for $792 (was $1,389) at Lenovo
  • IdeaPad Slim 5i (16-inch Intel Core i5-1335U) for $575 (was $930) at Lenovo
  • Legion Tower 5i Gen 8 (Intel Core i7-13700F and RTX 3060) for $1,290 (was $1,650) at Lenovo
  • Legion Tower 7i Gen 8 (Intel Core i7-13700F and RTX 4080) for $2,370 (was $2,990) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad T16 Gen 2 (16-inch Intel Core i5-1345U) for $1,407 (was $2,559) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad L13 Gen 3 (13-inch AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 5875U) for $1,090 (was $2,319) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad E14 Gen 5 (14-inch Intel Core i5-1335U) for $953 (was $1,589) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad L13 Gen 3 (13-inch AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 5875U) for $1,062 (was $2,259) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad P16 Gen 2 (16-inch Intel Core i7-13700HX and RTX A2000) for $2,599 (was $4,479) at Lenovo
  • ThinkBook 13s Gen 4 (13-inch AMD Ryzen 5 6600U) for $780 (was $1,369) at Lenovo
  • ThinkBook 13s Gen 4 (13-inch Intel Core i5-1240P) for $820 (was $1,439) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad P16s Gen 2 (16-inch Intel Core i5-1340P and RTX A500) for $1,489 (was $2,569) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad P16 Gen 2 (16-inch Intel Core i7-13700HX and RTX A1000) for $2,029 (was $3,499) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 (16-inch Intel Core i7-13800H and RTX 4080) for $3,199 (was $5,519) at Lenovo
  • Inspiron 15 Laptop (15-inch Intel Core i5-1135G7) for $380 (was $530) at Dell
  • XPS 15 Laptop (15-inch Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX 4060) for $1,949 (was $2,349) at Dell
  • Dell 27 Gaming Monitor - G2723HN for $130 (was $260) at Dell
  • XPS 15 Laptop (15-inch Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX 4050) for $1,599 (was $1,999) at Dell
  • Latitude 5540 Laptop (15-inch Intel Core i7-1365U) for $1,649 (was $2,750) at Dell
  • Alienware m18 Gaming Laptop (18-inch, Intel Core i9-13900HX and RTX 4080) for $2,800 (was $3,150) at Dell
  • Latitude 3440 Laptop (14-inch Intel Core i7-1355U) for $1,039 (was $1,730) at Dell
  • Vostro 3420 Laptop (14-inch Intel Core i5-1235U) for $849 (was $1,285) at Dell
  • XPS 13 Plus Laptop (13-inch Intel Core i7-1360P) for $1,749 (was $1,949) at Dell
  • XPS 15 Laptop (15-inch Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX 4050) for $1,749 (was $2,149) at Dell
  • Alienware m18 Gaming Laptop (18-inch Intel Core i9-13900HX and RTX 4080) for $2,600 (was $2,900) at Dell
  • Alienware x17 R2 Gaming Laptop (17-inch Intel Core i9-12900HK and RTX 3080 Ti) for $2,300 (was $4,300) at Dell
  • Alienware m18 Gaming Laptop (18-inch Intel Core i7-13700HX and RTX 4060) for $1,900 (was $2,150) at Dell
  • XPS 17 Laptop (17-inch Intel Core i7-12700H and RTX 3050) for $1,699 (was $2,599) at Dell
  • XPS 13 Plus Laptop (13-inch Intel Core i7-1360P) for $1,749 (was $1,949) at Dell
  • Dell UltraSharp 24 Monitor – U2422H for $285 (was $380) at Dell
  • Alienware 34 Curved QD-OLED - AW3423DWF for $1,000 (was $1,100) at Dell
  • Dell 34 Curved Monitor - S3422DW for $430 (was $480) at Dell
  • Dell UltraSharp 27 4K USB-C Hub Monitor - U2723QE for $585 (was $780) at Dell
  • Dell UltraSharp 49 Curved USB-C Hub Monitor - U4924DW for $1,275 (was $1,700) at Dell
  • Dell UltraSharp 32 4K Video Conferencing Monitor - U3223QZ for $1,200 (was $1,600) at Dell

Apple

  • Apple AirTag 4 Pack for $89 (was $99) at Amazon
  • MacBook Pro Laptop M2 14-inch for $1,799 (was $1,999) at Amazon
  • MacBook Pro Laptop M2 16-inch for $2,249 (was $2,499) at Amazon

Vacuums

  • Shark CH963AMZ 2-in-1 Cordless & Handheld Vacuum Ultracyclone System for $100 (was $150) at Amazon
  • Shark IZ483H Vertex Cordless Stick Vacuum with DuoClean PowerFins for $300 (was $500) at Amazon
  • Shark WS633 WANDVAC System Pet Pro Cordless Stick & Handheld Vacuum Combo 3-in-1 Ultra-Lightweight Powerful with Boost Mode for $170 (was $242) at Amazon
  • Shark AV2501S AI Ultra Robot Vacuum, with Matrix Clean for $330 (was $550) at Amazon
  • Shark IQ Robot Vacuum AV992 Row Cleaning for $250 (was $384) at Amazon
  • roborock Q5 Robot Vacuum Cleaner, Strong 2700Pa Suction for $300 after coupon (was $430) at Amazon

Fire TV deals

  • Amazon Fire TV 55-inch 4-Series 4K UHD for $340 (was $520) at Amazon
  • INSIGNIA 32-inch Class F20 Series Smart HD 720p Fire TV for $80 (was $150) at Amazon
  • INSIGNIA 42-inch Class F20 Series Smart Full HD 1080p Fire TV for $130 (was $200) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV 32-inch 2-Series 720p HD for $130 (was $200) at Amazon

DeWalt tools

  • DeWalt 20V MAX Cordless Drill Driver for $99 (was $122) at Amazon
  • DeWalt Drill Bit Set, 14-Piece, 135 Degree Split Point, Titanium Nitride Coated for $16 (was $24) at Amazon
  • DeWalt DW1341 14-Piece Titanium Nitride Speed Tip Drill Bit Set for $20 (was $25) at Amazon

Home and office

  • TP-Link Deco AXE5400 Tri-Band Wi-Fi 6E Mesh System(Deco XE75) 3-pack for $330 (was $450) at Amazon
  • TP-Link Deco AXE5400 Tri-Band Wi-Fi 6E Mesh System(Deco XE75) 2-pack for $230 (was $300) at Amazon
  • TP-Link Deco AX7800 Tri-Band Mesh Wi-Fi 6 System (Deco X95) 2-pack for $350 (was $450) at Amazon
  • TP-Link AC1900 Wi-Fi Extender (RE550) for $70 (was $80) at Amazon
  • TP-Link AC1200 Wi-Fi Range Extender (RE330) for $36 (was $45) at Amazon
  • TP-Link AC2600 Wi-Fi Extender(RE650) for $90 (was $150) at Amazon
  • AERLANG Portable Handheld Percussion Massager Gun with 6 Massage Heads for $27 (was $90) at Amazon
  • TOLOCO Massage Gun, Muscle Massage Gun Deep Tissue for Athletes with 10 Massage Heads for $40 (was $80) at Amazon
  • First Alert BRK CO5120BN Hardwired Carbon Monoxide (CO2) Detector with Battery Backup for $28 (was $31) at Amazon
  • First Alert AUTOMAR10 Car and Marine Fire Extinguisher for $24 (was $39) at Amazon
  • Chef's Path Premium Pasta Containers with Lids for Kitchen & Pantry Organization for $27 (was $36) at Amazon
  • Instant Pot Vortex Pro 10 Quart Air Fryer, 9-in-1 Rotisserie and Convection Oven for $130 (was $170) at Amazon
  • First Alert CO600 Plug-In Carbon Monoxide Detector for $20 (was $22) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 3-Tier Adjustable Steel Storage Rack with Removable Locking Casters for $45 (was $50) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 30.6 Quart WEATHERPRO Plastic Storage Box with Durable Lid 6-pack for $117 (was $130) at Amazon
  • First Alert PR700 Slim Photoelectric Smoke Alarm 3-pack for $30 (was $36) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 30 Quart WEATHERPRO Plastic Storage Box with Durable Lid and Seal and Secure Latching Buckles, Clear With Blue Buckles, Weathertight, 3 Pack for $66 (was $73) at Amazon
  • Kasa Smart 3 Way Dimmer Switch kit for $37 (was $55) at Amazon
  • Kasa Smart Plug KP200, In-Wall Smart Home Wi-Fi Outlet for $20 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Kasa Smart Light Switch HS200, Single Pole, Needs Neutral Wire for $14 (was $20) at Amazon
  • 2 Pack Power Strip Surge Protector - 6 Outlets 2 USB Ports 5Ft Long Extension Cords for $21 (was $35) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 6 Pack Fits 8.5x11-inch Portable Project Storage Case with Snap-Tight Latch 6-pack for $36 (was $40) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA Double Table Height Adjustable Mobile Laptop Cart for $60 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Sky Solutions Anti Fatigue Floor Mat for $38 (was $45) at Amazon
  • FIRST ALERT CO250B Family Gard Basics Carbon Monoxide Alarm 4-Pack for $71 (was $79) at Amazon
  • FIRST ALERT HOME2PRO Rechargeable Compliance Fire Extinguisher for $42 (was $50) at Amazon
  • First Alert 0827B Ionization Smoke Alarm with 10-Year Sealed Tamper-Proof Battery for $17 (was $37) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 34 Qt. Stackable Plastic Drawers for Clothes, Medium, 4 Pack for $72 (was $80) at Amazon
  • First Alert BRK SC9120FF Hardwired Smoke and Carbon Monoxide (CO) Detector with Battery Backup for $29 (was $34) at Amazon
  • First Alert 9120B Smoke Detector, Hardwired Alarm with Battery Backup, 6-Pack for $46 (was $60) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA Clothing Rack, Clothes Rack with 2 Wood Shelves for $68 (was $80) at Amazon
  • 125 ft Garden Hose for $68 (was $90) at Amazon
  • IRIS Letter Size Portable Wing-Lid File Box, 4 Pack for $45 (was $50) at Amazon
  • First Alert HOME1 Rechargeable Standard Home Fire Extinguisher UL Rated 1-A:10-B:C, Red for $18 (was $20) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA Letter/Legal File Tote Box, 4 Pack for $54 (was $60) at Amazon
  • IRIS USA 4x6-inch Photo Storage Craft Keeper, 2 Pack for $45 (was $50) at Amazon
  • FIRST ALERT Battery Powered P1210E Smoke Alarm for $23 (was $37) at Amazon
  • First Alert PRO10 Rechargeable Commercial Fire Extinguisher, UL rated 4-A:60-B:C, Red, 1-Pack for $65 (was $74) at Amazon
  • Surge Protector Power Strip - Extension Cord with 8 Outlets 4 USB Ports, 3 Side Multi Plug Outlet Extender, Flat Plug, 5 Ft for $13 (was $27) at Amazon
  • Rubbermaid Cleverstore Clear 30 Qt/7.5 Gal, Pack of 6 for $76 (was $85) at Amazon
  • Rubbermaid Roughneck Clear 95 Qt/23.75 Gal Storage Containers, Pack of 4 for $121 (was $135) at Amazon
  • Rubbermaid Roughneck Clear 19 Qt/4.75 Gal Storage Containers, Pack of 6 for $69 (was $88) at Amazon
  • Rubbermaid Cleverstore Clear Dorm Variety Pack, 16-pack for $180 (was $200) at Amazon
  • Rubbermaid Roughneck️ Storage Totes 14 Gal, 6-pack for $117 (was $130) at Amazon

Back-to-school supplies

Writing utensils! Get your writing utensils here!

Writing utensils! Get your writing utensils here! (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

  • Paper Mate Mechanical Pencils, SharpWriter Pencils, 0.7 mm, HB #2, Yellow, 36 Count for $10 (was $14) at Amazon
  • Sharpie S-Gel, Gel Pens, Medium Point (0.7 mm), Assorted Colors, 12 Count for $10 (was $29) at Amazon
  • Sharpie Tank Style Highlighters, Chisel Tip, Fluorescent Yellow, 36 Count for $11 (was $18) at Amazon
  • Paper Mate InkJoy 300RT Retractable Ballpoint Pens, Medium Point, 10 Ink Colors, 24 Pack for $10 (was $17) at Amazon
  • Paper Mate InkJoy 100RT Retractable Ballpoint Pens, Medium Point, Red, Box of 12 for $6 (was $7) at Amazon
  • Paper Mate EverStrong #2 Pencils, Reinforced, Break-Resistant Lead When Writing, 72 Count for $13 (was $22) at Amazon
  • EXPO Microfiber Cleaning Cloth for $6 (was $9) at Amazon
  • Sharpie Pocket Highlighters, Chisel Tip, Fluorescent Yellow, 36 Count for $16 (was $20) at Amazon
  • X-acto Crayon Pro Electric Crayon Sharpener, Electric Sharpener with SafeStart Automatic Motor for $50 (was $59) at Amazon
  • Paper Mate InkJoy 300RT Retractable Ballpoint Pens, Medium Point (1.0 mm), Black, 36 Count for $12 (was $14) at Amazon

Storage

  • SanDisk 2TB Portable SSD for $100 (was $135) at Amazon
  • SAMSUNG T7 2TB, Portable SSD for $120 (was $130) at Amazon
  • SAMSUNG Type-C USB Flash Drive 128GB for $17 (was $23) at Amazon
  • SanDisk 128GB Ultra Dual Drive Go USB Type-C for $15 (was $25) at Amazon
  • SanDisk 64GB Ultra Dual Drive Luxe USB Type-C for $12 (was $16) at Amazon

Watches and EDC

Timex returns to traditional design for its latest activity-tracking smartwatch.

Timex returns to traditional design for its latest activity-tracking smartwatch. (credit: Photo: Scott Akerman)

  • Timex Men's Expedition Grid Shock 50 mm Watch for $45 (was $83) at Amazon
  • Armitron Sport Unisex Digital Chronograph Nylon Strap Watch, 45/7004 for $15 (was $19) at Amazon
  • Timex Ironman Classic 30 Full-Size 38 mm Watch for $36 (was $42) at Amazon
  • Casio Men's W800H-1AV Classic Sport Watch with Black Band for $22 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Casio Men's AE1200WH-1A Black Analog Digital Multi-Function Watch for $29 (was $43) at Amazon
  • Casio Men's A158WEA-9CF Casual Classic Digital Bracelet Watch, Silver for $21 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Casio Men's MQ24-7B2 Analog Watch with Black Resin Band for $14 (was $23) at Amazon
  • Timex Full-Size Ironman Rugged 30 Watch for $30 (was $62) at Amazon
  • Timex Weekender Chronograph 40 mm Watch for $52 (was $58) at Amazon
  • Fossil Men's Nate Quartz Stainless Steel Chronograph Watch for $83 (was $180) at Amazon
  • Fossil Grant Men's Watch with Chronograph Display and Genuine Leather for $64 (was $140) at Amazon
  • Invicta Men’s Stainless Steel Pro Diver Quartz Watch for $43 (was $46) at Amazon
  • Fossil Minimalist Men's Watch with Leather for $72 (was $150) at Amazon
  • Bulova Men's Classic Stainless Steel Six-Hand Chronograph Quartz Watch for $226 (was $375) at Amazon
  • Skagen Men's Grenen Watch with Brown Leather Band for $106 (was $125) at Amazon
  • Bulova Men's 3-Hand Calendar Date Quartz Watch, Patterned Dial, 38 mm for $151 (was $295) at Amazon
  • Skagen Men's Jorn Minimalistic Stainless Steel Quartz Watch for $56 (was $125) at Amazon
  • Bulova Men's Classic American Clipper 3-Hand Automatic Leather Strap Watch, Day Date Calendar for $237 (was $395) at Amazon
  • WUBEN C3 Flashlight 1200 High Lumens Rechargeable Flashlights for $30 (was $38) at Amazon
  • Streamlight 66608 MicroStream 250-Lumen EDC Ultra-Compact Flashlight for $33 (was $59) at Amazon
  • ThruNite EDC Flashlight Archer Mini, 405 Lumens Tail Switch LED Flashlight for $20 (was $35) at Amazon
  • ACEBEAM Pokelit AA Rechargeable Mini Flashlight with Clip, 550 High Lumens Pocket EDC Flashlight for $20 (was $30) at Amazon
  • OLIGHT I5T Plus 550 Lumens EDC Flashlight for $28 (was $40) at Amazon
  • 77outdoor EDC Small Rechargeable Flashlight, Sofirn SC18 1800 High Lumen Flashlight for $25 (was $30) at Amazon
  • Leatherman, Wave Plus Multitool with Premium Replaceable Wire Cutters, Spring-Action Scissors and Molle Black Sheath for $100 (was $120) at Amazon

Games and video games

  • The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom - Nintendo Switch (US Version) for $57 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Octopath Traveler II for $40 (was $60) for Nintendo Switch | PlayStation 5 at Amazon
  • Elden Ring for $55 (was $60) for PlayStation 5 | Xbox X | PlayStation 4 at Amazon
  • Sonic Frontiers - PlayStation 5 for $35 (was $60) at Amazon
  • Stray - PlayStation 5 for $30 (was $40) at Amazon
  • The Last of Us Part I – PlayStation 5 for $65 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Soul Hackers 2: Launch Edition for $29 (was $60) for PlayStation 4 | Xbox X at Amazon
  • Ghost of Tsushima Director's Cut - PlayStation 5 for $44 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Star Ocean The Divine Force for $25 (was $40) for PlayStation 5 | Xbox X at Amazon
  • The Legend Of Zelda: Skyward Sword (Nintendo Switch) (European Version) for $44 (was $60) at Amazon
  • Atomic Heart PS5 for $49 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Kena: Bridge of Spirits - Deluxe Edition (PS5) - PlayStation 5 for $30 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Uncharted: Legacy of Thieves Collection - PlayStation 5 for $37 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Hasbro Gaming Trivial Pursuit Master Edition Trivia Board for $32 (was $45) at Amazon
  • Hasbro Gaming Taboo Party Board Game for $18 (was $25) at Amazon
  • Hasbro Scrabble Deluxe Edition for $34 (was $47) at Amazon
  • Scattergories Classic Game for $18 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Hasbro Gaming Jenga Wooden Blocks Stacking Tumbling Tower for $15 (was $17) at Amazon
  • Hasbro Gaming Twister Air Game for $18 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Hasbro Gaming Avalon Hill Axis & Allies Pacific 1940 Second Edition WWII Strategy Board Game for $48 (was $65) at Amazon
  • Hasbro Gaming Retro Series Scrabble 1949 Edition for $19 (was $22) at Amazon
  • Monopoly Ultimate Banking Edition Board Game for Families and Kids for $25 (was $28) at Amazon
  • Hasbro Gaming Trouble Board Game Includes Bonus Power Die and Shield for $13 (was $15) at Amazon

Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 5 and Galaxy Z Flip 5 preorders

  • Preorder the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 5 and save on storage upgrades and up to $300 on bundled accessories at Samsung
  • Preorder the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 5 and save on storage upgrades and up to $300 on bundled accessories at Samsung

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