Android 17 Will Finally Let You Remap Your Gaming Controllers

While iOS has caught up in recent years, Android is still the most versatile OS when it comes to smartphone gaming—especially if you’re looking beyond downloading games from app stores. Android supports a huge number of emulators, as well as game controllers and game pads. If you want to play a game, there’s a decent chance you can get it up and running on Android.

And yet, the OS doesn’t have something that many other modern gaming platforms do: native controller remapping. The idea is, you get to choose which of your controller’s buttons do what. If you’d prefer your down button to have the same effect as the L1 button, or the D-pad to have the same inputs as the right stick, you can. While individual Android games may offer these options, it doesn’t apply to the entire OS, which leads to some inconsistent gameplay situations.

Google is testing controller remapping with the Android 17 beta

As it turns out, Android 17 will introduce system-wide controller remapping options—assuming it makes it out of beta. Former tech journalism-turned Google employee Mishaal Rahman shared the news in a post on r/AndroidGaming, acknowledging the Android gaming communities’ repeated requests for controller remapping, and confirming the company is testing the feature in the Android 17 beta. Rahman says that Google is interested in two key points here: accessibility, so more players can remap buttons to fit their physical needs; and reducing issues with muscle memory when swapping between games.

Those two points really are huge for gamers. It can be frustrating to jump between games with different button layouts, and make mistakes only because you’re used to the layout from the previous game. But, more importantly, controller remapping makes gaming much more accessible for players who might not be able to play with a game’s default layout or control scheme. When some games support it and others don’t, it makes gaming on Android unbalanced. Now, assuming Android 17 really does launch this feature, gaming on phones like Pixel and Galaxy will be more accessible for everyone.

How to try controller remapping on Android 17

These tools are currently live in the latest Android 17 beta (beta 2). You can try it out now if you enroll your eligible device in the Android beta—just be warned that installing beta software on your device may result in bugs, instability, or data loss. I’d recommend making a full backup of any important data before install the beta.

With the latest Android 17 beta running on your device, you have two choices, depending on whether you’re using a wired or Bluetooth controller:

  • Wired controllers: Head to Settings > System > Game Controller and choose your controller from the list.

  • Bluetooth controllers: Head to Settings > Connected devices then choose the menu icon next to your controller. From here, go to the Device details page then choose “Game Controller” settings.

Either way, you’ll see a list of all the buttons and inputs on your controller. Tap one to make any available adjustments. Rahman does warn that glyphs—the icons that appear next to each button or input—may not be accurate as of this beta.

MLB injury check-in: How will teams navigate injuries to Cade Horton, Hunter Brown, Mookie Betts and others?

For a handful of MLB clubs, the start of the regular season has already been soured by injuries to key players. These ailments range in severity — some absences are expected to extend a few weeks, while others could stretch for the remainder of the season — but what’s undeniable is that several of the most important players in the sport have already landed on the injured list just as the season is getting going.

Here’s a look at the five most prominent injured stars, their timelines for return and which players will need to step up while their teammates are on the shelf.

A fifth-round pick out of Division II Wayne State in 2019, Brown has gradually grown into one of the best right-handed pitchers in the game. His third-place finish in the AL Cy Young race last year exemplified that growth, and with longtime Astros rotation mainstay Framber Valdez departing in free agency, there was zero doubt entering this season who the ace of the Astros’ staff would be. But after just two starts in which Brown largely looked like his dominant self, he landed on the injured list for the first time in his career due to a Grade 2 shoulder strain, which is expected to keep him on the shelf for several weeks at least. This is a devastating blow for an Astros team that spent much of last season navigating a slew of arm injuries to pitchers not named Brown and Valdez, who each made 31 starts. 

Houston spent the offseason restocking its staff around Brown, but the biggest names brought in have delivered mixed results so far, with Tatsuya Imai starting to flash his impact potential while Mike Burrows has been just OK. The more familiar faces have also provided varying results, with the long-tenured Lance McCullers Jr. seemingly having reinvented himself for the better after a disastrous 2025 while Cristian Javier is struggling badly in the early going. Beyond those four, the door would seem to be open for Spencer Arrighetti — who thrived as a rookie in 2024 but was a relative nonfactor last season due to poor performance and injury — to reemerge as a rotation option, and there are some long-relief types who could handle bulk innings as well (Ryan Weiss, Cody Bolton, AJ Blubaugh). 

All of these pitchers will need to step up their game in Brown’s absence, especially with a bullpen that has underperformed while closer Josh Hader works his way back from his own ailment; Bryan Abreu’s brutal showings thus far have been particularly concerning. The Astros have done an excellent job in recent years of conjuring effective pitching staffs regardless of the personnel involved, but Brown’s absence will really put that core competency to the test. 

The Astros announced that Brown will refrain from throwing for a few weeks, at which point he will likely require a build back up before he’s available for major-league games. That’s assuming no setbacks in the interim, which is hardly a safe assumption for a pitcher battling a serious injury for the first time in his career. A late May or early June return seems plausible given the information we have now, but that’s a long time for a team to go without one of the best pitchers in the league. Fortunately for Houston, the AL West does not currently seem to have any team eager to zoom ahead in the standings, so if the Astros’ stellar offense can continue to mash, they should be able to stay in the mix until their ace is reinstalled atop the rotation.

For the first time since a left shoulder strain cost him a couple of weeks early in the 2021 season, Soto has landed on the injured list. This time it’s a right calf strain suffered while running the bases during the Mets’ game April 3 in San Francisco. The team announced an expected return timeline of roughly two-to-three weeks, so this injury isn’t nearly as troubling as some of the others highlighted here. Even so, any absence for a player of Soto’s status is significant, especially considering how rare they’ve been throughout his career. In addition to his generational hitting ability, Soto has been tremendously durable as a big leaguer. He ranks sixth in games played since the beginning of the 2019 season, and only ironman Matt Olson (486) played more regular-season games the past three years (2023-2025) than Soto (479). Availability might not be Soto’s best ability, but it’s unquestionably part of what makes him so valuable.

But now, at least for a stretch, Soto will not be slotted near the top of the Mets’ lineup. Manager Carlos Mendoza has thus far moved the heart of the order up a spot, with Bo Bichette, Jorge Polanco and Luis Robert Jr. occupying the 2-3-4 spots behind leadoff man Francisco Lindor, as opposed to 3-4-5 behind Soto. Having switch-hitters in Lindor and Polanco ensures a baseline of lineup balance no matter what, but it’ll be interesting to see if Mendoza experiments with any other configurations while Soto is out.

As for the defensive alignment, joining Soto in the outfield this season have been a pair of fresh faces in offseason acquisition Luis Robert Jr. and rookie Carson Benge, but Soto’s temporary absence will open some more outfield opportunities for Brett Baty, who was previously on the outside looking in at a crowded infield picture. The left-handed-hitting Baty looks like the natural temporary replacement for Soto in one of the corner outfield spots alongside Benge, but Benge has struggled since homering in his debut, so perhaps Mendoza will seek at-bats for some of the other non-regulars on the roster, such as Jared Young, Mark Vientos and Tyrone Taylor. That group also includes the polarizing yet talented Ronny Mauricio, who was the corresponding move for Soto’s IL placement and delivered a walk-off hit in his first at-bat of the season on Tuesday

Assuming Soto’s absence is indeed rather brief, this should be an early-season blip of unusual lineup construction. That said, his impact is so outsized that it wouldn’t be surprising to see the Mets’ new-look offense take some time to figure out its identity without Soto anchoring the top of the order. Seeing Soto stuck watching from the bench, if even for a couple of weeks, will feel unfamiliar. At the same time, this is a golden opportunity for some of the new names to endear themselves to the fan base with a step up in performance while Soto is out.

The runner-up to Drake Baldwin in last year’s NL Rookie of the Year race, Horton appeared primed to build on his stellar debut season and solidify himself as a fixture in the Cubs’ rotation for years to come. Instead, he departed his April 3 start in Cleveland due to forearm discomfort and shortly thereafter received a recommendation for elbow surgery — the second such procedure of his young career after he underwent Tommy John surgery in college. The Cubs received an additional wave of bad news earlier this week, with All-Star lefty Matthew Boyd being placed on the injured list due to a strained biceps, but it’s Horton’s injury — which is expected to wipe out the rest of his season — that is particularly gutting and daunting to deal with in both the short and long term.

It was about a year ago that another frontline Cubs arm, Justin Steele, went down with an elbow injury that required surgery. In that way, Horton’s early exit from the rotation is an unwelcome case of deja vu, and now Steele’s impending return to the rotation this summer becomes all the more pivotal for Chicago. That’s still at least a month away, though, which means the spotlight brightens on the likes of Shota Imanaga and new addition Edward Cabrera to be the anchors atop this rotation in the meantime. Cabrera has looked terrific to start the season, allowing just two hits across 11 ⅔ scoreless innings and showcasing why the Cubs were willing to pay a reasonably steep price to snag him from Miami in the offseason. The talent has rarely been in question with Cabrera, but now there’s even more pressure on his durability — which has frequently been a concern — to hold up while other key arms are on the shelf.

Besides the hard-throwing Jaxon Wiggins, who could use some more development time in Triple-A, the Cubs do not have a wealth of MLB-ready pitching prospects to call on, so it’ll be on veterans Jameson Taillon, Javier Assad and Colin Rea to steady the ship after Imanaga and Cabrera. And however the pitching staff shakes out, it’ll be even more important for the Cubs to start hitting consistently, as an offense that was supposed to be the team’s clear strength has yet to really start humming.

The reigning American League champions’ injured list is as crowded as that of any team in the league through two weeks, but arguably the most consequential absence that Toronto is currently navigating is Kirk, who is expected to miss six weeks after fracturing his left thumb and undergoing surgery. It’s impossible to overstate the value of a franchise catcher capable of impacting both sides of the ball, and that key cog in Kirk will be unavailable for the next month-plus while the Blue Jays try to dig themselves out of an early, ugly hole in the unforgiving AL East. 

Kirk has been a mainstay behind the dish for the past half-decade for Toronto, ranking ninth in MLB in innings caught and fifth in fWAR among catchers since the start of the 2022 season. That makes him particularly challenging to replace, in terms of both how his defensive acumen impacts the pitching staff and his role in the middle of the lineup as a well-above-average bat for his position.

The two tasked with filling in for the two-time All-Star catcher will be Tyler Heineman and Brandon Valenzuela. The 34-year-old Heineman is a strong defender who reached base at a solid clip (.361 OBP) in a small sample (174 plate appearances) last season, but he has generally been limited to backup roles and offers essentially zero slugging upside. Valenzuela is a 25-year-old rookie who was acquired in a trade with San Diego last season, and he has long been known more for his glove than his bat. Both Heineman and Valenzuela are switch-hitters, affording some matchup flexibility for manager John Schneider.

But far more crucial will be how they manage Toronto’s injury-ravaged yet still talented pitching staff while Kirk is out. Ensuring a sense of stability with the glove will be paramount. Any offensive contributions from these backup backstops will be gravy, while the other hitters atop the order will be relied on far more heavily to compensate for Kirk’s absence.

The defending champs are off to a rip-roaring start to their quest for a three-peat, with only one glaring setback surfacing in the early going: Mookie Betts, the eight-time All-Star and sudden defensive stalwart at shortstop, suffered a right oblique strain. Return to play for such an injury commonly requires four-to-six weeks, but Betts and manager Dave Roberts are hopeful that he can return on the earlier side of that timeline.

Any team losing its starting shortstop would be a big deal, but this is a particularly intriguing case considering that the middle infield — or at least, second base before Betts’ injury — is arguably the only weak spot on the entire Dodgers roster. With Betts out, a group of unproven youngsters (Alex Freeland, Hyeseong Kim) and veteran utilitymen (Miguel Rojas, Santiago Espinal) will be tasked with covering both shortstop and second base, representing a clear collective shortcoming in a position-player group otherwise overloaded with impact talent. 

Viewed more favorably, the presence of all that star power elsewhere in the lineup should empower this group of middle infielders to make the most of their increase in playing time without the pressure of needing to replace Betts; there are plenty of other megastars to shoulder that burden in the interim. So whether it means a prospect such as Freeland breaking through as a regular or someone such as Kim establishing himself as a proven commodity, or the veterans Espinal and Rojas showing they still can play meaningful every-day roles, Betts’ absence could be a silver lining for other Dodgers to take advantage of. 

This Compact Bose Portable Bluetooth Speaker Is Cheaper Than Ever Right Now

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Bose knows how to make products that last, and very much follows the “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” mantra. Take the Bose SoundLink Micro: Released in 2017, it was such a hit, the company waited until last September to introduce a second generation. And right now, you can get the Bose SoundLink Micro (2nd Gen) from Amazon for $99 (originally $129), the lowest price it has reached anywhere, according to price-tracking tools.

With the new speaker, Bose improved on the first generation model in two big ways: the charging port (which is now a standard USB-C) and the battery life (which has doubled to 12 hours). It’s also a bit heavier and larger, and comes with an adjustable nylon strap you can use to attach it to bikes, bags, or any other object. There’s also a new Spotify Tap button that plays your favorite Spotify playlist at a touch. The only real omission is the loss of a mic, so you won’t be able to use it to take phone calls anymore.

The Bluetooth multipoint connection lets you connect up to two devices at the same time and switch between them seamlessly. With Speaker Link, you can sync two Bose speakers ato create a stereo setup.

But the best feature of this small speaker is its strong sound for its compact size. It has rich lows and well-defined highs, according to PCMag’s “excellent” review, and the higher-resolution aptX Adaptive codec means you get that extra oomph from compatible devices. It’s tough to find a speaker that gives you more for your money than the SoundLink Micro (2nd Gen).


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Angels’ Jorge Soler homers in first at-bat after appealing suspension for fight with Braves’ Reynaldo López

Los Angeles Angels designated hitter and outfielder Jorge Soler and Atlanta Braves pitcher Reynaldo López are both facing suspensions and undisclosed fines from MLB in the wake of their fight that cleared the benches and bullpens on Tuesday, and they both appealed those punishments, according tomultiple reports Wednesday.

Later on Wednesday, López reportedly reached an agreement with MLB to reduce his suspension to five games, whereas Soler is still looking at a seven-game suspension.

Less than an hour after the initial news broke about their impending bans, Soler went yard again against the Braves at Angel Stadium.

In his first at-bat of the series finale, Soler teed off on an 84-mph slider from Atlanta’s Grant Holmes and sent the ball 402 feet to left-center field. The solo shot made it 2-1 in the second inning of what turned out to be an 8-2 defeat.

That dinger marked Soler’s third home run of the season and his second in less than 24 hours.

The night before, Soler, who notably earned World Series MVP honors while helping the Braves win a title in 2021, smashed a two-run home run against his former team in the first inning of a 7-2 Angels loss. It was his fifth homer off López, against whom Soler is now a career 14-for-23 hitter.

Two innings later, López pelted Soler with a 96-mph fastball.

Then, in the fifth frame, López missed high on a pitch that played some chin music and hit the backstop. After Angels first baseman Nolan Schanuel stole second, the brawl began to take form, first with a staredown between López and Soler. Eventually, Soler started to approach the mound. He picked up speed after López winged out his arms.

Soon enough, they were throwing hands. López was even swinging with the baseball still in his right hand.

Amid the melee, Braves manager Walt Weiss tackled Soler to the ground, and Angels star Mike Trout pushed López away. Both Soler and López were ejected from the game.

“Obviously, I have good numbers against him,” Soler said afterward through interpreter Jobel Jiménez, per MLB.com. “After the home run and getting hit by a pitch after that, and then he missed way too high and close to my head.

“At this level, you can’t miss like that.”

López didn’t seem to see it that way.

“It’s just a shame, the situation and how things unfolded,” he said through interpreter Franco García, according to The Athletic. “On my part, there was never any intent to hit him at any point.”

Regardless of their differing interpretations of the chaos in Anaheim, MLB handed out punishments on Wednesday. Those suspensions were on hold while each player appealed, and, so, Soler kept on raking against the Braves.

Steam Just Added Support for Apple Vision Pro Gaming

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The Apple Vision Pro is taking another step toward becoming the killer VR gaming device we all know it could be. Valve recently announced that it is adding Steam Link, an app for Vision Pro that will let users wirelessly stream Steam games from their PC or Mac to their headsets. Steam Link will allow streaming up to 4k and includes a panoramic mode with an adjustable screen curve.

There’s a huge caveat though: Steam Link will not stream VR games, so you won’t be playing Half-Life: Alyx or any other Steam-based VR or AR games on your Vision Pro. At least for now.

Steam Link for iOS is currently in Beta, with no word yet on when the full version will be released, but getting into the Beta is painless:

  • Go to the App Store on your Vision Pro and Install TestFlight.

  • Make sure you have a game controller paired to your Vision Pro and your wifi is fairly fast.

  • In your Apple Vision Pro, click on this link.

  • You’ll be guided through the rest of the set-up process.

The state of gaming on the Apple Vision Pro

At launch, the Apple Vision Pro had few choices for gamers, but that’s been steadily changing over the last month or so. First Apple announced support for NVIDIA CloudXR, and now Steam, giving users two legitimate ways to game on the Vision Pro, but the Holy Grail of gaming, native PC VR games like Skyrim VR and Boneworks, remain out of reach unless you use a hacker-y workaround.

While there has been no announcement from Apple, enabling low latency tools like Cloud XR and opening Steam to Vision Pro may be leading to the next logical step: supporting OpenVR and/or SteamVR. The Vision Pro’s M5 chip certainly has the power to handle the frame-rates of AAA VR games, and Apple Pro users, I’m sure, would at least like the option of playing top-tier games on their face computers.

10 Shows Like ‘The White Lotus’ You Should Watch Next

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The next season of HBO salacious, schadenfreude-rich dramedy The White Lotus doesn’t premiere until October, so you’ll need to wait months yet to witness the antics of an all-new all-star cast (Helena Bonham Carter! Heather Graham! Rosie Perez! Sandra Bernhard!) as they travel to paradise and encounter murder, mystery, and the inevitable consequences of their own greed. In the meantime, here are 10 more shows about wealthy people getting their comeuppances (or not) in lush locales.

The Perfect Couple (2024)

Though the cast includes names like Nicole Kidman, Liev Schreiber, and Dakota Fanning, the real star of The Perfect Couple is Donna Lynne Champlin as Nikki Henry, a police detective who has no idea what she’s getting into when she shows up in a wealthy Massachusetts island community to investigate a dead body on a beach. The beach is attached to a lavish mansion playing host to a society wedding involving some of the most self-satisfied rich people you’ll ever encountered on television. Kidman plays novelist Greer Garrison Winbury, the mother of the groom. She has nothing but icy disdain for her future daughter-in-law, who has committed the cardinal sin of having grown up not-rich. As in The White Lotus, the murder exposes the secrets and the fault lines in a seemingly “perfect” family. Stream The Perfect Couple on Netflix.


The Resort (2022)

Starring Christin Milioti and William Jackson Harper (The Good Place). this one plays a bit like a romantic drama take on White Lotus—the set-up and setting are similar, but it’s much more about relationships than social status. A couple celebrating their tenth anniversary arrives at a luxury Yucatan resort, but things aren’t as happy as they seem on the surface. Their marriage is quietly crumbling, but a young woman who went missing 15 years earlier might be the thing to bring them back together. The mystery has threads that catch on the pair’s own secrets, as well as the shady history of the the resort itself; eventually, things travel into even weirder territory than what we’ve yet encountered on The White Lotus. Stream The Resort on Peacock.


Nine Perfect Strangers (2021 – )

It’s Nicole Kidman again, this time as Masha Dmitrichenko, overseer of up the posh wellness resort Tranquillum House. The nine strangers of the title (each season has a different all-star cast—sound familiar?) show up hoping for a little healing, but get much more than they bargained for from the mostly well-intentioned, but shady and mysterious Masha. She’s secretly drugging them, for one thing, and her therapy regimen includes things like digging your own grave. It’s pretty bonkers, but nobody ever said that personal growth would be easy. Stream Nine Perfect Strangers on Hulu.


The Comeback (2005  – )

Though it’s significantly less murder-y and generally much funnier than The White Lotus, this is another show about clueless rich people moving through life amiably enough while only occasionally realizing how fragile their self-worth is when tied solely to money and status. Lisa Kudrow is brilliant as actress-of-a-certain-age Valerie Cherish, who has plotted one comeback after another over the course of three seasons released across two decades. Her utter shamelessness in her quest for greater fame is simultaneously admirable and embarrassing, even as the show makes clear that women face different burdens in the effort to maintain relevance. It’s cringe comedy par excellence. Stream The Comeback on HBO Max.


Big Little Lies (2017 – )

Much as with The White Lotus, part of the thrill of Big Little Lies is in watching some very rich, very attractive, very white (mostly) ladies facing tough times in beautiful locales (in this case, Monterey, California). And as on The White Lotus, any threat to the status quo can lead to big drama, as at least as much as small differences in perceived wealth. In season one, five women (played by Nicole Kidman, Reese Witherspoon, Shailene Woodley, Laura Dern, and Zoë Kravitz) become involved in a murder investigation connected to a school fundraiser that threatens to bring all of their private dirt out into the open—and there are secrets aplenty to uncover. Stream Big Little Lies on HBO Max.


Billions (2016 – 2023)

Billions doesn’t have quite the bite of White Lotus, but it’s still plenty of fun, with Paul Giamatti playing rather ruthless U.S. attorney Chuck Rhoades (based in part on the real-life Preet Bharara), who is working to bring down shady hedge fund manager Bobby Axelrod (Damian Lewis). The tone is that of a darkly comic soap opera, and it stays fresh over seven seasons by playing off the contrast between Axelrod’s willingness to use all the money and power at his disposal to stay on top and out of jail, and Rhoades’ willingness to resort to shady, not-entirely-legal tactics to reel in his big fish. Stream Billions on Paramount+ and Prime Video.


Enlightened (2011 – 2013)

Before The White Lotus, Mike White co-created (with star Laura Dern) this beloved, if short-lived, comedy-drama about a middle-aged woman who experiences a complete mental breakdown following a demotion at the job to which she’s devoted her life. Following a two-month stay in an holistic treatment facility, Dern’s Amy Jellicoe becomes determined to approach life with a new perspective, focusing on meditation and positive change at work and at home. The results are mixed, but there’s also a rather beautiful sense that while change is absurd and difficult, but also entirely possible (in that, it’s perhaps a lot less cynical than White’s subsequent series). Stream Enlightened on HBO Max.


Mine (2021)

South Korean TV creators have no problem criticizing the ultra-wealthy, particularly the plutocratic chaebol families who control huge portions of the country’s economy. Mine targets the women who are jockeying for control of the massive, fictional Hyowon Group from within their family’s outrageously opulent (and extremely photogenic) residential compound. The plans of two increasingly powerful women who married into the family, Hi-soo and Seo-hyun, are thrown into disarray when the new housemaid begins a romantic relationship with one of the family’s male heirs, while a new tutor seems ready to expose old family secrets. It’s a Dynasty-style soap opera, but one that isn’t particularly besotted by its wealthy characters, and with a self-awareness that leads to moments of dark comedy as various family members crawl over one another in pursuit of power. Stream Mine on Netflix.


The Prisoner (1967 – 1968)

You want a show with a beautiful setting that confronts issues of identity and authoritarianism in a capitalist context? Fifty years on, The Prisoner remains one of television’s most starkly realized dystopias—and it’s set in a candy-colored, pop-art-inspired village that actually looks like a pretty great place to relax. Creator/director Patrick McGoohan plays Number Six, who has resigned from his government job over a matter of conscience. Apparently knowing too much, he’s rendered unconscious and taken to the remote, inescapable “Village,” which is full of others with numbers and no names. The Village has all the comforts and conveniences one could want, and most are perfectly content there—but rebellious Number Six can’t appreciate luxurious surroundings that look to him like a gilded cage. This surreal, psychedelic series builds to a wild conclusion as the mystery of where he really is and why plays out, and makes as good an argument against the soul-crushing impacts of consumer culture and conformity as anything ever on TV. Stream The Prisoner on Prime Video and Tubi.


Your Friends and Neighbors (2025 – )

In Your Friends & Neighbors, Jon Hamm plays Andrew “Coop” Cooper, a recently divorced, recently unemployed New York hedge fund manager. In an effort to keep up an illusion that nothing in his life has changed, he begins breaking into the homes of his wealthy neighbors to steal and sell their stuff, inadvertently catching on to their secrets as well. This dark comedy isn’t exactly about how hard it is to be a once-rich white guy, but neither is it a pointed lesson in the downfalls toxic masculinity—Coop is an insider forced into the role of an outsider (playing an insider), offering him a unique perspective on the artifice at the center of a life based on flaunting wealth. Stream Your Friends and Neighbors on Apple TV.

Amazon Big Spring Sale 2026 Live Blog: All the Best Deals From Apple, Kindle, Garmin, and More

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Early deals from Amazon’s Big Spring Sale were surprisingly good, and starting today, Wednesday, March 25, the sale is now in full swing. As is the case with other big Amazon sales, I’m going to highlight all best the deals as our team covers them throughout the event. All of our recommended deals have been vetted using price-tracking tools, so you can trust that the sales we’re talking about are actually good deals, and not just hype designed to fool you.

You can read more details about the spring sale here, like what to expect, how long it’ll last, and some tips to make your shopping experience better. You can also just browse what’s on sale here on your own. We’ll continue highlighting new deals as we find them, but you can scroll through to see earlier deals that may still be active.

Los Angeles Dodgers icon, longtime MLB coach Davey Lopes dies at 80

Bryce Harper (34), then with the Washington Nationals, talks to first base coach Davey Lopes on Oct. 7, 2017, in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)
Win McNamee via Getty Images

The Los Angeles Dodgers announced that franchise icon and longtime MLB coach Davey Lopes died on Wednesday. He was 80 years old.

Lopes is one of the greatest second basemen in Dodgers history. He was a four-time All-Star from 1978 to ’81, an impressive run that started with a Gold Glove Award and culminated in a World Series ring.

He won another World Series as a coach for the Philadelphia Phillies in 2008. Altogether, between playing and coaching, Lopes spent 45 years in the majors.

Despite standing only 5-foot-9, 170 pounds, Lopes brought oomph to the plate, where he set a Dodgers record for homers by a second baseman with 99. He was also swift on the basepaths, twice finishing as the NL’s stolen base leader in the ’70s.

After helping the Dodgers come back from a 2-0 deficit and beat the New York Yankees in six games during the 1981 World Series, Lopes was traded to the Athletics. He spent 1982-84 with the A’s, 1984-86 with the Chicago Cubs and 1986-87 with the Houston Astros to conclude his playing career.

The East Providence, Rhode Island, native was hired by the Texas Rangers to join manager Bobby Valentine’s staff the next year. That jump-started Lopes’ coaching career, which spanned four decades.

He got his shot as a manager with the Milwaukee Brewers in 2000. The Brewers didn’t record better than a third-place NL Central finish during his two-plus seasons running the clubhouse. But it wasn’t long before Lopes was back coaching, returning to the show as the San Diego Padres’ first-base coach in 2003. 

Lopes’ stay with the Phillies, spanning 2007-10, saw him give the club a boost on the basepaths as a baserunning advisor. Philadelphia claimed the NL East crown all four years, including in 2008 when it won the World Series.

Lopes wrapped up his coaching career with the Dodgers (2011-15) and Washington Nationals (2016-17).

Not All Sleep Scores Are Created Equal

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Sleep scores may be one of the most-checked metrics in wearable health tracking, but the companies behind them haven’t agreed on a shared language. A Garmin wearer with a 75 is in “Fair” territory. An Oura wearer with a 75 is doing “Good.” An Apple Watch user with a 75 might see “OK” or “High” depending on which software version they’re running. Where are these numbers coming from, and what are they actually telling you?

Each platform uses different scales, labels, and underlying signals to arrive at that single morning number. Here’s a breakdown of how the most popular wearables calculate your “sleep score,” and what that score means for you.

What your “sleep score” actually means

For all the scoring systems below, know that it’s impossible for a sleep score to be truly “accurate.” Your device tracks how long you seemed to be asleep, and makes guesses as to how much of that time was spent in light sleep, deep sleep, and REM sleep. Then, it distills it into a single composite score, which might have more to do with branding decisions than clinical science.

So while the data that is going into your score (like your heart rate) might be accurate, it’s important to understand that the score itself is a made up number. Sleep tracking, at its best, functions less like a medical test that you pass or fail, and more as a way to see patterns over time.

How an Oura Ring calculates your sleep score

Let’s start with Oura, since it’s widely considered the best sleep tracker out there. Oura’s Sleep Score ranges from 0 to 100, with three broad zones for scoring:

  • 85–100: Optimal. An 85 or higher means all your metrics appear reasonably healthy. Oura even marks the day with a crown icon in the app.

  • 70–84: Good. Your sleep was good, but not great. You’re adequately rested and prepared for most daily activities, but there’s still room to improve your overall sleep quality.

  • Under 70: Pay Attention. Scores below 70 indicate that you may benefit from prioritizing rest and recovery.

According to Oura, your Sleep Score is built from seven contributors: total sleep time, sleep efficiency (the percentage of time actually spent asleep), restfulness, REM sleep, deep sleep, sleep latency (how long it takes to fall asleep), and timing (whether your sleep aligns with your body’s natural circadian rhythm).

Oura has been shown to be the most accurate of all the wearables on this list, largely because it reads from your finger, which provides stronger optical signal than a wrist.

One important note: Scores of 100 are designed to be rare rather than regular. If you’re never cracking 85, that’s not unusual, either. Sleep naturally fluctuates, and there may be periods where your sleep is better or worse. Again, it’s more useful to be interested in your trends over time than any single night.

How a Whoop calculates your sleep score

Whoop gives you two numbers—a Sleep Performance percentage and a Recovery score—and it expects you to read them together.

Sleep Performance is expressed as a percentage from 0–100%, measuring how much of the sleep your body needed you actually got. It’s calculated using sleep sufficiency (the percentage of needed sleep you got), sleep consistency (how your bedtime compares to the previous four nights), sleep efficiency (the percentage of time in bed actually spent asleep), and sleep stress (time spent in physiologically high-stress states during the night).

Recovery is the broader daily readiness score, also expressed as a percentage, and this is the number most Whoop users check first. Recovery is color-coded into three zones: Green (67–100%) means you’re well recovered and primed to perform; Yellow (34–66%) means your body is maintaining and ready for moderate strain; Red (0–33%) signals that rest is likely what your body needs.

Whoop says it compares your metrics to your own baseline rather than to a fixed population standard, which means your 70% Recovery and a friend’s 70% Recovery may reflect totally different states.

Whoop also stands out for avoiding a single “sleep was good/bad” verdict. The sleep performance percentage tells you about quantity and consistency relative to your personal need, while the Recovery score tells you how your body responded. Most people consider Whoop and Oura to be neck-and-neck for the top sleep trackers.

How a Garmin calculates your sleep score

Now onto the smartwatches. Garmin offers perhaps the most traditional scoring system of the group. Each morning you receive a sleep score on a 0–100 scale, and based on that score, you’re assigned one of four rankings:

  • 90–100: Excellent

  • 80–89: Good

  • 60–79: Fair

  • Below 60: Poor

For Garmin, the nightly sleep score is calculated based on a blend of how long you slept, how well you slept, and “evidence of recovery activity occurring in your autonomic nervous system derived from heart rate variability data.” What that last point should mean is Garmin tracks the change in time between heartbeats during sleep, and factors that in when scoring your overall sleep quality. In theory, this should account for something like your nervous system staying elevated all night, even if you were physically still.

Garmin also has a Body Battery reading, which shows how well your energy reserves recharged overnight. This it comes from a combination of your heart rate, heart rate variability (HRV), and movement data. When your sleep score is low, your Body Battery typically is too.

Garmin (along with the rest of the smartwatches below) is probably best considered as a smartwatch that happens to track sleep, as opposed to a dedicated sleep tracker, like Oura or Whoop.

How an Apple Watch calculates your sleep score

Apple’s Sleep Score is the newest entry on this list, arriving in September 2025. But even with this most recent update, Apple’s sleep scores are considered to be way too generous.

Your score is calculated based on sleep duration (worth 50 points), bedtime consistency (worth 30 points), and interruptions—how often you wake up and how long you stay awake (worth 20 points). The current five-tier scale, as updated in watchOS 26.2, looks like this:

  • 96–100: Very High (formerly called “Excellent,” but Apple renamed this category to better reflect that it’s an objective measure rather than a promise of how you’ll feel)

  • 81–95: High

  • 61–80: OK

  • 41–60: Low

  • 0–40: Very Low

Compared to the other trackers on this list, Apple’s score seems to focus on habits around sleep (enough hours, consistent timing, minimal waking) rather than trying to take a stab at sleep stages.

How a Fitbit calculates your sleep score

Fitbit was one of the first mainstream wearables to introduce an official sleep score, and its system remains pretty clean and consistent. Your overall sleep score is a sum of individual scores in sleep duration, sleep quality, and restoration, for a total score of up to 100. Fitbit says most people score between 72 and 83.

The four ranges:

  • 90–100: Excellent

  • 80–89: Good

  • 60–79: Fair

  • Below 60: Poor

Fitbit defines Sleep Duration as total time asleep relative to your goals; Sleep Quality assesses how much time you spent in deep and REM stages; and Restoration (the most distinctive element) looks at your sleeping heart rate versus your daytime resting heart rate and how much time you spent tossing and turning. A higher restoration score comes when your sleeping heart rate dips meaningfully lower than your resting heart rate.

One catch: To see a detailed breakdown of your restoration score, you need a Fitbit Premium subscription. Basic users see the total score, but the granular component breakdown is paywalled.

What does a score of 75 mean on each platform?

Just for fun, let’s take a look at how these different companies interpret the same number. Here’s what a 75 might mean, depending on your wearable:

  • Oura: Good sleep, adequately rested.

  • Garmin: Fair, meaning some things could be better.

  • Apple Watch: Just above midpoint of the “OK” tier.

  • Fitbit: Near the top of “Fair,” below the “Good” threshold.

  • WHOOP: Not directly comparable, since it’s percentage-based).

The bottom line

No sleep score, across any of these platforms, is a clinical measurement. They are estimates derived from wrist (or finger) sensors, algorithms built on population data, and proprietary definitions that no company fully discloses. Two people who slept identically might score differently, and the same person might score a 90 one night and a 65 the next with no clear explanation.

Again, the more useful way to read these scores is as a trend signal over time, not a verdict on any single night. To get the most out of your sleep scores, I explain the best practices for sleep tracking here.