Digg, the dominant link aggregator of the mid-2000s, is attempting yet another comeback. Kevin Rose, one of Digg’s original founders, has acquired the brand name for an undisclosed sum and is teaming up with Reddit founder Alexis Ohanian to build a new-ish social network. The plan was announced this morning in articles on Techcrunch and in the New York Times.
There aren’t many concrete details in these articles about what the site will look like, though they do note it will use AI as a key moderation tool. “Online communities thrive when there’s a balance between technology and human judgment,” Ohanian told Techcrunch, adding that, “AI should handle the grunt work in the background while humans focus on what they do best: building real connections.” Rose surveyed current Reddit moderators in an attempt to learn what improved moderation tools could look like.
That’s about it in terms of specifics—both pieces focus less on the tech and more on the founders themselves. But we do know the new Digg won’t look like an “old school forum” according to Rose. He said that, in a few years, it “will be an interface that is unlike any other that you’ve seen.” Whatever that means.
Digg was founded in 2004—more than two decades ago, an eternity in internet terms—by Rose and other collaborators. Reddit arrived on the scene around a year later, in 2005, founded by current CEO Steve Huffman, the late hacktivist Aaron Swartz, and Ohanian. The two websites fought to be the dominate link aggregator for a half-decade, a competition Reddit eventually won. One way of looking at this history is that Reddit ultimately won over users, though you could also argue that Digg destroyed itself: An extremely buggy and widely unpopular 2010 redesign, launched under Rose’s leadership, prioritized the posts of certain contributors and ultimately led to a mass exodus of users. The site never recovered and was soon more or less sold off piecemeal in 2012.
How to sign up for early access to the new Digg
Invitations to the new version of the site will be sent in the next few weeks—you can sign up here to try it if you’re curious. With any luck it won’t just be yet another place to yell about screenshots taken from other social networks; the internet sure could use something that’s actually new. Only time will tell, though.
Tax season is the perfect time to review your Roth IRA contribution strategy. While Roth IRAs offer incredible tax advantages, they come with specific rules that can trip up even savvy investors. After all, the humble Roth IRA is one of your most powerful retirement savings tools—when used correctly.
You have until the April tax return deadline to set up and fund an IRA for the prior tax year. This means you have until April 15, 2025 to open and contribute to a Roth for 2024. We’re also in the window where you can fund your 2025 IRA at the same time. Additional contributions for 2025 can be made until April 15, 2026, and so on. Keep in mind, filing for an extension to submit your return does not extend the deadline for IRA contributions.
Here key contribution guidelines to know about Roth IRAs right now, so you can maximize your retirement savings and avoid potential penalties.
Rule 1: Earned income
The most fundamental rule for Roth IRA contributions is simple: You can only contribute money you’ve actually earned. This means your contributions must come from:
Wages from a job
Salary
Tips
Commissions
Self-employment income
Bonuses
Alimony
Important nuances to remember:
Investment income, Social Security benefits, and pension payments do not count as earned income
If you’re a stay-at-home spouse, you can still contribute based on your working spouse’s earned income
For students or part-time workers, your contribution is limited to your actual earned income for the year
Rule 2: Annual contribution limits
The IRS sets specific limits on how much you can contribute to a Roth IRA each year. For 2024, these limits are:
Under 50 years old: $7,000 maximum annual contribution
50 and older: $8,000 (includes a $1,000 catch-up contribution)
These limits are aggregate across all your IRAs. So if you have multiple Roth or traditional IRA accounts, the total contributions cannot exceed the annual limit.
Attempting to contribute more than the annual limit will result in a 6% penalty tax on the excess amount unless promptly removed. If you exceed the Roth IRA contribution limits, you have until the tax filing deadline, plus extensions, to withdraw the excess contributions and any income they earned.
Rule 3: You can’t contribute more than you earn
This rule is a direct extension of the earned income requirement. Your Roth IRA contribution cannot exceed your total earned income for the year. For example:
If you earned $5,000 in part-time work, your maximum Roth IRA contribution is $5,000
If you only earned $3,000, you can only contribute up to $3,000
If you earned $0, you cannot make any Roth IRA contributions
Pro tips for Roth IRA contributions
As a rule of thumb, keep detailed records of your earned income. I know I rely on automated contributions to stay within limits, as well as make sure I’m maxing out my fund.
Remember that contribution limits can change annually, so stay informed. Tax season is an excellent time to review your Roth IRA strategy. For me, this means making contributions as early in the calendar year as I can. I highly recommend getting ahead by maxing out 2025 as soon as you can, and then contributing larger lump sum right at the start of 2026. At the end of the day, compound interest is the name of the game, and early investing means more time for compounding to work.
There used to be a clear progression in home ownership: You bought a “starter” home when you were young, built equity, then cashed in when prices rose and leveled up to something bigger, newer, or with the features you really want. And if you bought a house that didn’t live up to expectations, or if your situation changed without warning (hello, unexpected third child!), you would list the place and move to a better option.
But increasingly, that seems like an artifact of a bygone age. It’s easy these days to feel “stuck” in your current home—because of that amazing mortgage rate you locked in years ago, the eye-watering cost of a house these days, or some other issue. If that’s you, don’t despair: Maybe you can’t sell and move right now, and an expensive whole-house renovation or addition might not be in the cards, but there’s a lot you can do with your current home to make it work for your family and lifestyle without needing to launch a Kickstarter.
Work with it
If you’re stuck in your current house, your first step is to assess what you have and look for ways to make it work for you. This doesn’t have to involve an expensive major renovation or addition project—there are probably a lot of resources already in your current home that you’re not using to their full potential, such as:
Home offices don’t have to be their own room—aside from that tiny closet, you can fit an office under a lofted bed, in the corner of your bedroom, or under a flight of stairs.
Hallways are often overlooked as usable space, but if yours are wide enough, you can cram seating or library space and even a sleeping area into your hallways.
Second (or third) bathrooms might not be in the cards if your house (and budget) are small, but if you just need a practical solution, you can actually create a usable bathroom just about anywhere in your home without any plumbing whatsoever.
Storage is one of the biggest reasons people feel like they’ve outgrown their homes, but you might be surprised at how much extra storage you can carve out of your house if you put your mind to it.
Laundry facilities in the house are one of the greatest gifts of the modern age. If your current home lacks a washer, a portable washing machine might make things more tolerable for you until you can find a place with laundry hookups.
By using every inch of your home’s potential you can find ways to make it meet your needs—at least for a while.
Start over
Sometimes all you need to make a house work for you is a reset. A cluttered, crowded house can have a negative impact on your mental health in general, which will obviously affect your feelings toward your home. Rooms filled with boxes can’t be used for their intended purpose, and the constant sense of disruption and unfinished business can make a home feel less than comfortable. Decluttering and organizing your home can make it feel almost new.
And this doesn’t have to be a monumental project requiring time off from work and an extra therapy session—start with one room. Clear it out completely, clean and freshen it up (a coat of paint can make a room feel brand-new), then re-imagine it. Even if it remains a storage room, making it neat and tidy will make it usable, which will make you more positive toward it and thus toward the house. Repeat for each room at your own pace, and you’ll slowly gain back that sense of pride, control, and ownership you had when you first bought the place.
Look outward
Maybe you’ve explored the spare square footage and decluttered like a champ, and there are just things your current home can’t give you. Space is finite, after all, and there may be no super creative solutions to give you that space or functionality you need.
If you’re stuck in your home for the time being, you might find contentment by looking elsewhere for what’s missing in your house. No space for a workout? A gym membership’s got you covered. No spot for even a tiny office? A co-working space nearby might work. If your closets are bursting, hauling seasonal stuff to a local storage unit can give you your house back. While the ideal might be to have all these things conveniently in your house, stashing them away temporarily will at least meet your needs until you can make some real estate moves.
Personalize
It’s funny: You go through all the trouble and expense of buying a house, and then you work very hard to keep the place “neutral” for potential resale. You never use the bathtub, but you keep it because it’s “good for resale value.” You choose paint colors and design elements that are broadly in line with what “most people” want in a house.
This can result in a house that never feels like yours—it’s like living in someone else’s house. If you’re going to be in this house for the time being, one way to feel better about it and make it work for you is to go in the opposite direction: Lean into personalizing the space. Choose colors and furniture pieces that make you happy, display your collections and art pieces, DIY whatever you want or need to in order to use the space the way you want to. If part of what’s driving your desire to move is a sense of not being comfortable in your current home, working to make it as comfortable as possible—resale value be damned—might solve the problem.
So, you want to buy a MacBook? You have no shortage of options. If you go directly through Apple, you can pick between the Air or the Pro, in two different sizes, across a seemingly endless number of configurations. If you’re shopping from a third party retailer, the issue only compounds. There are a lot of MacBooks out there.
Which machine you should purchase is entirely up to you and your unique needs. However, unless you have demanding or specialized work to do, there is one model that makes more sense than most. Before today, I recommended the M2 MacBook Air to most people. Its combination of price, portability, and power made it not just the best MacBook for most people, but the best laptop overall. (Sorry, PCs.) There were and are cheaper options out there, but that M2 MacBook Air was simply, in my opinion, the best overall value on the market.
Let’s kick things off with what makes the MacBook Air great: the price. The MacBook Air has been Apple’s entry-level machine for a long time, presenting a very clear trade—you spend $999, you get a solid Mac. You could pay more to acquire additional features and a power boost, but you didn’t have to. A cool grand was all you needed.
Apple changed that deal a bit starting with the launch of the M2 MacBook Air. Rather than offer it as the $999 entry-level model, it kept the previous generation M1 in that spot, and priced the newer model a few hundred dollars higher. Now, the “old” MacBook Air was your entry into the Mac line, and if you wanted the latest MacBook Air, you needed to spend more.
Lucky for consumers, the M1 MacBook Air was great. It’s still pretty great, in fact. Despite Apple continuing to release new Macs with new chips, I argued the M1 MacBook Air was the best MacBook for most people up until early 2024. It was only when Apple replaced the M1 with the now “old” M2 MacBook Air, pricing it at $999, that I proclaimed that to be the best option.
The M4 MacBook Air only continues that tradition, but with a bit of a twist. The M4 is brand new, and yet it’s also the entry-level machine in Apple’s lineup. That $999 doesn’t get you the model from last year, or the year before that: This is the freshest MacBook Air you can buy. It doesn’t feel like any kind of compromise, and that makes it easy to recommend to just about anyone looking for a great MacBook for a reasonable price.
The M4 chip
If the argument was just about money, it wouldn’t hold water. Now that Apple has dropped both the M2 and M3 MacBook Airs from its lineup, those machines are likely going to be on sale from other retailers. If the M2 MacBook Air was the best Mac for most people yesterday for $999, shouldn’t it definitely be the best Mac for most people if they can pick it up for? That’s part of my argument against buying the latest iPad Air after all—it’s a great tablet, but so are the older Airs that are now likely going to be less expensive than ever.
Yes, a discounted M2 MacBook Air is a fantastic value, and I wouldn’t stop anyone from buying it. But I feel that $999 is an even better value for the M4 MacBook Air. For that price, you get Apple’s latest chip—the M4—which represents the highest performing chip in Apple’s laptop lineup. The M4 in the MacBook Air has 10 CPU cores, compared to eight in the M2, and its NPU (the chip responsible for running AI tasks) has a 120GB/s memory bandwidth, versus 100GB/s on the M2. The M2 is still a very capable chip, and you won’t notice as big of a difference between the two as you would between the M1 and M4 (Apple says the M4 Air is up to twice as fast as an M1 Air) but there will be gains, as evidenced by independent benchmarking of other M4 chips. We won’t know exactly how well the M4 Air performs until reviewers put it through its paces, but it will undoubtedly run better than a chip that came out in 2022.
Beyond performance, Apple will almost assuredly support the M4 chip longer than the M2. I have no doubts that M2 still has many years of support ahead of it, but when the time does come for Apple to eventually stop issuing updates for these machines, the M4 will likely receive them for at least an extra year or two—if not longer.
Apple is also continuing the trend of starting each MacBook off with at least 16GB of RAM. Previously, Apple’s base MacBooks included 8GB of RAM, which, while enough for simple tasks, wasn’t always enough for more intensive applications—and didn’t bode well for their longevity. You needed to spend an extra $200 to upgrade to 16GB, which completely erased the value aspect of the MacBook Air. Last year, Apple made the decision to bump all Macs up to 16GB of RAM to start, without raising the price. Maybe $999 for a laptop with 8GB of RAM is a tough pill to swallow, but for one with 16GB? It’s an excellent value.
The perks you expect from a MacBook Air
Apple hasn’t broken the mold with the M4 MacBook Air, and that’s a good thing. This design is functionally identical to both the M2 and M3 MacBook Airs—which is to say, it’s excellent.
The base M4 MacBook Air still comes with a 13.6-inch “Liquid Retina” display, with a resolution of 2560×1664, a P3 wide color gamut, and a maximum brightness of 500 nits. It weighs the same 2.7 pounds, comes with the same great speakers and microphones, and ships with an excellent backlit keyboard with Touch ID. (The days of the butterfly keyboard are long gone.) Like the M3 MacBook Air, this M4 comes with Wi-Fi 6E support (one generation newer than the M2’s Wi-Fi 6 support).
You also get MagSafe charging, which is among the best MacBook features. Why Apple ever rid itself of magnetic chargers, I’ll never understand, but at least it has corrected itself in recent years.
Various smaller advantages
What the company did change from previous MacBooks are minor, but notable. First up, the camera. The M4 sports a 12MP camera, which should improve the quality of video calls. However, the bigger perk with this higher megapixel count is the addition of Center Stage. This feature, introduced on iPad and found on the M4 MacBook Pro, follows your face as you move around the frame during calls. That lets you walk and talk in front of your MacBook Air, while still remaining in focus.
The M4 MacBook Air still comes with two USB-C ports, but they’re different than the two found on previous MacBook Airs. These ports are Thunderbolt 4, not USB-4, which means there are higher minimum speed requirements here. That enables the M4 MacBook Air to extend to up to two 6K external monitors.
The colors have shifted a bit this go around, too. Gone is the iconic Space Gray option that many know and love, which isn’t necessarily a “small advantage.” However, the new Sky Blue color looks great. Ever since Apple revamped the iMac line with fun new colors back in 2021, I’ve wanted them to adopt the same with their laptops. This is the closest we’ve come yet, and I hope they keep it up with future models.
Older MacBooks are still an excellent value (with a caveat)
Apple will let you preorder an M4 MacBook Air today, and the machine will go on sale on Wednesday, March 12. But if you have any interest in an older Mac, I’d recommend waiting to buy it if you can: Once this new MacBook is out, the discounts on older machines should follow.
M3 MacBook Air, 16GB RAM (2024)
$1,099.00 at Amazon
$1,299.00 Save $200.00
$1,099.00 at Amazon
$1,299.00 Save $200.00
M2 MacBook Air, 16GB Ram (2022)
$799.00 at Amazon
$999.00 Save $200.00
$799.00 at Amazon
$999.00 Save $200.00
Apple won’t be selling new M2 and M3 MacBook Airs, but outlets like Amazon and Best Buy certainly will. If you’re looking to pick up a new MacBook Air for under $999, that’s the way to do it. I imagine these companies will take $100 or $200 off these models at least, if not more. If Apple is selling new M4s for $999, these stores can’t justify keeping older models at the same price. Apple will likely sell used M2 and M3 models in its refurbished store, too, so keep an eye out there.
Like I said above, the M2 and M3 chips are still excellent, and Apple will likely support them for years. No matter which of these three machines you buy, they’ll feel functionality the same, since the design hasn’t changed, so you’ll snag a modern MacBook experience for a great price.
Check your RAM
My one caveat is to watch out for the RAM: You will likely find deals on MacBooks with 8GB of RAM, which I can’t recommend in 2025. These Macs will generally work well, and may run the tasks you need to run, but you will hit limitations with that amount of memory sooner rather than later. Your Mac won’t work as well as machine with 16GB of RAM, and, in all likelihood, Apple will drop support for it sooner than the models with more memory. These machines aren’t worthless by any means (Apple currently fully supports all M-series Macs with 8GB of RAM) but if you’re looking to buy a new MacBook this year, it’s important to prioritize that 16GB of RAM.
WASHINGTON, March 5, 2025 – The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced that people recovering from the impact of recent severe storms, flooding and straight-line winds may be eligible for food assistance through USDA’s Disaster Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (D-SNAP). Approximately 12,600 households in 14 counties in Kentucky are estimated to be eligible for this relief to help with grocery expenses.
All batteries age, and the lithium ion battery in your iPhone is no exception. Overtime, the battery degrades, meaning it can no longer hold as much of a charge as it could when it was new. After a few years of using the phone, you may notice your phone needs more frequent juice-ups throughout the day.
When the inevitable happens to you, you don’t need to buy a new iPhone. Instead, you can simply replace the battery at a relatively inexpensive cost. Depending on your iPhone, you may not only notice an increase in time away from the charger, but also a boost in performance, since iOS slows down the processing power of your iPhone when its battery is too degraded.
Though replacing your battery is possible, it could certainly be easier. Apple secures the battery to the inside of most iPhones with strong adhesive. To remove it, you need to pull on a few tabs that are easy to break, making the removal process more precarious than it should be. The battery itself is also fragile, and you’ll need to remove and reattach some very delicate cables. Despite all of this, it’s possible to replace your battery yourself, but it’s simpler to opt to take it to a repair shop. (Apple would prefer you use one of its own.)
All that said, the process is notably easier with three of the iPhone 16 devices—including the newly released iPhone 16e.
Some iPhone 16s use a different adhesive
The iPhone 16, 16 Plus, and 16e all ship with a new type of battery adhesive that makes repairs much easier. At first glance, it doesn’t seem like much has changed: When you pry open the back case of your iPhone, you’ll still find a tab on its battery. However, that tab isn’t meant to be pulled yet. Instead, you need to apply an electric current through the adhesive holding the battery to the device for 60 seconds. The current is enough to shake the battery loose, at which point, you use the tab to gently pull the battery away from the iPhone. You don’t need to worry about damaging the battery, since the battery will be so loose, gravity could remove it.
As iFixit explains, the tech works by oxidizing the adhesive with the electric current. That breaks the bonds that actually makes the glue adhesive, so it no longer sticks to the surface it was connected to. It’s quite technical, and I am no expert, but it’s really cool tech—and something that makes replacing the battery in your iPhone 16, 16 Plus, or 16e safer and easier.
Apple probably didn’t make these changes out of its concern for customers. Instead, it’s likely in response to an EU law that requires smartphones to have “replaceable batteries” by 2027. Europe has had quite an influence over Apple’s decisions in recent years, requiring the company to open up many of its closed platforms, including allowing independent app stores and browsers on iOS.
That said, if you own an iPhone 16 Pro or 16 Pro Max, you won’t find your batteries any easier to repair. These devices still come with Apple’s traditional battery adhesive, so their batteries are just as difficult to replace as ever. It’s not clear why Apple opted to skip this new adhesive on the Pro phones, but it is possible that it’s simply trialing the fresh tech on some of their devices, not all—especially while there’s still time before that EU law takes effect. Perhaps the entire iPhone 17 line, Pro iPhones and all, will sport easy-to-remove batteries. For now, it seems it’s just the less expensive models that benefit.
The iPhone 16e has some added repairability
In addition to this new adhesive, Apple added some additional repairability perks to the 16e. The biggest is that Apple now has a guide for repairing the USB-C charging port on this particular iPhone, the first time the company has issued a manual for such a repair.
However, as iFixit reports, this repair is not easy. It involves removing a number of iPhone components in the way of the port, including the back glass, front camera, top speaker, battery, among others; lift up the logic board, then access the USB-C port to repair it. This was apparently the procedure before, but now Apple has a step-by-step guide confirming the difficulty of the repair.
Finally, you don’t need to be as careful when opening the back cover on the 16e: One of the metal clips that holds the back cover in place now guards an important flex cable. With other iPhones, you can easily slice this cable while sliding pick tools into the back case when opening it, but the clip here ensures you won’t damage the cable in the process.
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You can get thousands of free e-books over the course of 2025 if you know where—and when—to look. All year long, Amazon is offering free Kindle e-books to readers, with new opportunities popping up every month. In March, Prime members can get two free Kindle e-books from Amazon’s First Reads program.
What is Amazon’s First Reads?
Amazon First Reads is a program aimed at Prime members that offers early access to new e-books across many genres, as curated by First Reads editors (one of your many Prime Member benefits). Prime members can choose to download one free e-book every month from a rotating list—though some months that number is bumped up to two—and non-members get them for a discounted price. These e-books can be read on any compatible Kindle device or via the free Kindle app.
How to get your free Amazon Kindle e-books in March
Go to the First Reads landing page to see the full list of e-books available this month. Once you find a book that seems interesting, click the “Shop Now” button from the First Reads landing page. Make sure you’re not being redirected to the Kindle or Amazon mobile application, because you won’t see the free book option there; instead, use your internet browser on your phone or computer.
Make sure you’re not clicking the ”Pre-order for…” button, as that will direct you to pay; instead, click the “Read for Free” or the “Buy Now with 1-Click” button under the “First Reads” banner on the book’s Amazon page (don’t worry, you won’t be charged). This will send the e-book directly to the Kindle linked to your Amazon account.
You can see what it should look like from the screenshot below.
Credit: Daniel Oropeza
You’ll know you did it right when you see a “Thanks, [your name]!” order summary indicating the e-book is being auto-delivered to the Kindle Cloud Reader.
Free Amazon Kindle e-books available in March 2025
This month, you can choose one from eight new Kindle e-books plus a free short story, The Sublet. Amazon notes the genre for each of the books above the title, offering a quick way to narrow down your options. (If you hover over the “See Editor Notes” under the “Shop Now” button, you’ll be able to read a short description from the First Reads editor who picked the book.)
Here are your options for March 2025. You can choose one of these e-books, plus the short story The Sublet:
Despite this trend, Microsoft recently launched Copilot for Mac, for some reason. While Windows users are looking to remove Microsoft’s AI tool from their machines, Mac users are invited to actively install it on theirs. So, in the interest of fairness, I am going to take the exact opposite approach to hiding Copilot in Windows: setting up Copilot on your Mac. The thing is, unless you really love Copilot, you probably shouldn’t use this app.
Copilot for Mac is about what you’d expect
Copilot for Mac is basically the web version of Copilot in a dedicated Mac window. You can sign into your Microsoft account and start talking with the virtual assistant right away. There are a few Mac-specific features here: The first is a system-wide keyboard shortcut, Option-Space, for quickly sending a message to Copilot in a little pop-up overlay. (You can change the keyboard shortcut if you want.) This is not unlike how ChatGPT’s launcher works on its desktop app.
Credit: Justin Pot
There’s also a menu bar icon you can click to bring up this same pop-up. The application respects your Mac’s Appearance setting, meaning if you switch to Dark Mode so will Copilot.
And that’s honestly most of the Mac integration features offered. Unlike ChatGPT’s Mac app, there’s no screenshot button, which is a bit of a disappointment—that feature lets you ask ChatGPT about things currently on your screen. With Copilot, you’ll have to take the screenshot and upload it yourself. If you don’t care about this keyboard shortcut you could just as easily use the web version of Copilot and not notice the difference.
You can use Copilot to do pretty much all of the usual stuff you associate with other large language model chatbots, like ChatGPT or Claude—everything from coding, to research, to cheating on homework. The free version of Copilot, notably, has access to current information from the web, meaning you can ask it about current events and sports. But there aren’t a lot of Mac-specific reasons to install the app.
For the sake of comparison, here is the Mac version (spouting widely-reported misinformation about the NHL trade deadline):
Credit: Justin Pot
And here’s the Windows version (which seems to have decent taste in Game Boy Advance games):
Credit: Justin Pot
Yeah, they’re the same. If you like Copilot on Windows, you’ll like it on Mac. If you haven’t tried Copilot, and are curious, maybe try the web version first. It’s essentially the same, and won’t take up any space on your hard drive.
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It’s a good time to shop for portable projectors, with the Nebula Capsule 3 GTV projector down to its lowest price and now the more powerful Anker Nebula Mars 3 Air going for $419.99 (originally $599.99), also its lowest price, according to price-tracking tools. Both of these projectors are portable, but the Nebula Mars 3 Air is more suitable for outdoor use.
The Nebula Mars 3 Air came out last August to an “average” review from PCMag due to its auto-focus feature (keystone) being finicky and the image being darker when watching 1080p SDR input content. However, it’s still a great portable projector for the right person.
This projector has 1080p resolution and supports 4K HDR input, and like the Nebula Capsule 3, it has a built-in Google TV with the Netflix app, which not a lot of other portable projectors offer. Google TV is also my favorite smart TV OS for projectors since you can cast your smartphone using the Chromecast feature.
Since you’ll likely be using it outdoors, brightness is important because you can only control the light outdoors to a certain degree. The 400 ANSI lumens doubles the brightness of what the Nebula Capsule 3 offers. The screen size ranges from 30 inches up to 150 inches. If you plug it in with the AC power, you get a boost in brightness, which is always appreciated. Otherwise, you can expect a battery life of 2.5 hours in Eco mode and 1 hour at full power. This projector also doubles as a Bluetooth speaker and lasts 8 hours when just playing music.
If you’re looking for a portable projector that you can easily carry around the home or want to use it outdoors, consider the Nebula Mars 3 Air. At its current price, it’s a good bang for your buck and better than the Nebula Capsule 3 if you plan to use it outdoors.
Washington, D.C., Mar. 4, 2025 — Today, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins delivered remarks to hundreds of local leaders at the National Association of Counties. There, she previewed her vision for restoring rural prosperity to America. She discussed the importance of the President’s efforts to rein in out-of-control government spending and federal overreach to return more power to the people. She also addressed the wildfires in the Carolinas and provided an update on the Department’s distribution of economic and disaster aid passed by Congress in December.