M3 MacBook Pros Are up to $500 Off

Several of the MacBook Pros with M3 and M3 Pro chips are discounted up to $500 off right now. The M3 MacBook Pro is practically the perfect laptop, and Apple made an 8GB RAM version with a more affordable starting price than previous generations ($400 lower, to be exact). Here’s the full rundown.

The 14.2-inch M3 MacBook Pro

The cheapest entry-level M3 MacBook Pro has a 14.2-inch screen. The base model has an M3 chip with an 8‑core CPU, 10‑core GPU, 8GB of RAM, and 512GB of storage for $1,399 (originally $1,599) after the on-page $99.01 coupon. The display is a mini LED with a 3,024 by 1,964 resolution and 120Hz screen refresh, which should help it run most games smoothly—this is something the M3 MacBook Air and previous MacBook Pros were not as capable of doing. You can read the “excellent” PCMag review here.

The 14.2-inch M3 Pro MacBook Pro

The $400 listing price difference between the M3 and M3 Pro MacBook Pro laptops is deceiving. The M3 Pro chip is leaps and bounds better in terms of value than the M3 for those looking for the best performance—and for those who can afford it. It comes with 18GB of RAM (10 more GB than the entry level M3 MacBook Pro), an 11‑core CPU, and 14‑core GPU M3 Pro chip. You also get about eight hours more battery life than the 14.2-inch M3 MacBook Pro. The M3 Pro is just a more powerful engine, although there are no upgrades in the display—so if the RAM and chip processing power is not what you’re after, the standard M3 MacBook Pro is the better choice. You can find this one for $1,699 (originally $1,999) after a $300 discount on Amazon. Read more about the M3 Pro 14.2-inch MacBook Pro in PCMag’s “outstanding” review here.

The 16.2-inch M3 Pro MacBook Pro

The M3 Pro 16.2-inch MacBook Pro is very similar to the 14.2-inch M3 MacBook Pro. The obvious main difference is the bigger screen, but it also has a stronger M3 Pro chip with a 12‑core CPU and 18‑core GPU, about four more hours of battery life, and a mini-LED backlit Liquid Retina XDR display with 3,456 by 2,234 pixels of resolution. Those upgrades result in a significantly higher price (it starts at $2,499) but you can usually find this one up to $300 off on Amazon. This is a good option if you want more screen real estate and more power than the 14.2-inch model offers but don’t want to spend about $3,000 for the M3 Max chip.

The 16.2-inch MacBook Pro laptop M3 Max chip

If you want to go all out, the MacBook Pro 16-inch M3 Max chip is the best MacBook Pro Apple offers. To be honest, it’s overkill for most people. It has 128GB of RAM, 8TB of memory, a 3,456 by 2,234 resolution, a Mini LED screen with a 120Hz refresh rate, a 40-core GPU Apple M3 Max graphics processor, and about 28 hours of battery life according to PCMag’s review. Again, hardly anyone needs that much power. You can get the M3 Max Chip MacBook Pro for $2,999 (originally $3,499) for $500 off, the lowest price it has been since its release.

YouTube Can Now Use AI to Remove Copyrighted Music From Videos

YouTube quietly celebrated Independence Day this week by previewing a new feature that uses AI to help creators declare independence from copyright strikes.

One of the most annoying parts of streaming or making YouTube videos for a living is when copyrighted music accidentally makes its way into your videos. If you don’t catch it early, you could be out on all of the money that video earns, and could get in trouble with YouTube itself.

Sometimes, this catches piracy. Often, it catches people who stumble across a licensed song in a video game or in the background of their vlog. For live video, not muting quickly enough could demonetize the stream’s archive, while creators making edited video might have to spend hours painstakingly isolating a song from the rest of their work.

YouTube’s had an “Erase Song” tool in beta for a while now, but the company wasn’t proud of its efficacy. Now, it’s updating the feature with a new AI algorithm that will scan a video for copyrighted music and give creators two options.

Erase Song will use AI to attempt to intelligently mute just the offending music while leaving the rest of your audio intact, while Mute all sound will work as a fallback to mute a video for the duration of a copyright protected song.

While YouTube is promising better performance with the updated tool, a company support page says it “might not work if the song is too hard to remove,” hence the need for a fallback.

Unfortunately, Erase Song is only available once a video has been copyright claimed, which means it can’t be used proactively. To access it, go to your copyright claim summary page and click on Select Action in the lower right corner of the screen. Click on Erase Song, then choose Erase Song (yes, again) to use AI to intelligently remove just the claimed audio. Alternatively, click on Mute all sound in the claimed segments if you’re not confident in what the AI can do. You can preview your edited video before finalizing your claim, and if you’re muting all sound in a claimed segment, you can either use suggested timestamps or customize your own.

The YouTube support page says that “if all claimed audio can be muted, the Content ID claim will be removed from your video,” meaning creators can use this system to avoid having to argue with a representative.

Erase Song joins other similar tools like Replace Song, which allows creators to replace a copyright claimed song with royalty free music, and Trim Out Segment, which just removes the copyright claimed part of a video in its entirety.

My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: Bose QuietComfort Earbuds II

When it comes to the best noise-canceling earphones, Bose has been on top for years. Before the third-generation Bose QuietComfort Ultra came out in 2023, the second-generation Bose QuietComfort Earbuds II were considered the best active noise-canceling (ANC) earbuds, and right now they’re on sale for $169.95 (originally $279). They’re $130 cheaper than the Ultra, but the ANC technology is the same.

It’s been almost two years since the release of the Bose QuietComfort Earbuds II, and they’re still some of the best ANC earbuds you can get today. Yes, the newer Bose QuietComfort Ultra are better overall, but they’re also more expensive. If you mainly care about ANC and want to save some money, the Bose QuietComfort Earbuds II might be a better choice.

PCMag gave these earbuds an “outstanding” review because of their great dynamic range with deep lows and bright highs, fantastic low- and high-frequency ANC, an Active Aware mode to hear your surroundings, and IPX4 rating for water resistance. Keep in mind there is no way to turn off the ANC with these earbuds, but you can always turn on Aware mode if you want to be able to hear your surroundings.

You’ll get between six and seven hours of juice with these earbuds. The charging case can provide about 18 hours of battery life. The case doesn’t support wireless charging and takes three hours to fully charge from empty, with 20 minutes of charging giving you up to two hours of listening time.

Use the ‘7-Minute Life’ to Create Faster To-Do Lists

There are so many productivity techniques out there and a lot of them can feel pretty intense. They might involve turning your to-dos into data, creating elaborate matrixes to prioritize your tasks, or listing everything you have to do before assigning it a grade based on a subjective scale. All of that takes time. The “7 Minute Life” framework, on the other hand, only takes a few minutes per day and is an effective way to plan what you need to do and stay motivated. Here’s how it works.

What is the 7 Minute Life?

This concept comes from Allyson Lewis, a productivity guru who founded the 7 Minute Life in an effort to help people feel engaged with their work and interests. Her technique can be applied to a variety of things, like unfinished tasks or reaching certain goals, but it’s also broad enough for everyday use.

Essentially, you dedicate seven minutes each morning and night to making decisions about your day and reflecting on what you did and need to do tomorrow. The idea is that you should choose to consciously focus for just those two seven-minute intervals, using that time to make deliberate choices about how you’ll spend the rest of the time in your day. Lewis’ technique is based on the fact that each day only has 1,440 minutes and 14 minutes only make up 1% of those. The rest of your time, if you plan it right, is all yours, so you should use that 1% of planning and reflecting time to prioritize your tasks and reflect on how it all went.

How to use the 7 Minute Life technique

Lewis offers courses, coaching, and resources for turning the 7 Minute Life into a whole lifestyle, but you can start small. Every morning, start your day by setting a timer for seven minutes and thinking about what you need to get done. You can create a to-do list during this time, structuring your day based on the magnitude and resource demands of individual tasks. At night, set your timer again, spending those seven minutes reflecting on what went well and what didn’t, as well as what you learned and can implement the next day, as if you were doing an after-action review.

You don’t want to spend longer than seven minutes on either activity. The goal here isn’t to overthink or plan too much; it’s to train yourself to make choices and assessments quickly, get on with the action, and learn from the patterns you start to notice during the reflection.

You can do this in a planner or phone app, but Lewis also sells a 7 Minute Life Daily Planner, if you’d prefer a journal more specifically designed for this purpose.

While you can certainly use other to-do list making and prioritizing techniques during the seven minutes in the morning, remember that this is about untethering yourself from getting into your own head too much and learning to be quicker with your decision-making and action plans. Once you identify your goals and mission, you should spend much more time doing than you do thinking or planning, which is what sets this technique apart from some of the other weedier ones out there.

Today’s Wordle Hints (and Answer) for Friday, July 5, 2024

If you’re looking for the Wordle answer for July 5, 2024 read on. We’ll share some clues, tips, and strategies, and finally the solution. Today’s puzzle is easier; I got it in three. Beware, there are spoilers below for July 5, Wordle #1,112! Keep scrolling if you want some hints (and then the answer) to today’s Wordle game.

How to play Wordle

Wordle lives here on the New York Times website. A new puzzle goes live every day at midnight, your local time.

Start by guessing a five-letter word. The letters of the word will turn green if they’re correct, yellow if you have the right letter in the wrong place, or gray if the letter isn’t in the day’s secret word at all. For more, check out our guide to playing Wordle here, and my strategy guide here for more advanced tips. (We also have more information at the bottom of this post, after the hints and answers.)

Ready for the hints? Let’s go!


Does today’s Wordle have any unusual letters?

We’ll define common letters as those that appear in the old typesetters’ phrase ETAOIN SHRDLU. (Memorize this! Pronounce it “Edwin Shirdloo,” like a name, and pretend he’s a friend of yours.)

Four of today’s letters are from our mnemonic. The other is also pretty common.

Can you give me a hint for today’s Wordle?

As a noun, something you have as a teenager; as a verb, to squeeze or press.

Does today’s Wordle have any double or repeated letters?

There are no repeated letters today. 

How many vowels are in today’s Wordle?

There is one vowel.

What letter does today’s Wordle start with?

Today’s word starts with C. 

What letter does today’s Wordle end with?

Today’s word ends with H. 

What is the solution to today’s Wordle?

Ready? Today’s word is CRUSH.

How I solved today’s Wordle

I started with RAISE and TOUCH, which gave me all of the information I needed to guess CRUSH.

Wordle 1,112 3/6

🟨⬛⬛🟩⬛
⬛⬛🟩🟨🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

Yesterday’s Wordle answer

Yesterday’s Wordle was easier. The hint was “a first appearance” and the answer contained four common letters and one fairly common letter.

The answer to yesterday’s Wordle was DEBUT.

A primer on Wordle basics

The idea of Wordle is to guess the day’s secret word. When you first open the Wordle game, you’ll see an empty grid of letters. It’s up to you to make the first move: type in any five-letter word. 

Now, you can use the colors that are revealed to get clues about the word: Green means you correctly guessed a letter, and it’s in the correct position. (For example, if you guess PARTY, and the word is actually PURSE, the P and R will be green.)

  • Yellow means the letter is somewhere in the word, but not in the position you guessed it. (For example, if you guessed PARTY, but the word is actually ROAST, the R, A and T will all be yellow.)

  • Gray means the letter is not in the solution word at all. (If you guessed PARTY and everything is gray, then the solution cannot be PURSE or ROAST.)

With all that in mind, guess another word, and then another, trying to land on the correct word before you run out of chances. You get six guesses, and then it’s game over.

The best starter words for Wordle

What should you play for that first guess? The best starters tend to contain common letters, to increase the chances of getting yellow and green squares to guide your guessing. (And if you get all grays when guessing common letters, that’s still excellent information to help you rule out possibilities.) There isn’t a single “best” starting word, but the New York Times’s Wordle analysis bot has suggested starting with one of these:

  • CRANE

  • TRACE

  • SLANT

  • CRATE

  • CARTE

Meanwhile, an MIT analysis found that you’ll eliminate the most possibilities in the first round by starting with one of these:

  • SALET

  • REAST

  • TRACE

  • CRATE

  • SLATE

Other good picks might be ARISE or ROUND. Words like ADIEU and AUDIO get more vowels in play, but you could argue that it’s better to start with an emphasis on consonants, using a starter like RENTS or CLAMP. Choose your strategy, and see how it plays out.

How to win at Wordle

We have a few guides to Wordle strategy, which you might like to read over if you’re a serious student of the game. This one covers how to use consonants to your advantage, while this one focuses on a strategy that uses the most common letters. In this advanced guide, we detail a three-pronged approach for fishing for hints while maximizing your chances of winning quickly.

The biggest thing that separates Wordle winners from Wordle losers is that winners use their guesses to gather information about what letters are in the word. If you know that the word must end in -OUND, don’t waste four guesses on MOUND, ROUND, SOUND, and HOUND; combine those consonants and guess MARSH. If the H lights up in yellow, you know the solution.

One more note on strategy: the original Wordle used a list of about 2,300 solution words, but after the game was bought by the NYT, the game now has an editor who hand-picks the solutions. Sometimes they are slightly tricky words that wouldn’t have made the original list, and sometimes they are topical. For example, FEAST was the solution one Thanksgiving. So keep in mind that there may be a theme.

Wordle alternatives

If you can’t get enough of five-letter guessing games and their kin, the best Wordle alternatives, ranked by difficulty, include:

How to Watch the Copa América Quarter Finals Using a VPN

The Copa América quarter finals are set to start this week at the same time as the EURO 2024. Argentina will face Ecuador, an undefeated Venezuela plays Canada, a strong Uruguayan team meets a struggling Brazil, and Colombia looks to beat their Panamanian neighbors. If you’re looking to stream the Copa América with a subscription, there are plenty of options for you to choose from. However, if you want to watch the matches without signing up for a standalone streaming service, a VPN is a good alternative—but it won’t be totally free, either.

To watch the upcoming Copa América games using a VPN, head over to Sportitalia, which is streaming all of the Copa América matches in Italy. Yes, you might not be physically in Italy, but that’s where a VPN comes into play. Express VPN is our favorite VPN for bypassing geo-blocking restrictions. It will run you $12.95 per month, $9.99 per month for six months, or an annual plan for $8.32 per month. VPNs are useful beyond just streaming these matches, so you may find that a month or two of the subscription price is worth it—if not, don’t forget to set yourself a reminder to cancel before you’re charged more than you expected.

Once you have ExpressVPN, open the app and go to Sportitalia on the same device (you’ll probably need your browser to translate to English unless you speak Italian), and you’ll be able to watch the Copa América matches there.

The Copa América 2024 match schedule

Thursday, July 4

  • 09:00 PM ET: Argentina vs. Ecuador (FOX, Univision, TUDN, Fubo, DirecTV Stream, Sling Blue)

Friday, July 5

  • 09:00 PM ET: Venezuela vs. Canada (FS1, Univision, TUDN, Fubo, DirecTV Stream, Sling Blue)

Saturday, July 6

  • 06:00 PM ET: Group D winners vs. Panama (FS1, Univision, TUDN, Fubo, DirecTV Stream, Sling Blue)

  • 09:00 PM ET: Uruguay vs. Group D runner-up (FS1, Univision, TUDN, Fubo, DirecTV Stream, Sling Blue)

Tuesday, July 9

  • 08:00 PM ET: Argentina/Ecuador vs. Venezuela/Canada (FS1, Univision, TUDN, Fubo, DirecTV Stream, Sling Blue)

Wednesday, July 10

  • 08:00 PM ET: TBD vs. TBD (FS1, Univision, TUDN, Fubo, DirecTV Stream, Sling Blue)

Saturday, July 13

  • 08:00 PM ET: TBD vs. TBD (FS1, Univision, TUDN, Fubo, DirecTV Stream, Sling Blue)

Sunday, July 14

  • 08:00 PM ET: TBD vs. TBD (FOX, Univision, TUDN, Fubo, DirecTV Stream, Sling Blue)

Today’s Wordle Hints (and Answer) for Thursday, July 4, 2024

If you’re looking for the Wordle answer for July 4, 2024 read on. We’ll share some clues, tips, and strategies, and finally the solution. Today’s puzzle is easier; I got it in four. Beware, there are spoilers below for July 4, Wordle #1,111! Keep scrolling if you want some hints (and then the answer) to today’s Wordle game.

How to play Wordle

Wordle lives here on the New York Times website. A new puzzle goes live every day at midnight, your local time.

Start by guessing a five-letter word. The letters of the word will turn green if they’re correct, yellow if you have the right letter in the wrong place, or gray if the letter isn’t in the day’s secret word at all. For more, check out our guide to playing Wordle here, and my strategy guide here for more advanced tips. (We also have more information at the bottom of this post, after the hints and answers.)

Ready for the hints? Let’s go!


Does today’s Wordle have any unusual letters?

We’ll define common letters as those that appear in the old typesetters’ phrase ETAOIN SHRDLU. (Memorize this! Pronounce it “Edwin Shirdloo,” like a name, and pretend he’s a friend of yours.)

Four of today’s letters are from our mnemonic. The other is fairly common.

Can you give me a hint for today’s Wordle?

A first appearance.

Does today’s Wordle have any double or repeated letters?

There are no repeated letters today. 

How many vowels are in today’s Wordle?

There are two vowels.

What letter does today’s Wordle start with?

Today’s word starts with D. 

What letter does today’s Wordle end with?

Today’s word ends with T. 

What is the solution to today’s Wordle?

Ready? Today’s word is DEBUT.

How I solved today’s Wordle

I started with RAISE and TOUCH, then tried AMEND, as options included the consonants M, D, and N. This left only three possible solutions (DUVET, DEBUT, and ETUDE), of which DEBUT seemed like the most common word.

Wordle 1,111 4/6

⬛⬛⬛⬛🟨
🟨⬛🟨⬛⬛
⬛⬛🟨⬛🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

Yesterday’s Wordle answer

Yesterday’s Wordle was easier. The hint was “this is a lower body part, colloquially” and the answer contained four common letters and one fairly common letter.

The answer to yesterday’s Wordle was THIGH.

A primer on Wordle basics

The idea of Wordle is to guess the day’s secret word. When you first open the Wordle game, you’ll see an empty grid of letters. It’s up to you to make the first move: type in any five-letter word. 

Now, you can use the colors that are revealed to get clues about the word: Green means you correctly guessed a letter, and it’s in the correct position. (For example, if you guess PARTY, and the word is actually PURSE, the P and R will be green.)

  • Yellow means the letter is somewhere in the word, but not in the position you guessed it. (For example, if you guessed PARTY, but the word is actually ROAST, the R, A and T will all be yellow.)

  • Gray means the letter is not in the solution word at all. (If you guessed PARTY and everything is gray, then the solution cannot be PURSE or ROAST.)

With all that in mind, guess another word, and then another, trying to land on the correct word before you run out of chances. You get six guesses, and then it’s game over.

The best starter words for Wordle

What should you play for that first guess? The best starters tend to contain common letters, to increase the chances of getting yellow and green squares to guide your guessing. (And if you get all grays when guessing common letters, that’s still excellent information to help you rule out possibilities.) There isn’t a single “best” starting word, but the New York Times’s Wordle analysis bot has suggested starting with one of these:

  • CRANE

  • TRACE

  • SLANT

  • CRATE

  • CARTE

Meanwhile, an MIT analysis found that you’ll eliminate the most possibilities in the first round by starting with one of these:

  • SALET

  • REAST

  • TRACE

  • CRATE

  • SLATE

Other good picks might be ARISE or ROUND. Words like ADIEU and AUDIO get more vowels in play, but you could argue that it’s better to start with an emphasis on consonants, using a starter like RENTS or CLAMP. Choose your strategy, and see how it plays out.

How to win at Wordle

We have a few guides to Wordle strategy, which you might like to read over if you’re a serious student of the game. This one covers how to use consonants to your advantage, while this one focuses on a strategy that uses the most common letters. In this advanced guide, we detail a three-pronged approach for fishing for hints while maximizing your chances of winning quickly.

The biggest thing that separates Wordle winners from Wordle losers is that winners use their guesses to gather information about what letters are in the word. If you know that the word must end in -OUND, don’t waste four guesses on MOUND, ROUND, SOUND, and HOUND; combine those consonants and guess MARSH. If the H lights up in yellow, you know the solution.

One more note on strategy: the original Wordle used a list of about 2,300 solution words, but after the game was bought by the NYT, the game now has an editor who hand-picks the solutions. Sometimes they are slightly tricky words that wouldn’t have made the original list, and sometimes they are topical. For example, FEAST was the solution one Thanksgiving. So keep in mind that there may be a theme.

Wordle alternatives

If you can’t get enough of five-letter guessing games and their kin, the best Wordle alternatives, ranked by difficulty, include:

My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: Amazon Fire HD 8 Tablet

Prime Day is just around the corner, but early Prime Day and Fourth of July deals are already here. If you’re looking for a tablet to do some streaming or social media doom scrolling, the 64GB Amazon Fire HD 8 tablet is $54.99 (originally $129.99).

The Amazon Fire HD 8 tablet came out in 2022 and succeeded the Amazon Fire 7 tablet, which ironically is $5 more than the Fire HD 8 right now. This Fire HD 8 is one inch bigger, has a faster hexa-core processor (over the quad-core), better resolution with 1,280 by 800 pixels, about three more hours of battery life (between 10 and 13 hours), has a brighter screen, and twice as much storage with the possibility to expand it to 1TB.

The high-definition touch screen is not amazing by any means (neither is the 2GB RAM or 2MP cameras), but for a $54.99 tablet, you’ll get great value for your money if you’re just looking for something you can carry around to watch your shows or surf the web. This is a great budget tablet, but keep in mind that since it is a Fire Tablet, you’ll be limited in terms of the apps you can download. Fire devices are not compatible with Google, so you won’t have the Google App Store. You’ll still have access to all of the major streaming apps from Amazon’s own app store, though.

Why You Shouldn’t Feel Guilty About Your Screen Time

I write for a living, which means I reflexively spend a good chunk of my day trying to avoid writing. Computers are perfect for this: I have quick access to every distraction you can possibly dream of, all on the device I should in theory be using to write.

Perhaps the best part of this whole arrangement is how easy it is to feel guilty about all of the writing I’m not doing. The best tool for this is the screen time feature offered on Apple and Android devices, which allow you to review how much time you’ve spent using each app on your device. These are perfect applications for feeling guilty in a way that doesn’t really inspire any kind of self reflection or change: they just make me feel bad.

And you know what? I think me feeling guilty, and not doing anything about it, is on some level the reason these apps are built into phone operating systems. Such features subtly push the blame away from the intentionally addictive and habit forming applications I use and toward me.

To make this argument, I’m going to talk about littering. Please don’t leave.

Pay no attention to the multinationals behind the curtain

Littering is obviously bad—I’m not going to pretend that it isn’t. But a lot of the anti-littering messaging you’ve seen is funded by the companies that produce the wasteful packaging that ends up on the ground. Put simply: there wouldn’t be as much litter if regulations forced companies not to over-package everything, but that would cut into profits. Anti-littering campaigns were a specific corporate tactic to prevent regulation. Here’s Bradford Plumer, writing for Mother Jones:

In 1953, the packaging industry—led by American Can Company and Owens-Illinois Glass Company, inventors of the one-way can and bottle, respectively—joined up with other industry leaders, including Coca-Cola and the Dixie Cup Company to form Keep America Beautiful (KAB), which still exists today. KAB was well-funded and started a massive media campaign to rail against bad environmental habits on the part of individuals rather than businesses.

This isn’t a conspiracy theory—everyone involved was fairly transparent about their motivations, as Plumer’s reporting makes plain. I am not saying that all the people who work for Keep America Beautiful are cynical—I’m sure some sincerely want to reduce litter, and reducing litter is good. But what I am saying is that there is value, for companies, in shifting the blame for litter away from wasteful packaging practices and toward individuals, and that value is the main reasons such large companies are diverting money to such a tactic.

I think the screen time feature on your phone is similar. I am certain that there are people inside both Apple and Google who are sincerely concerned about users’ phone habits, and that screen time features exist in part out of those sincere concerns. At the same time, though, this feature plays a trick similar to the anti-littering campaign: to subtly switch the blame for how much time we all spend on our phones away from the tech industry and toward the individual.

It’s not about the time, it’s about what you do with it

Companies like Google, TikTok, and Facebook employ some of the smartest people on the planet and incentivize them to build software that gets users to spend as much time as possible using their products. Using self control to limit your screen time in that context isn’t bringing a knife to a gun fight—it’s bringing a water pistol to a thermonuclear war. Tech companies know this—believe me, they obsess over user data more than you could possibly imagine, and they know that screen time as a tool can, at best, help you aim that water pistol a little better.

Put simply: if knowing how much time you looked at your screen really helped you waste less time on your devices, the feature wouldn’t exist. I think that there needs to be more regulations around the kinds of tactics applications use to pull us into scrolling trances, though I don’t think that’s likely to happen anytime soon.

I recently read an article on Simone.org that outlined this all well, in much fewer words than I’ve used here:

Here’s the truth: Screen time doesn’t matter. It’s not about how much you use your phone. It’s about whether your phone is a needy, attention-sucking vampire. If that’s the case, the only healthy screen time is no screen time. Zero. That’s why the main metric tracked by screen time apps is deceptive: 10 minutes of shooting crack cocaine intravenously are still 10 minutes of shooting crack cocaine intravenously.

I am not going to sit here and tell you which applications are good and which applications are bad—only you can figure that out for yourself. And I’m not going to try to tell you how you should use your device—again, that’s on you.

What I am going to do is tell you that there’s value to thinking critically about how you’re using your technology. Devices are, in theory, a tool. When you use them it should be toward accomplishing a specific goal. That might be writing, an art project, or coding. It also might be relaxing. It is valuable, no matter what your goal is, to be intentional about it. Your attention is valuable—what you do with it literally shapes the person you become.

My advice is to think less about how much time you’re spending on your devices and to think more about what you’re doing during that time. Two hours spent scrolling through Reddit posts is different than two hours spent reading an ebook. I can go even further: two hours spent scrolling r/all on Reddit is different than two hours spent reading Reddit reviews of a tool you’re thinking of buying. The important thing isn’t how much time your spend on the device—it’s about noticing, at any given moment, whether the time you’re currently spending is being spent well.

Believe me: this is going to be an annoying habit to build, and in many ways the task is impossible. But your relationship with technology, like any other relationship, is complicated, and you need to work on it regularly if you want it to be healthy. Keep that in mind, and consider turning off screen time notifications altogether.

It’s Time to Learn What ‘Core Sleep’ Actually Is

Friends, let’s talk about one of the most confusing terms you’ll see on your fitness tracker—specifically your Apple Watch. Next to REM sleep, which you’ve probably heard of, and “deep” sleep, which feels self explanatory, there’s “core” sleep. And if you google what core sleep means, you’ll get a definition that is entirely opposite from how Apple uses the term. So let’s break it down.

The root of the confusion lies in the fact that the term “core sleep” has been used in the scientific literature to mean a few different things. Importantly, it’s not a recognized sleep stage. Apple, on the other hand, decided to rename the sleep stages its watch can detect, and called one of them “core sleep”—but it bears no relation to any of the previous common uses of the term.

“Core sleep” in the Apple Watch is the same as light sleep

Let me give you a straightforward explanation of what you’re seeing when you look at your Apple sleep data. 

Your Apple Watch tries to guess, mainly through your movements, when you’re in each stage of sleep. (To truly know your sleep stages would require a sleep study with more sophisticated equipment, like an electroencephalogram. The watch is just doing its best with the data it has.) 

Apple says their watch can tell the difference between four different states: 

  • Awake

  • Light (“core”) sleep

  • Deep sleep

  • REM sleep

These categories roughly correspond to the sleep stages that neuroscientists can observe with polysomnography, which involves hooking you up to an electroencephalogram, or EEG. (That’s the thing where they attach wires to your head). Scientists recognize three stages of non-REM sleep, with the third being described as deep sleep. That means stages 1 and 2, which are sometimes called “light” sleep, are being labeled as “core” sleep by your wearable.  

In other words: Apple’s definition of “core sleep” is identical to scientists’ definition of “light sleep.” It is otherwise known as N2 sleep. (More on that in a minute.)

So why didn’t Apple use the same wording as everyone else? The company says in a document on their sleep stage algorithm that they were worried people would misunderstand the term “light sleep” if they called it that.

The label Core was chosen to avoid possible unintended implications of the term light, because the N2 stage is predominant (often making up more than 50 percent of a night’s sleep), normal, and an important aspect of sleep physiology, containing sleep spindles and K-complexes.   

In other words, they thought we might assume that “light” sleep is less important than “deep” sleep, so they chose a new, important-sounding name to use in place of “light.”

A chart on the same page lays it out: non-REM stages 1 and 2 fall under the Apple category of “core” sleep, while stage 3 is “deep” sleep. That’s how Apple defined it in testing: If an EEG said a person was in stage 2 when the watch said they were in “core,” that was counted as a success for the algorithm.

What are the known sleep stages?

Let’s back up to consider what was known about sleep stages before Apple started renaming them. The current scientific understanding, which is based on brain wave patterns that can be read with an EEG, includes these stages: 

Non-REM stage 1 (N1) 

N1 only lasts a few minutes. You’re breathing normally. Your body is beginning to relax, and your brain waves start to look different than they do when you’re awake. This would be considered part of your “light” sleep.

Non-REM stage 2 (N2)

Also usually considered “light” sleep, N2 makes up about half of your sleep time. This stage includes spikes of brain activity called sleep spindles, and distinctive brainwave patterns called K complexes. (These are what the Apple document mentioned above.) This stage of sleep is thought to be when we consolidate our memories. Fun fact: if you grind your teeth in your sleep, it will mostly be in this stage. 

Non-REM stage 3 (N3) 

N3 is often called “deep” sleep, and this stage accounts for about a quarter of your night. It has the slowest brain waves, so it’s sometimes called “slow wave sleep.” It’s hard to wake someone up from this stage, and if you succeed, they’ll be groggy for a little while afterward. This is the stage where the most body repair tends to happen, including muscle recovery, bone growth in children, and immune system strengthening. As we age, we spend less time in N3 and more time in N2.

(There was an older classification that split off the deepest sleep into its own stage, calling it non-REM stage 4, but currently that deepest portion is just considered part of stage 3.) 

REM sleep

REM sleep is so named because this is where we have Rapid Eye Movement. Your body is temporarily paralyzed, except for the eyes and your breathing muscles. This is the stage best known for dreaming (although dreams can occur in other stages as well).

The brain waves of a person in REM sleep look very similar to those of a person who is awake, which is why some sleep-tracking apps show blocks of REM as occurring near the top of the graph, near wakefulness. We don’t usually enter REM sleep until we’ve been through the other stages, and we cycle through these stages all night. Usually REM sleep is fairly short during the beginning of the night, and gets longer with each cycle. 

How much core sleep do I need?

Using Apple’s definition, in which core sleep is the same as light sleep, it’s normal for almost half of your sleep to be core sleep. Sleep scientists give an approximate breakdown (although the exact numbers may vary from person to person, and your needs aren’t always the same every night):

  • N1 (very light sleep): About 5% of the total (just a few minutes)

  • N2 (light or “core” sleep): About 45%, so just under four hours if you normally sleep for eight hours

  • N3 (deep sleep): About 25%, so about two hours if you normally sleep for eight hours

  • REM: About 25%, so also about two hours.

Other ways people use the term “core sleep”

I really wish Apple had chosen another term, because the phrase “core sleep” has been used in other ways. It either doesn’t refer to a sleep stage at all, or if it is associated with sleep stages, it’s used to refer to deep sleep stages. 

In the 1980’s, sleep scientist James Horne proposed that your first few sleep cycles (taking up maybe the first five hours of the night) constitute the “core” sleep we all need to function. The rest of the night is “optional” sleep, which ideally we’d still get every night, but which it’s not a big deal to miss out on from time to time. He described this in a 1988 book called Why We Sleep (no relation to the 2017 book by another author) but you can see his earlier paper on the topic here. He uses the terms “obligatory” and “facultative” sleep in that paper, and switched to the core/optional terminology later. 

You’ll also find people using the phrase “core sleep” to refer to everything but light sleep. For example, this paper on how sleep changes as we age compares their findings in terms of sleep stages with Horne’s definition of core sleep. In doing so, they describe core sleep as mainly consisting of stages N3-N4 (in other words, N3 as described above). 

From there, somehow the internet has gotten the idea that N3 and REM are considered “core” sleep. I don’t know how that happened, and I don’t see it when I search the scientific literature. I do see it on “what is core sleep?” junk articles on the websites of companies selling weighted blankets and melatonin gummies. 

For one final, contradictory definition, the phrase “core sleep” is also used by people who are into polyphasic sleep. This is the idea that you can replace a full night’s sleep with several naps during the day, something that biohacker types keep trying to make happen, even though it never pans out. They use the term pretty straightforwardly: If you have a nighttime nap that is longer than your other naps, that’s your “core sleep.” Honestly, that’s a fair use of the word. I’ll allow it.

So, to wrap up: Core sleep, if you’re a napper, is the longest block of sleep you get during a day. Core sleep, to scientists who study sleep deprivation, is a hypothesis about which part of a night’s sleep is the most important. But if you’re just here because you were wondering what your Apple sleep app means by “core sleep,” it means stages N1-N2, or light sleep.