
Marc Porat sat with a red notebook in 1989, drawing what no one else could see. A little rectangular piece of glass with a touch screen, phone, fax, messages, video, games, ticket purchases, and apps delivered over the air. He named it the Pocket Crystal. It would feel like a piece of jewelry you carried every day, something with the comfort of a seashell and the pull of a crystal. At Apple, where he worked, the idea landed with John Sculley. Resources stayed scarce. So in May 1990 the project left Cupertino and became its own company. Bill Atkinson and Andy Hertzfeld, two of the original Macintosh wizards, signed on. General Magic was born.

iOS 27 public beta rolled out this afternoon and the rebuilt Siri is the reason most people will install it on day one. After years of half-steps and delays, Apple has delivered a version that actually reaches into your email, messages, calendar, and the stuff on your screen to get things done without forcing you to open half a dozen apps first.

SpaceX just released a new documentary that drops straight into the control rooms and launch site during the final stretch before its biggest rocket flew again. Titled Critical Path, the 34-minute film follows engineers at Starbase in Texas through the intense days leading up to Flight 12 on May 22. It is the second episode in their ongoing series and stays tightly focused on the real work required to get the first Version 3 Starship and Super Heavy off the ground.

Every phone forces a daily choice between screens optimized for different tasks. Standard color displays handle photos, video, and apps with ease but can strain eyes during long reading sessions and consume more power. E Ink panels reverse those strengths and weaknesses. They deliver paper-like text that stays readable in bright sunlight and sip battery life during hours of books or notes. Hisense built the A10 to remove that forced trade-off.

Security cameras frequently promise peace of mind yet deliver grainy clips, nonstop false alerts, or hidden fees that add up fast. The Tapo C530WS from TP-Link, priced at $55.99 (was $70), takes a simpler route and focuses on the basics done right. A 5-megapixel sensor records in 3K resolution. Details hold up well when you zoom during playback, whether checking a face at the front gate or reading a plate on a vehicle that pulled into the driveway. Daytime color stays natural and edges remain defined across the frame.