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The Television Market in 2026

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The television market in 2026 has reached a fascinating tipping point. Technologies that were the exclusive playground of “home theater enthusiasts” just two years ago have trickled down into the mid-range and budget segments.

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Here are the most significant developments in TV technology that are now accessible to budget-minded buyers.

​1. The Rise of “Budget” Mini-LED

​Until recently, Mini-LED was a premium feature reserved for flagship models. By 2026, it has become the standard for high-performance budget TVs.

​The Tech: Instead of a few dozen large light bulbs behind the screen, Mini-LED uses thousands of microscopic LEDs. This allows for much more precise Local Dimming, giving you “inky” blacks that rival OLED without the high price tag.

​Budget Access: Brands like TCL (QM6K series) and Hisense (U7/U8 series) are now offering Mini-LED panels for under $600. Even entry-level models are hitting brightness levels (up to 1,500 to 2,000 nits) that were unheard of in this price bracket previously.

​2. High-Frame Rate Gaming for All

​Gaming features used to be a major “tax” on a TV’s price. Now, the gap between a high-end gaming monitor and a budget TV has almost disappeared.

​144Hz Refresh Rates: While 120Hz was the gold standard, budget models like the TCL QM6K now offer 144Hz native refresh rates out of the box.

​HDMI 2.1 is Standard: Features like VRR (Variable Refresh Rate) and ALLM (Auto Low Latency Mode), which prevent screen tearing and lag on PS5/Xbox Series X, are now found on TVs costing less than $500.

​3. The “Affordable” OLED

​OLED has long been the “holy grail” of TV tech, but price has always been the barrier. In 2026, we are seeing the emergence of true “budget OLEDs.”

​LG B5 Series: The LG B-series has matured into a powerhouse for value seekers. You can now often find 48-inch or 55-inch OLEDs on sale for $650 to $800, offering the perfect contrast and “pixel-perfect” blacks once reserved for $2,000+ displays.

​Supply Chain Wins: Manufacturing costs for OLED panels dropped significantly in late 2025, allowing manufacturers to move away from the expensive “Evo” panels in their base models while still maintaining elite picture quality.

​4. AI-Powered Upscaling in Cheap Chips

​Previously, only expensive TVs from Sony or Samsung had the “brains” to make old 1080p content look like 4K.

​Generative AI Upscaling: Budget processors (like the Alpha 8 AI Gen2) now use sophisticated AI neural networks to “fill in the blanks” of low-resolution video. This means your old DVDs or standard-definition cable looks significantly sharper on a $400 TV today than it did on a $400 TV from 2022.

If you’re shopping right now, look for “Clearance” 2025 models (like the LG C5 or Samsung S90D). With the release of 2026 flagships at CES, these high-end “last year” models often drop into the budget-buyer territory ($800 to $950 range).

Filed Under: Personal Tech Today

Antigravity A1 Infinity Bundle

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The Sky Has No Edges.

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Every Angle. Every Moment.

There was a time when you had to choose what to look at. That time is over.

01  The Problem With Forward

The World Doesn’t Face One Direction

For as long as camera drones have existed, they’ve had a silent agreement with gravity and geometry: you point the lens, you get the shot and everything else is gone forever. Miss the mountain reflected in the lake behind you while banking left. That moment belonged to the wind. The engineers at Antigravity were tired of that agreement. So, they broke it.“The A1 doesn’t capture footage. It captures everywhere simultaneously, in 8K, without compromise.” The result is the A1 Infinity: a 360-degree camera drone that doesn’t ask you to commit to a direction mid-flight. It captures all of it. Every angle. Every second. The mountain. The valley. The friends below, waving. The hawk gliding ten meters to the left that you didn’t even notice. All of it, crystalline and reframeable in 8K resolution, waiting for you to find it later.

02 Wearing the Sky

When the Goggles Go On

There is a specific kind of silence that happens when you slide the Vision goggles over your eyes for the first time. The world behind you the ground, the crowd, the noise ceases to matter. What replaces it is impossible to describe until you’ve been there.The dual 1-inch micro-OLED displays, driven by precision pancake optics, don’t simulate sky. They are sky. Not the window-seat approximation of it, not a wide-angle squint. You get the full, uninterrupted spherical panorama of wherever the A1 is hovering. Turn your head left, and the ridge materializes. Look straight up, and you’re staring into the blue vault above the drone’s rotors. Traditional FPV headsets lock you to a single frustum, a narrow cone of perception that mirrors the lens. The A1’s goggles liberate your gaze entirely. The drone is not your eye. It’s your perch. You look around freely, as if you’re hovering there yourself, weightless, patient, taking it all in.

03 The Language of Motion

Fly on Pure Instinct

Most pilots don’t fail because drones are difficult. They fail because the control systems ask you to translate intention into joystick geometry in real-time while also composing a shot, managing altitude, and monitoring battery. That’s too many languages at once. The A1 ships with two modes built around a different philosophy. In FreeMotion, you simply point to fly. The gesture is the command. In FPV mode, a subtle tilt of the wrist translates into precise directional movemen, kinesthetic, responsive, deeply satisfying in the way a well-weighted tool always is.

The A1 doesn’t require you to become a pilot. It asks only that you be curious about where you want to go next.

Add the Sky Genie system, eight cinematic maneuvers activated with a single tap, from the Arc Shot to the spiraling ascent that makes every landscape look like the opening of something important, and suddenly the barrier between vision and execution collapses entirely.

04 The Numbers

What the A1 Carries

Flight Time (3-battery bundle)117 min

Camera Resolution8K 360°

Display TechnologyDual Micro-OLED

Obstacle Avoidance360° Dual Fisheye

AI Edit1-Tap Film

Sky Genie Moves8 Cinematic

Return to HomeAutomatic RTH

05  The Shared Sky

Fly Once,
Experience Together

The loneliest thing about most aerial photography is the privateness of it. You fly, you see, you land and then you spend twenty minutes explaining to your friends what the view was like from up there. The words never quite land. The photos get closer. But they’re still flat. The A1’s Sky Path feature dissolves that problem. Record your flight path once, then hand the Vision goggles to someone else and let them inhabit it, looking wherever they want, experiencing the exact sky you charted, as though they’re floating there themselves. The summit. The coastline. The stadium from above at the moment the crowd erupts. Theirs now, too.

This is what the A1 Infinity Bundle offers that no drone has before: not just a tool for capturing memory, but a vehicle for sharing it , completely, immersively, without loss.

06 After the Flight

The Edit Already Knows

The 360-degree capture philosophy changes what editing means, too. With a traditional drone, you were locked to whatever framing you chose in the air. A degree off, a second late and  gone. With the A1’s Deep Track system, you select your subject after landing, and the drone’s 360 capture lets you reframe entirely in post without sacrificing a single pixel of quality. The shot you meant to get is almost certainly in there, waiting to be found. For those who want the story faster, AI Edit assembles your footage into a ready-to-share cinematic film with a single tap, smart highlights, motion, flow. Not a slideshow. A film. Your morning on the mountain, your afternoon on the coast, your evening in a city seen from above, edited and scored and ready before you’ve finished packing the case.

The A1 doesn’t just see everywhere. It remembers everything and it knows which moments were worth keeping. Antigravity A1 Infinity Bundle 8K 360°  117 Min Flight  Triple Battery  Vision Goggles. The sky has always been there. Now you can keep all of it.

Filed Under: Drones

Why 90% of New Washing Machines Are Garbage

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By Quality Rot – Your new washing machine was designed to fail. In this video, I break down the sealed drum scam that’s costing families hundreds in unnecessary repairs, which brands to avoid (Samsung, Whirlpool, Hotpoint), and the 3 brands that appliance repair professionals actually trust: LG, Miele, and Speed Queen.

Filed Under: Appliances

Micro‑Habits That Actually Stick

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Micro‑Habits That Actually Stick

Habit Science  ·  Behavior  ·  Self-Improvement

Micro‑Habits
That Actually Stick

Big transformations rarely begin with grand gestures. They begin with something almost embarrassingly small and that’s exactly the point.

Long Read ◆ 10 min read ◆ March 2026

There is a peculiar optimism that strikes every January, and again every Monday, every birthday, every “fresh start” we hand ourselves. We resolve to wake at five, meditate for an hour, run five miles, eat nothing processed, and read thirty pages before bed. For forty-eight hours, maybe seventy-two, we are the person we always meant to be. Then life reasserts itself, willpower evaporates, and we are back where we started, except now with an additional layer of guilt.

The problem was never motivation. The problem was scale. We attempted to rewire ourselves all at once, treating identity change like a software update — complete, instantaneous, and total. But the brain doesn’t work that way. It changes slowly, through repetition, through grooves worn by use.

Micro-habits are the answer to that mismatch. They are behaviors so small that refusing to do them feels more ridiculous than doing them. And, quietly, they work.

“You do not rise to the level of your goals. You fall to the level of your systems.”

The ScienceWhy Small Works

Every habit, large or small, runs on the same neural loop: a cue triggers a routine, which delivers a reward. The brain tags the sequence as efficient and begins automating it. The critical variable isn’t the size of the behavior. It’s the consistency of the loop. A two-minute habit practised daily creates a stronger neural groove than a two-hour habit practiced sporadically.

Stanford behavioral scientist BJ Fogg discovered that motivation is wildly unreliable. It spikes when we feel inspired and craters when we’re tired, stressed, or simply busy which is most of the time. Designing habits that don’t depend on motivation is therefore not a compromise; it’s strategic engineering. The tiny behavior sidesteps the motivation requirement entirely. You don’t need to feel like doing it. It’s over before resistance can form.

There’s also the matter of identity. Every time you perform a habit, however small, you cast a vote for the kind of person you are. One glass of water in the morning is a vote for someone who takes care of their health. One sentence written is a vote for someone who writes. Over time, these votes accumulate into a self-image, and self-image is a far more durable driver of behavior than any resolution.

The Habits

01The Two-Minute Rule

If a new behavior takes more than two minutes, scale it down until it doesn’t. Want to read more? The habit is not “read for thirty minutes.” The habit is “open the book.” Want to meditate? The habit is not “sit for twenty minutes.” The habit is “sit down and close your eyes.” The expanded version follows naturally but it is never required. This dismantles the all-or-nothing trap that kills most attempts before they begin.

Try this today

Pick one habit you’ve failed to start. Strip it down to its two-minute version and do only that, every day, for two weeks. No upgrades until the two-minute version is effortless.

02Habit Stacking

The brain is extraordinarily good at chaining behaviors together. You already have dozens of anchored routines such as brushing your teeth, making coffee, sitting at your desk. These are reliable cues, waiting to be used. The formula is simple: after I do X, I will do Y. After I pour my morning coffee, I will write one sentence in my journal. After I sit at my desk, I will open today’s task list. The existing habit becomes a trigger, eliminating the need to remember or decide.

The power of stacking compounds. One new behavior attached to a reliable anchor becomes stable in days. A chain of three or four stacked habits reshapes an entire morning routine without requiring a single act of willpower.

03Environment Design

Willpower is finite and easily exhausted. Environment, however, is infinitely patiently persistent. If the guitar is in the case, in the cupboard, under a pile of coats, you will not play the guitar. If it hangs on the wall at eye level, you will pick it up several times a week without deciding to. The most successful habit builders spend less time motivating themselves and more time arranging their surroundings so that good defaults are frictionless and bad ones require effort.

Leave the book on your pillow. Put the vitamins next to the kettle. Set out your running shoes the night before. Remove the app from your phone’s home screen. These are not tricks. They are engineering decisions, and they work with your brain rather than against it.

The one-step rule

A habit you want to do should require one step to begin. A habit you want to stop should require five. Audit your space and count the steps. Then redesign accordingly.

04Never Miss Twice

Perfection is not the goal, and treating it as such is the single fastest way to abandon a habit. Life intervenes, you travel, fall ill, get overwhelmed. The habit breaks for a day. What happens next is everything. Missing once has no measurable impact on long-term outcomes. Missing twice begins a new pattern. The rule is therefore not “never miss” but “never miss twice.” One miss is an anomaly. Two is a habit of missing.

This reframe takes an enormous amount of pressure off. It allows for imperfection without catastrophizing, and keeps the identity narrative intact: you are still the person who does this thing. You just had one off day.

05Make the Reward Immediate

Habits fail in part because the reward is distant. You exercise now for health benefits that arrive in years. You write now for a book that might exist in two years. The brain’s reward system is shamelessly short-sighted. To compensate, attach an immediate reward to the completion of the habit, something that arrives within seconds or minutes. It doesn’t need to be large. Crossing an item off a list. A specific playlist that plays only during your workout. A few minutes of guilt-free scrolling after completing your morning pages. The reward trains the loop.

“The habit needs to be enjoyable enough that you want to do it again tomorrow.”

06Track Visibly

Tracking a habit creates a second, parallel motivation: the streak. A simple paper calendar where you mark each completed day with an X builds a chain you become reluctant to break. Visible progress is a form of reward in itself. It provides evidence that you are becoming the person you want to be, and that evidence is motivating in a way that abstract intention is not. The method needn’t be elaborate. A notebook page, a habit-tracking app, a jar of marbles moved from one side of a shelf to the other. What matters is that you can see it.

The Deeper Truth

A Final NoteIdentity Before Outcomes

The most durable micro-habits are anchored not to an outcome but to an identity. “I want to read fifty books a year” is outcome-based and collapses the moment you miss a week. “I am someone who reads” is identity-based and survives almost anything, because every page read, even one paragraph on a difficult evening, confirms who you are.

Start absurdly small. Stack your habits onto existing anchors. Design your environment to make the right choice the easy choice. Forgive one miss, never tolerate two. Make it enjoyable enough to repeat. Track it somewhere you’ll see. And frame the whole endeavor not as building a routine, but as becoming a person one quiet, repeatable action at a time.

The embarrassingly small habit you do every single day will, without exception, outlast the ambitious habit you attempt three times and abandon. That is not a consolation. That is the strategy.

An article on behavior design  ·  2026

Filed Under: Creators

GPU News

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Here’s a rundown of the biggest GPU news right now:

GPU Prices Are Surging The most significant story is a sharp rise in GPU prices. By February 2026, graphics cards are more expensive than MSRP in most regions, with an average global price increase of about 19% over the past three months. In November 2025, $1,000 would have bought you an RTX 5080; today that same budget only gets you an RTX 5070 Ti. TechSpot

The Culprit: A Global Memory Shortage Nvidia CFO Colette Kress confirmed that its gaming products are facing “supply constraints” that will be a headwind through Q1 and beyond. Reports indicate Nvidia has focused 75% of GPU production on its most VRAM-efficient models, including the 8GB RTX 5060, 8GB RTX 5060 Ti, and 12GB RTX 5070. Overclock3D

No New Nvidia Gaming GPUs in 2026 According to The Information, Nvidia does not plan to release a new graphics chip for gaming this year, which would mark the first time in nearly three decades the company has gone a full year without a new gaming GPU. The AI-driven memory shortage is pushing Nvidia to prioritize memory for AI accelerators over consumer cards. Nvidia has also delayed its RTX 50 Super refresh (“Kicker”) and the next-gen RTX 60 series. TrendForce That said, one report from Overclockers claims at least one high-end SKU, possibly an RTX 5090 Ti, could surface around Q3 2026, though its existence is far from confirmed. Notebookcheck

AMD Is Holding Its Own The Radeon RX 9070 XT delivers raw performance within striking distance of the GeForce RTX 5070 Ti for far less money as of February 2026, making it a standout option. Tom’s Hardware However, AMD isn’t immune to the memory crisis either.  Radeon GPU prices increased 5–10% in early 2026, with further hikes expected. TweakTown

What’s Coming Next Nvidia’s GTC 2026 conference is on the horizon, where teases of the Rubin GPU architecture, aimed at five times the AI performance of Blackwell, are expected, along with hints at the Feynman architecture using TSMC’s advanced process. Tom’s Guide The RTX 60 series is now likely not until 2028.

The bottom line: if you need a GPU now, prices are painful, and supply is tight, and they may not get much better anytime soon.

Filed Under: GPU News

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