Author: Geek Planet

Hello, tech enthusiasts! I'm Devender, your guide through the ever-evolving world of technology. With a passion for innovation and a knack for breaking down complex concepts into digestible bits, I'm here to help you navigate the digital frontier.

Even some of the most ubiquitous ingredients in top American restaurants aren’t immune to tariff woes.  Four years after launching, Carbone Fine Food — a CPG company associated with the famous New York City restaurant — is grappling with an increasingly complicated supply chain. Thanks to tariffs on imports from the European Union, Carbone could face additional long-term costs on what it calls its “most important ingredient” for its line of pasta sauces: tomatoes imported from the San Marzano region of Italy. For Carbone, 2025 was expected to be a major year, with the company growing at a 100% year-over-year rate.…

Read More

A power supply is the least exciting part of a PC build, which is exactly why people underbuy it. Then they add a more power-hungry GPU later and wonder why things get weird. The Corsair RM850e is down to $99.99, a 31% discount from $144.99, and this is the kind of deal that makes it easy to do the sensible thing: buy a modern, properly specced PSU once and stop thinking about it. What you’re getting This is a fully modular 850W power supply built for modern builds, with ATX 3.1 support and PCIe 5.1 readiness. It includes a 12V-2×6…

Read More

A couple of days ago, a Dutch publication shared pictures of the first-party transparent cases for the Galaxy S26. Some of them had a magnetic ring, while the others didn’t, leading to speculation about the absence of native Qi2 wireless charging (along with the built-in magnets). All the smartphones in Samsung’s upcoming series are believed to be light on hardware upgrades, and among the few silver linings for buyers was magnetic wireless charging. Tipster pours cold water on built-in magnets Now, renowned tipster Ice Universe (@UniverseIce) has basically confirmed the absence of “built-in magnetics inside the device.” The tipster seems…

Read More

This is the fifth installment in Digiday’s 2025 CMO Strategies series that analyzes key marketer strategies and challenges across leading marketing channels, such as retail media, display advertising, social media and ad-supported streaming. Among all channels considered in Digiday’s 2025 CMO Strategies series, social media had the highest usage rate for the third year in a row, with 92% of the more than 190 marketer professionals who responded to our Digiday+ Research survey saying their company uses social media for marketing. That is down 5 percentage points from the percentage of respondents who said their company used social media for…

Read More

Google’s AI-powered advertising tool Performance Max (PMax) is the marketer’s paradox: everyone complains about it, but few actually walk away. Some do, though — pulling their ad dollars entirely. In a response to a request for comment, a Google spokesperson claimed that PMax was used by over 1 million advertisers across Google’s channels. “In 2024, we launched more than 90 quality improvements in Performance Max that increased conversions and business value for advertisers,” they said in a statement. In this edition of our Confessions series, where we trade anonymity for candor, a 20-year growth marketing veteran explains why they’ve advised…

Read More

Apple has quietly turned Xcode, its venerable app-building machine, into an AI-driven software that can now harness agentic coding. Last year, the Cupertino giant added basic AI-based features, such as code completion and suggestions to Xcode 26, but the new update changes everything. Xcode 26.3 includes powerful AI agents such as Anthropic’s Claude and OpenAI’s Codex, both of which can analyze your current project, update settings, search for relevant information, run tests, and interact with previews, all via text-based commands. What does agentic coding actually do? In simpler terms, the app’s AI won’t just assist coders and developers; it will…

Read More

Jimmy Zollo, the co-founder of Joe & Bella, thought India could be a viable alternative for the online retailer’s China-made socks. The company explored moving production there, drawn by lower costs and a perception that the country was politically “safe” from steep taxes enacted by the Trump administration. “Pricing seemed great,” Zollo said. “We actually were probably, in the next few weeks, planning on getting a few prototypes made to see if the quality hit our standard levels.” Then came the tariff news. With little warning, the Trump administration doubled duties on Indian imports to 50%, up from 25%, as…

Read More

Laptops featuring Nvidia‘s ARM-based chips are a long time coming. Rumors about the devices have been circulating for well over a year, and a recent report suggested that the first machines could arrive as early as Q1 2026. However, a fresh leak indicates the wait may stretch longer than expected. The scoop from leaker Moore’s Law is Dead (via Notebookcheck) suggests the delay stems from unresolved software and compatibility issues affecting Nvidia’s chips. The situation is reportedly being further complicated by Microsoft’s slow progress in ensuring the Nvidia N1X platform works smoothly with Windows. As a result, the launch window…

Read More

As AI goes global in the workplace, many of us grapple with questions that go far beyond productivity metrics — questions like: How do we maintain authenticity while leveraging the assistance of machines? What happens when the line between human and AI-generated work becomes impossible to detect? How do we navigate the balance between employing AI tools and fearing getting “found out”? In this candid conversation, a marketing strategist and content creator reveals the stark reality of working with AI — from using it as everything from a creative collaborator to an emotional support system, to wrestling with the constant…

Read More

New York-based startup Atma Sciences is rethinking doomscrolling with a new app called Gizmo that swaps viral videos for a TikTok-style feed of interactive, vibe-coded mini apps. Instead of passively watching short clips, Gizmo lets users scroll through fun AI-generated experiences they can actively engage with. Each swipe drops users into a different interactive experience, ranging from simple games and quizzes to reactive memes and visual experiments. According to TechCrunch, these mini apps are generated using natural language prompts, with Gizmo’s built-in AI handling the underlying code and design, allowing anyone to create and publish interactive content without technical skills.…

Read More