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mardi 17 février 2026

This Shortcut Solves the Biggest Issue With Finding Messages on Your iPhone

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I have always found it annoying to search for anything in Apple's Messages app. Admittedly, things have gotten better in recent years, especially as Messages allows you to use search filters now, but my biggest complaint still stands: searching in Messages can be both slow and complicated, particularly if you just want to find a specific text. If you have the same experience, I have good news: I've found a workaround that offers a massive improvement to Apple's built-in search function.

The problem with searching in Messages

For most people, the easiest way to search for texts on an iPhone involves opening the Messages app, tapping the search bar near the base of the screen, and typing in what you're looking for. You'll receive a variety of results, but that's the problem: It's too much information.

When I search for a person's name, for example, Messages in iOS 26 shows a list of four chats where the name is mentioned, followed by two chat threads, pinned chats, shared notes, links, photos, locations, and documents. This is great when I want a more in-depth search, but when I'm just looking for a specific message, these extra details just get in the way.

The fastest way to search for texts in iOS 26

That's where our hack comes in. First, open the Shortcuts app on your iPhone, then install the Search and Open Messages shortcut. This shortcuts takes advantage of actions released in iOS 26, which allow you to look for text messages and open them in a single tap. Once the shortcut is installed, you can run it from the Shortcuts app, or add it to your iPhone's Home Screen for easier access.

The shortcut will prompt you to type what you want to search for, and almost instantly, it'll list all the chats containing those words. In some cases, it even highlights the exact sentence containing those words. It'll find keywords in images you share, as well: These appears as "blank" entries in the search results, but if you tap through, you'll see the image the search identified.

The moment you tap a result, the shortcut instantly takes you to the relevant part of the chat, and doesn't make you scroll through hundreds of results to find the right one. This is the kind of functionality Apple needs to add directly to Messages. But, for now, this shortcut workaround will have to do.



These Three Claude Premium AI Features Are Now Available for Free

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Anthropic's Claude is an AI bot that keeps up a steady pace when it comes to pushing out new features, and the latest upgrade of note sees three useful features make their way down to free users, having previously been exclusive to the paid-for plans.

If you're choosing between AIs and comparing the features available on the free plans, then there's now more of a case to be made for choosing Claude over a competitor like ChatGPT or Gemini for your next batch of AI tasks.

The three new features now available to free users on Claude are file creation, external plug-ins called Connectors, and bundles of instructions called Skills. Here's how you can make use of them.

File creation in Claude

Claude's file creation capabilities let you create Word documents, PowerPoint slideshows, Excel spreadsheets, and PDFs from right inside a conversation. You can either supply the bot with all text, data, and other information you want included, get Claude to invent everything itself, or something in between.

For example, if you've got a long list of names and scores, Claude can put them into a spreadsheet for you. If you've got a series of images, Claude can combine them into a PDF and describe them. You can get it to analyze and visualize data, produce presentations based on reports, and create summary documents.

Claude AI
A simple prompt can create a file in Claude. Credit: Lifehacker

To enable file creation for your account, click your profile icon (bottom left) in Claude on the web, then select Settings > Capabilities and enable Code execution and file creation. With that done, you just have to prompt Claude with the type of file you want to make and what you want included, supplying any information as needed (or telling the AI where to find it online).

As usual with these AI bots, the more detail and specificity you can provide, the better—the end result is then more likely to be closer to what you were aiming for. I got it to quickly come up with the results of a fictional sports day race, and produce a spreadsheet from it. While it's not the most demanding of tasks, Claude completed it correctly.

Claude Connectors

Connectors can hook Claude up to a variety of other apps, sites, and services: So if you want to get it to design something for you in Canva, or manage your messages in Slack, or find some travel deals on Trivago, then Claude can do that for you. The full list of current Connectors gives you some idea of what's possible.

To get to the Connectors from the Claude prompt box, click the small + (plus) icon in the lower left corner, then choose Add connectors. You can search through Connectors by name, and filter them by type and category. When you select one you like, you'll need to supply your account credentials and give Claude permission to access your account.

Claude Connectors
Use Connectors to connect Claude to other apps. Credit: Lifehacker

Your Connectors of choice are then available from the same sub-menu in the prompt box: You can add more plug-ins and remove existing ones from there. You can either select an app, or specify the name of it in your prompt and Claude should understand what you mean. You can ask for outputs, run searches, and communicate through your connected services.

Connectors can give Claude some handy extra talents. With the Canvas Connector, for example, I was able to create a basic bit of artwork for a birthday party flyer—something that the AI wouldn't have been able to do on its own. I find that access was spotty, however, perhaps a sign of a lot of free users now making use of these tools.

Claude Skills

With Skills, you can "teach Claude how to complete specific tasks in a repeatable way" (in the words of the official support document). In old-school computer talk, they might be referred to as macros: batches of set instructions that Claude can repeat whenever you need something doing in a particular way.

Templates are a good example, whether they're for emails or documents. Rather than just getting Claude to write an email for you, you can set down some basic parameters for the job that include guidelines on tone, length, and style, as well as crucial bits of information (such as your contact details) that always need to be included.

Claude Skills
You've got three options for creating Skills. Credit: Lifehacker

Click your account profile icon (bottom left) in Claude on the web, then choose Settings > Capabilities and click Add under Skills to get started. You can create a Skill through a Claude conversation, by writing out the instructions, or by uploading a Skills file (which is handy for including extra items such as code snippets, as described here).

I took the Create with Claude route to put together a basic way of summarizing PDF reports, with specific guidelines on how many paragraphs and headings to use, and the tone of voice to apply. In the future, rather than typing out those instructions every time I need something summarized, I can just invoke the Skill.



vendredi 13 février 2026

This Premium Sony Soundbar Is More Than 50% Off During an Early Presidents Day Sale

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The Sony HT-Z9F is down to $419.99 on Woot, a steep drop from its original price of $899.99. At this price, it becomes a far more accessible way to upgrade your TV audio without committing to a full AV receiver and multi-speaker setup. The deal is available for the next 16 days or until it sells out, whichever happens first. Prime members receive free standard shipping, while non-Prime customers pay $6. That said, shipping is not available to Alaska, Hawaii, APO addresses, or PO Boxes, and the purchase includes a 90-day Woot limited warranty. Discover more President's Day Sale deals and the best Tech deals during the early President's Day Sale here.

It’s a 3.1-channel soundbar, meaning it has left, right, and center speakers built in, plus a wireless subwoofer. That dedicated center channel is especially helpful for dialogue—it keeps voices clear and easy to follow, even during action scenes or loud background scores (meaning you do not need to ride the volume during conversations, then scramble to lower it when explosions hit). And then, there’s the wireless sub, which adds weight to action movies and bass-heavy playlists. It is not room-shaking, but it gives enough low-end punch to feel cinematic in a living room setting.

Sony markets the HT-Z9F as Dolby Atmos-enabled, but it does not have upward-firing drivers or rear satellite speakers. Instead, it relies on Sony’s S-Force Pro Front Surround and Vertical Surround Engine to simulate height and surround effects. That processing does create a wider sound field than basic stereo, but everything still feels anchored to the front of the room. Overhead effects lack the distinct placement you would get from true Atmos speakers bouncing sound off the ceiling. If you are upgrading from built-in TV speakers, the improvement will be obvious. But if you expect a fully immersive surround with objects flying above and behind you, this will not deliver that experience.

As for its connectivity, you get two full HDMI inputs that handle all major audio formats, plus HDMI ARC for TV connection. You also get Bluetooth, wifi, and built-in Chromecast for streaming music directly from your phone or apps. The design looks premium and feels sturdy, which helps it blend into a midrange or high-end setup. The tradeoff is limited sound customization. There are preset EQ modes, but no detailed treble or bass adjustments. At $419.99, the HT-Z9F makes sense for someone who values clear dialogue and solid bass, with wide-format support. Those chasing a true Atmos surround setup with discrete height channels may want to look elsewhere.




12 Shows Like 'Silo' You Should Watch Next

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In Apple TV's Silo, Rebecca Ferguson stars as Juliette Nichols, an engineer who gets wrapped up in an investigation involving the local sheriff (David Oyelowo)—usual procedural stuff, except that the characters all inhabit a massive silo, 144-levels deep, protecting the remaining 10,000 humans from the allegedly poisoned world above. It's an addictive show in spite of its smart, dystopian vibe and, it's been renewed through a concluding fourth season, doing one better than the three-book Hugh Howey novel series on which it's based.

Season three is expected sometime in 2026. In the meantime, you can catch these other shows that blend dystopian settings with existential mysteries. Stream Silo on Apple TV

Snowpiercer (2020 – 2024)

Though initially feeling like an unnecessary extension of Bong Joon Ho's allegorical post-apocalyptic film, Snowpiercer the show ultimately takes on a life of its own, a clever sci-fi melodrama that realizes that there are no heroes and few true villains at the end of the world, but mostly just people doing whatever they can to survive. In a frozen future (2026, to be precise), humanity survives on an extremely long train that circumnavigates the globe. If it stops, the power will go out and everyone (literally everyone) will die. Those who came aboard with wealth live near the front in relative luxury, while the poor live on scraps (or worse) in the tail. Daveed Diggs stars as former detective Andre Layton, a "Tailie" deputized by Jennifer Connelly's Melanie Cavill, engineer and the train's head of hospitality, to solve a series of murders. The inevitable uprising that follows sets the two of them on different sides of a violent conflict, as each comes to realize they're just pawns of elites—same as it ever was. Stream Snowpiercer on AMC+ or buy episodes from Prime Video.


Station Eleven (2021 – 2022)

The miniseries, based on the Emily St. John Mandel bestseller, was released at either the best time or the worst possible time: The story of the world 20 years after a devastating flu pandemic hit HBO square in the middle of COVID—and don't all of our current apocalypse dramas owe just a bit to that waking nightmare? The adaptation follows two tracks. In the past, Kirsten Raymonde is a young stage actor whose performance in a production of King Lear is cut short by the onset of a virus with a 99% fatality rate. We also visit Kirsten 20 years on, still an actor, but in a world very much changed. This one is a slow-burn, picking up steam only after a couple of episodes, but ultimately, it makes a moving case for the power of art, even (or especially) in moments when survival is on the line. Stream Station Eleven on HBO Max.


Pluribus (2025 – )

The tones here aren't a match, with Pluribus leaning toward dark comedy, but as post-apocalyptic mysteries go, you could do a lot worse than this sci-fi dystopia from Breaking Bad's Vince Gilligan. Well, I say dystopia, but the world of Pluribus is about as good as it gets for basically everyone but our main character. Rhea Seehorn plays Carol Sturka, a fantasy romance author and general grouch who becomes one of only 13 people on the planet immune to the "Joining," an alien virus that transforms the rest of humanity into a peaceful, perky, and perpetually content hive mind. Carol refuses to surrender her miserableness in the face of a loss of identity, fighting instead to restore humanity to its admittedly cruddy ways. Thrilling, heartbreaking, and oddly funny, the show manages to address big questions about what it means to be human, and what we'd be willing to give up to change. Stream Pluribus on Apple TV+.


Black Knight (2023)

Decades after a comet impact killed most of the Earth's population and left a barely breathable atmosphere, survivors in Seoul live in wildly segregated conditions. QR codes tattooed on hands determine your level of access to resources including air, as supplemental oxygen is a necessity for survival, to the point that cutting off the hand of someone with a better code than yours is seen as a viable means of moving up. It's all controlled by the mega-corporation that's building an underground refuge for survivors of its choosing, and that doles out oxygen via couriers who've taken on legendary status. One such deliveryman, known only as 5-8 (Kim Woo-bin), is also running an underground operation to help out the neediest of Seoul's population—which soon puts him at odds with the powers that be. Stream Black Knight on Netflix.


Wayward Pines (2015 – 2016)

While we're talking high-concept sci-fi, let's head off to Wayward Pines, from whence you will never leave. Based on a trilogy of Blake Crouch novels, this one stars Matt Dillon as a secret service agent investigating the disappearances of two fellow agents in the Idaho town of Wayward Pines. Things go awry pretty much immediately, and he wakes up from a car accident to find one of the agents (Carla Gugino), who's also his ex, having settled down in the seemingly idyllic community—and 12 years older than when he last saw her, only a few weeks ago. Even more dramatically, the local sheriff (Terrence Howard) enforces a strict "no one ever leaves" policy, on pain of having one's neck slit. As in Silo, the mysteries pile up from there. Stream Wayward Pines on Hulu.


Paradise (2025 – )

Paradise reunites This is Us creator Dan Fogelman with one of that ensemble's stars, Sterling K. Brown, for something quite different. It looks more like a political thriller at the outset: We're apparently in an affluent suburban town in which everything looks fairly tidy. It's the home of Brown's Xavier Collins, a widower and secret service agent, which would be more impressive if the president he'd been serving (James Marsden) hadn't been murdered (much of the narrative is revealed in flashbacks). Oh, and that cute little town? Turns out that it's an underground bunker, fancier one than in Silo, but just as ominous. Stream Paradise on Hulu.


The Rain (2018 – 2020)

Leave it to those melancholy Danes to center an apocalypse around precipitation. In this three-season import, a virus spread by rainfall that wipes out most of the population of Scandinavia. Siblings Simone and Rasmus emerge from their bunker six years later, setting off across the countryside with the hope of finding a safe haven, and maybe tracking down their father. It turns out that one of them holds the key to wiping out the virus and saving the world. It’s not the most original premise (The Last of Us game came out five years earlier), but the setting gives it a unique feel, and the series comes to a decisive ending. Stream The Rain on Netflix.


War of the Worlds (2019 – 2022)

The War of the Worlds industrial complex is never far from churning out new adaptations, this being one of two competing series that started in 2019. There was a period-faithful BBC miniseries, and then this French co-production, serving as a much looser, modern-set adaptation. Gabriel Byrne and Elizabeth McGovern lead the cast as estranged couple Bill and Helen, among the few survivors of an alien pulse that leaves the world sparsely populated, and humanity under constant threat from the mysterious invaders who aren't done with us yet. It's as dark as they come, with traumatized individuals nursing secrets and making calculations as to whom they might be willing to sacrifice in order to survive our new overlords. Stream War of the Worlds on MGM+ or buy it from Prime Video.


Battlestar Galactica (2003 – 2009)

Going from an underground dystopia to an outer-space dystopia only to find that things aren't all that different, save that the giant hunk of metal that contains the bulk of surviving humanity is horizontal and in space rather than vertical and underground. Humans will figure out how to take our problems with us anywhere, being the point. Here, the trigger is the monotheistic Cylons, an artificial intelligence once relegated to serve as a labor force and who evolve, rebel, and have a plan involving wiping out their former masters in twelve colony worlds. The relatively few survivors, all that remains of humanity, escape on the title ship accompanied by a handful of others. Politics follow them, with military commander Adama (Edward James Olmos) frequently at odds with Mary McDonnell's Laura Roslin, the education secretary promoted to president after the entire line of succession is wiped out. It's one of the smartest shows of the aughts, in spite of the silly name, treating the premise of the cheesy '70s original with deadly seriousness. Buy Battlestar Galactica from Prime Video.


Severance (2022 – )

Late-stage capitalism encourages “work-life balance” while simultaneously making it impossible, and then makes us feel guilty about it. In Severance, biotechnology giant Lumon Industries has a solution: They split your consciousness between your life at work and your life outside of it. For our lead characters (among them, Adam Scott, Patricia Arquette, and Britt Lower) the work- and home-based consciousnesses grow apart to the point that they become entirely different people. The show blends the conventions of office-based dark comedies with movies like Brazil and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, diving into the dangers of modern American-style totalitarian capitalism while providing a reminder that technology often promises to improve our lives while only making them worse. Stream Severance on Apple TV+.


Fallout (2024 – )

As in Silo, we're stuck with a large chunk of humanity being forced to live underground for reasons that aren't entirely legit. In the world of Fallout, adapted from the video games, the aesthetic of the 1950s hung on for a lot longer than it did in our own, so plot similarities give way, in part, to a unique sense of style. The background is a little complicated, but not belabored within the show itself: It's 2296 on an Earth devastated two centuries earlier by a nuclear war between the United States and China. Lucy MacLean (Ella Purnell) emerges from the underground fallout shelter where she's lived her entire life in order to find her father, kidnapped by raiders. The aboveground wasteland is dominated by warring factions, each of which considers the others cults and believes that they alone know the correct way forward for mankind. Amid this conflict, the landscape is also overrun by ghouls, gulpers, and other wild radiation monsters, and Lucy seems to be just about the only human with any lingering belief in humanity. Stream Fallout on Prime Video.


Under the Dome (2013 – 2015)

Not to be confused with The Simpsons Movie, this is the other story about an entire town trapped under a giant dome. Adapted rather loosely from the Stephen King novel, the show finds an entire community cut off from the rest of the world—their own personal apocalypse. As resources begin to dwindle, social structures begin to collapse, and the squabbling residents need to figure out how to survive and, if they're ever to escape, to figure out why they've been trapped under this dang dome to begin with. Stream Under the Dome on Paramount+.



jeudi 12 février 2026

The Best Tech Deals in Amazon's Early Presidents Day Sale

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Presidents' Day is not until Monday, but as is often the case, the sales are already here. Amazon's sale features some notable deals on tech products like smartwatches, headphones, home appliances, speakers, and more. There are plenty of other Presidents Day sales on the way, so don't fret if nothing here catches your eye. Regardless, I've gathered the best of Amazon's sale below, which features a few all-time low prices, according to price-checking tools.

The Apple Watch Series 11 is $100 off

The Apple Watch Series 11 is the latest Apple Watch and it improves on the Series 10 in many ways. It has a longer battery life and tiny tweaks that make a big difference, like a brighter screen, greater durability, and new software features. Right now, the Apple Watch Series 11 (GPS 42mm) is down 25% to $299 (originally $399).

The Beats Studio Pro headphones are 51% off

Beats headphones are well-known for their style and seamless compatibility with Apple devices. Right now, the brand's flagship headphones with 40 hours of battery life, the Beats Studio Pro, are on sale for $169.95 (originally $349.99), the second-lowest price they have been. Every color is included in the sale.

My favorite Shark vacuum is 40% off

I've been loving the Shark Pet Cordless Vacuum for the past few months and have cleaned my rugs to a degree that none of my old vacuums were able to manage. It works for floors as well, and I've been using the light with the lights off to easily see any dirt on my floor. Get it for $179.99 (originally $299.99).

A 57-inch curved Samsung gaming monitor for $800 off

The 57-inch Samsung Odyssey Neo G9, one of the best ultra-wide gaming monitors on the market, is currently on sale for $1,499.99 (originally $2,499.99 at launch). This monitor came out in 2023 with an "excellent" review from PCMag, mainly due to its impressive 7,680 by 2,160 4K native resolution, the ridiculous 57-inch screen size, its great color range and accuracy, the 240Hz refresh rate, and its design.

The Sonos Beam Gen 2 soundbar is $140 off

The Sonos Beam Gen 2 is one of the best soundbars you can buy today, especially if you're short on space. This compact soundbar doesn't skimp on premium features, and it's currently down to $369 (originally $499), a near-record low. This is the soundbar I'd choose if I were looking for a powerful option that wouldn't take up a ton of space in my living room.

The Amazon Echo Show 11 gets its first $40 discount

Amazon released the Amazon Echo Show 11 last year to replace the 3rd Generation Echo Show 10. The upgraded home hub and smart speaker hybrid features a larger, sharper display; a separate static screen, Alexa+ capabilities, and other updates, and right now, it's at its lowest price since launch. You can get it for $179.99, down $40 from the usual price, and its lowest price ever.

The SHOKZ OpenRun bone conduction headphones are $90

The original OpenRun headphones are great for their current discounted price of $89.94 (originally $129.95); that's the lowest price they've been. You won't get the same thumpy bass you'd get from regular headphones, but they're still great, and the bone conduction technology adds a fun layer of novelty.

The Bose Ultra Open earbuds are $100 off

The Bose Ultra Open earbuds cater to people who prefer awareness over isolation. Think cyclists, runners, or anyone who doesn’t want to miss the honk of a car while listening to music. Instead of sealing you off from the world, they sit outside your ears, letting in ambient sound while still delivering rich, detailed audio. Priced at $199 (down from its original $299), this is their lowest price yet.



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