More Stories

jeudi 7 mai 2026

Canvas Has Been Hacked, and Is Apparently Being Held for Ransom

by

Canvas, the cloud-based learning management system used by more than 8,000 colleges and universities, including all top ten colleges in the U.S., is being held for ransom. A group called Shinyhunters has claimed responsibility for the hack and has given Canvas' parent company, Instructure, until May 12 to reach a settlement, or else "everything is leaked."

Canvas outages have been reported nationwide

There's no word on how many schools have been affected, but reports of students being unable to access Canvas are coming in from universities and colleges all over the country. Over the last half an hour, complaints of Canvas being down have gone from nearly none to over 8,000 on Down Detector.

Down Detector report on Canvas outage
Credit: Stephen Johnson

A similar breach of Instructure took place in late April or early May, and the company confirmed that names, email addresses, student ID numbers, and private messages exchanged between users were exposed by Shinyhunters, but said there was no evidence of compromised passwords, dates of birth, social security numbers, or financial information.

Instructure updated its software on May 2, saying that it had deployed patches, increased monitoring, and taken other measures meant to contain the damage, a fact referenced by ShinyHunters in the message left for Canvas users:

Screenshot of ransom note from ShinyHunters displayed on hacked Canvas login page
Credit: Stephen Johnson

The hacker group claimed its previous hack added up to over 3 terabytes of data, affecting 275 million students, teachers, and others at close to 9,000 educational institutions. Whether this latest breach will be that large remains to be seen.

What to do if you're affected by the Canvas outage

While the threat is presumably being resolved, here are some steps students and faculty can take to make their digital data more secure on Canvas.

  • Change your password: If you can log in, change your Canvas password. If you use the same password for banking, email, and other places, change those as well.

  • Enable Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA): This adds an extra layer of security.

  • Beware of phishing emails: If email addresses were compromised, hackers may send highly targeted emails to students. Be suspicious of any messages asking you to install software or share account information.

  • Monitor your credit: It's unknown whether financial information was part of the hack, but giving your credit report a check wouldn't hurt.



This Pixel 10 Pro Is $250 Off Right Now

by

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

Google’s Pixel phones have spent the last few years becoming the default recommendation for people who want a straightforward Android experience without dealing with heavy software skins or overloaded features. The Google Pixel 10 Pro continues that approach, though its original $1,219 price made it harder to justify against competing flagship phones. Now, Amazon has dropped the unlocked 512GB model to $969 (its lowest price yet, according to online price trackers), and that makes it easier to appreciate what Google actually does well here.

The hardware itself is familiar in a good way—the flat display makes it easier to grip and use one-handed, the matte glass back does a better job resisting fingerprints than many glossy competitors, and the overall build feels solid without becoming bulky. Google also continues to offer one of the better long-term Android support policies, so you aren't buying something that will feel outdated in two years. Performance is solid for day-to-day use, though the Tensor G5 chip still trails behind Snapdragon-powered competitors in heavier gaming and more demanding apps, notes this PCMag review. That said, the biggest reason to buy this phone is still the camera system. Google continues to deliver photos that look natural without over-sharpening faces or cranking up colors, and its triple-camera setup handles low-light shots especially well.

The 6.7-inch OLED display of the Pixel 10 Pro also gets brighter than last year’s model, making it easier to use outdoors, and Qi2 charging plus Google’s new PixelSnap magnetic system make wireless charging less annoying in daily use—snapping the phone onto a desk stand or car mount feels simple in the same way Apple’s MagSafe accessories do, says our writer in her review of the product. Battery life is good enough for a full day with regular use, but frequent video recording, navigation, or extended camera sessions can drain it faster. Also, one thing to keep in mind is the switch to eSIM-only support. For people who travel often or frequently change carriers, losing the option for a physical SIM card may feel limiting.




mercredi 6 mai 2026

This 10th Gen iPad Is on Sale for $240 Right Now

by

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

A discounted tablet from a couple of years ago usually comes down to one thing: how much performance you actually need. The 2022 Apple iPad is currently on sale for $239.99 in Grade-A refurbished condition on StackSocial—the 10th-generation model with 64GB of storage and wifi. Since it’s a 2022 release, it doesn’t have the latest hardware or the longest update runway ahead, but for basic, predictable use, the lower price can outweigh those trade-offs.

In regular use, this iPad feels familiar in a way that works to its advantage, with apps opening quickly, streaming staying smooth, and video calls running without friction. Its A14 Bionic chip may not be the latest, but it still handles everyday tasks comfortably, whether that’s switching between a few apps, editing documents, or keeping a YouTube video playing in the background while you browse. It has a 10.9-inch display that is sharp and bright, and the front-facing camera sits in landscape mode, which makes a noticeable difference when you use it on a table for Zoom or FaceTime. Battery life holds up through a workday of mixed use, too.

Where you might start to notice its limits is in storage. With just 64GB, you have to be mindful about what stays on the device, especially if you download shows or large apps instead of relying on cloud storage. File transfers over USB-C are also slower than those on newer iPads. And while it still runs current iPadOS versions, it won’t receive updates for as long as newer models do. None of this makes it a bad buy, but it helps set expectations: this 10th-gen iPad works well as a secondary device, a student tablet, or for everyday browsing and streaming.



I'm a Runner, and This Is How I'm Training for a Hyrox Race

by

My fellow Lifehacker writer Beth Skwarecki is a weightlifter. I'm a marathon runner. Together, we make one reasonably competent Hyrox athlete—and in four weeks, we're going to find out if that's enough.

Beth and I are competing together in a Hyrox doubles race on May 29, in something of a joint experiment in just how little training you can get away with before showing up to one of these things. Hopefully, we can each bring our respective strengths to the floor, cover for each other's weaknesses, and survive. Hopefully.

What is Hyrox, anyway?

If you haven't encountered Hyrox yet, here's the short version: It's currently the trendiest fitness-race-sport-competition-lifestyle since Crossfit. You'll hear people compare the two, but they have some key differences. For instance, while Crossfit competitions may include just about anything in any format, the Hyrox format is standardized, which is part of its appeal.

You run a total of eight kilometers (around five miles), broken into eight one-kilometer segments. Between each run, you complete one functional fitness station, always in the same order: a SkiErg, sled push, sled pull, burpee broad jumps, rowing, farmers carry, sandbag lunges, and wall balls. The entire thing is timed. You're racing against yourself, your friends, and thousands of others who've done the exact same workout under the exact same conditions.

In the doubles format, two athletes share the workload—to an extent. All the 8x1km loops must be run side-by-side, but we can split the workload of the eight functional stations however we need. Right off the bat, I think I luck out more than Beth in this situation. I get a weightlifter to help me with the feats of strength (or "functional movement," to be more accurate), but she still has to run the same as me no matter what.

My strengths going into Hyrox

As of writing, I'm bringing a cardio engine sitting at a comfortable half-marathon level of fitness. For a race that's fundamentally built around eight kilometers of running, this is by far my greatest asset.

I also have hopes that my marathon experience in particular will provide me a certain "psychological toolkit." Marathon training teaches you to hurt for a long time and keep moving anyway. You learn to negotiate with your own suffering and to push through the wall—something that will no doubt come up for me on Hyrox race day. In theory, the running portions alone of Hyrox shouldn't break me. But I know what probably will.

My weaknesses going into Hyrox

Ironically, strength is my weakness. My resistance training is, generously speaking, inconsistent. The stations that require you to move heavy things—specifically the sled push and sled pull—are the ones I'm most afraid of. The sled push is station two, and the sled pull is station three. That means if I blow up my legs fighting those stations in the first quarter of the race, every single thing that comes after—the running, the lunges, the wall balls—is going to hurt in a completely different way than I'm used to. Marathon pain is a slow burn, but some of these functional stations sound like the pain will arrive fast—and last for the rest of the competition.

Beyond raw strength, I'm also concerned about technique and efficiency—and honestly, the injury risk that comes with poor form under fatigue. I've taken exactly one Hyrox class so far, at my local F45 gym. I'll be able to attend three more before race day, but as of right now, I know enough to know that I don't know enough.

Wall balls normally wouldn't scare me, but after eight rounds of running and seven other stations, the idea of repeatedly squatting and launching a weighted ball overhead sounds significantly less manageable. Beth and I have much to discuss when it comes to strategy and how we plan to conserve our strength.

How I'm training for Hyrox

Given that I have less than a month until race day and can't realistically build meaningful strength in that window, I'm prioritizing technique over everything else. I can't radically transform my power output in four weeks, but what I can do is learn to move efficiently, avoid compensating in ways that cause injury, and conserve energy by not fighting the movements.

For me, that means more time with a sandbag and sled than I'm used to, specifically focused on form rather than load. As I mentioned above, I'll be training at classes with Hyrox-specific stations in sequence. Still, these classes don't have the running portions, so I have yet to really know what it feels like to transition from a run into a strength station on tired legs.

I'm also exploring the official Hyrox training modes available for Garmin and Amazfit watches, along with some unofficial off-brand apps that have popped up for Hyrox-specific preparation.

The bottom line

Having Beth as my partner makes me feel significantly better about all of this. The one thing I'm slightly nervous about on her end is the cardio. Eight kilometers of running interspersed with eight stations might end up being a lot for someone who doesn't regularly train for endurance. In doubles, you can tag in and out, but there's a limit to how much you can cover for each other. My biggest fear is I burn out and leave her with way too much of the heavy lifting—quite literally.

We'll figure it out on May 29. Either we'll discover you need surprisingly little prep to survive a Hyrox doubles race, or we'll discover exactly what happens when a marathon runner and a weightlifter underestimate a fitness competition. At least both outcomes make for a good story.



The 2023 Google Pixel Fold Is 75% Off Right Now

by

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

The Google Pixel Fold launched in 2023 as Google’s first foldable, and while newer phones have come out since then, this current price changes how you might look at it. It is listed at $449.99 for the 256GB model, which is significantly lower than its earlier pricing and still below what you will find on places like Amazon. The deal is expected to run for the next ten days or until stock runs out. You also get free shipping if you are a Prime member (others pay $6), although it is worth noting that Woot does not ship to Alaska, Hawaii, PO boxes, or military addresses.

When it is closed, it works like a standard Pixel with a familiar Android interface and a smaller outer display. Open it up, and you get a 7.6-inch inner screen that gives you more room to work with—reading articles, watching videos, or browsing multiple tabs feels less cramped. Performance-wise, it runs on Google’s Tensor G2 chip with Android 13, so performance is steady for everyday use, even if it is not as fast as the latest flagships. It is also unlocked for 5G, so you can drop in a SIM from most major carriers and switch networks without much effort. That flexibility makes it easier to justify if you travel often or want a backup device ready with a different network.

Pixel phones have a reputation for great cameras, and that carries over here, too—you get a 48MP main sensor with additional lenses, and the image processing is consistent with other Pixel phones, which means photos tend to come out sharp with good color even in low light. You can also prop the phone halfway open to take hands-free shots or use the rear cameras for selfies, which is something slab phones cannot do as easily. As for its battery life, it lasts around eight hours (according to this PCMag review), which is enough for a full day of moderate use but not much more. This is not a budget phone in design or intent, but at this price, it works well as a secondary phone, a travel device, or something you use when you want a bigger screen without carrying a tablet.




mardi 5 mai 2026

These Beats ANC EarBuds Are $75 Off Right Now

by

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

The Beats Studio Buds+ have been around long enough to feel familiar, but this current deal adds a layer that makes them worth a second look. Right now, they are bundled with two years of AppleCare+ and listed at $123.95 (down from $198.95)—price trackers show this is the lowest this bundle has ever been. Wireless earbuds are easy to misplace, drop, or wear down over time. AppleCare+ extends repair coverage and adds accidental damage protection, which can save you from paying full replacement costs if something goes wrong. For a product that lives in your pocket or gym bag, that safety net has real value. Plus, they carry an IPX4 rating, so sweat or a bit of rain is not a concern.

The Studio Buds+ are a refinement over the older Studio Buds, and the upgrades show up in small but noticeable ways—battery life now stretches to nine hours on a single charge, with the case pushing the total to 36 hours. That means you can go several days without reaching for a charger. The active noise cancellation is also stronger this time, especially for steady background sounds like traffic or a gym environment. It will not block everything, but it does enough to make podcasts and music easier to focus on. Call quality is another area that sees a bump, with microphones that do a better job isolating your voice in busy surroundings, notes this PCMag review.

These earbuds also don't lock you into one type of phone/ecosystem. Apple users get quick pairing and seamless switching, while Android users get support for Google Fast Pair and a dedicated app for controls and updates. You can customize tap functions, switch between noise modes, and even track a misplaced pair. That flexibility makes them easier to recommend across different devices. The main limitation is that while the noise cancellation is strong for the price, it does not match premium models that cost significantly more. Still, at this price, with solid battery life, reliable call performance, and added AppleCare+ coverage, the Studio Buds+ make a great choice for anyone who wants a solid everyday pair of earbuds without spending top-tier money.



This Bose Wireless Outdoor Speaker Is $50 Off Right Now

by

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

A price drop always stands out more when the product in question already has a reputation for delivering above its size, and that’s the case with the Bose SoundLink Plus. It hasn’t been on the market for long, but it’s already earned strong reviews—CNET even labeled it “the Goldilocks of Bose Bluetooth speakers.” And right now, it’s down to $219 from $269, which price trackers show is the lowest it’s ever been.

Bose positions it right in the middle of the SoundLink lineup, and you feel that balance in how it’s built. It’s compact enough to clip onto a backpack using its built-in nylon strap, and tough enough to handle getting knocked around, and sealed against dust and full water submersion with an IP67 rating. Battery life can last up to 20 hours, depending on the volume, which is sufficient for full-day outings. However, the roughly five-hour recharge time means it’s better to charge it overnight than rely on a quick boost. On the connectivity side, there’s Bluetooth 5.4 with AAC and AptX Adaptive support, as well as the ability to keep two devices paired for smoother switching. What you don’t get is a microphone, aux port, or any voice assistant support, which might matter if you prefer wired options or use speakers for calls.

The sound profile of this Bluetooth speaker leans into mid- and high-bass, which gives electronic and pop tracks a lively pulse without turning everything muddy. It doesn’t reach into true low-bass territory, so anyone who wants thumping sub-bass may not get it here, but the punch it does deliver feels clean for its size, notes this PCMag review. Vocals sit a little behind the beat in denser tracks because the mid-range pulls back slightly, though you can adjust this with the app’s EQ tools. It’s also worth knowing that the speaker plays everything in mono, so you lose the space and width you’d hear in a stereo mix, but its directivity is good—you don’t have to stand directly in front of it to hear things clearly. That said, at higher volumes, there’s some compression, which is common in speakers this size.




Top Ad 728x90