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vendredi 10 avril 2026

Meta's New 'Personal Superintelligence' AI Is Coming to Its Smart Glasses

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Calling it a step towards "super intelligence," Meta announced it is releasing Muse Spark, an overhauled and improved AI. This "natively multimodal reasoning model" goes way beyond a chatbot, and it will soon live in your glasses and your social feeds. It's available now in the Meta AI app, with plans to roll out with a smart glasses update in the next few weeks.

Instead of a one-size-fits-all approach, there are three levels to Muse Spark's "thinking," and users will be able control how deep the intelligence goes.

  • Instant Mode: For quick questions and everyday chats.

  • Thinking Mode: This mode is designed to solve more complex problems, so if you need some help with math, science, or logic, this is the mode.

  • Contemplating Mode: Muse Sparks' highest level engages multiple AI agents that work in parallel and collaborate to complete complex, multi-step tasks.

Meta says Muse Spark's performance compares to or exceeds their Llama 4 Maverick model while using over an order of magnitude less computing power. That means, theoretically, high-level reasoning without excessive server use.

While Muse Sparks will be accessible in a variety of places, it seems like Muse Spark's ground-up integration of visual material is made for smart glasses. Here are some of the ways Ray-Ban Meta and Oakley Meta users will be able to use the new AI.

AI is now integrated across different tools

One of the Muse Spark main improvements over Meta's previous model is the way the new AI will integrate visual information across different tools. So, theoretically, you could point your glasses at a mess of wires and electronic boxes and say "how do I hook up this home theater system?" Or get step-by-step coaching on assembling a piece of IKEA furniture without opening the booklet. The AI would read the instructions and make sure you're not screwing anything in upside down.

Muse Sparks will have health reasoning capabilities

Meta said its Meta Superintelligence Lab collaborated with over 1,000 physicians to develop the AI's health reasoning capabilities. Users will be able to do things like generate an interactive display that unpacks the nutritional information about food, and maps out what muscles are activated during a workout.

But how will it actually perform?

All of the above is "in theory." Artificial intelligence hasn't always lived up to its hype, even when it's being hyped in front of a massive audience. It's one thing to perform well in laboratory benchmark tests, but how the tech works in the real world, where lighting is spotty, wi-fi is slow, and furniture instructions can be extremely complicated, is the real challenge.

While I haven't dug deeply into the tech, I did give it a quick test by turning on "thinking" mode and sending Meta AI the below picture of a random assortment of audio gear:

Audio Gear
Credit: Stephen Johnson

It not only correctly identified everything in the picture, it gave me a couple different options for possible ways to hook it together, and told me (correctly) what cords I needs. So I look forward to having it on my glasses. If you want to test it yourself, Muse Spark is already running on meta.ai and the Meta AI app, and smart glasses firmware and social media integrations are expected to follow shortly.



These Entry-Level Soundcore Earbuds Are Under $40 Right Now

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The Soundcore P31i earbuds are down to $36.98 (originally $59.99), which is about as low as they’ve been, according to price trackers. At this price, most earbuds stick to the basics, so it’s unusual to see features like active noise cancellation and LDAC included here. That doesn’t mean they compete with premium pairs, but they do give you more to work with than you’d expect for under $40.

These earbuds are light, they fit well, and they don’t get uncomfortable after an hour or two, which isn’t always the case with cheaper earbuds. Battery life, too, holds up through a full day of use, with a little over seven hours on a single charge and extra top-ups from the case. The sound quality is better than expected for the price, though it leans toward bass-heavy tuning out of the box (you can tweak it in the app, but the app itself is not the most intuitive and takes some getting used to, notes this ZDNET review), and if you’re using a compatible device, LDAC support gives you the option for better audio quality.

There are also a few extras tucked in, like HearID for tuning the sound to your ears and an AI translation feature, though features like that feel more like a bonus than something you will use every day. As for its noise cancellation, it works, but expectations need to stay in check—it reduces steady background noise like engines and traffic, but it won’t match the isolation you get from more expensive earbuds. That lines up with its overall build, as well, which feels a bit basic compared to more expensive options.


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Here's How Many Reps You Should Do, Depending on Your Fitness Goals

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When you lift a weight, how many times should you lift it? Supposedly, there’s a correct “rep range” to use to build strength, and a different rep range to build muscle size, or endurance, or to “tone.” But how much of the oft-repeated wisdom is true? Not as much as you’d think. 

What are reps and sets? 

Just so we’re on the same page here: if you pick up a dumbbell and do eight curls before putting the weight down, you have just done one set of eight reps. (Rep is short for repetition.)

Typically a workout will call for several sets of each exercise, separated by a rest period of a minute or two, or by another exercise. Typical schemes include three sets of 10, four sets of eight to 12, or five sets of five. These are often written in the format [sets]x[reps], so 5 x 5 would be five sets of five reps each, and 3 x 10 would be three sets of 10. 

There are many factors you might consider (or that an experienced trainer might include when writing your program) when deciding how many reps you should do, but often people try to stick with the “rep range” that they are told makes sense with their goals. 

What are the traditional rep ranges? 

Here’s what you’ll hear from many trainers, influencers, and online resources. Beware that you need to take these with a grain of salt, and I’ll explain why in a minute: 

  • Smaller numbers of reps, like one to five, are said to be for strength. 

  • Medium numbers, like six to 12, are said to be for building muscle size.

  • If you’re a woman and want to “tone,” you may be told that eight to 12, or maybe 10 to 15, will give you definition while keeping your muscles from growing too much. (You may notice this overlaps with the range for muscle growth.)

  • A rep range of 15 or more is usually held to be for muscular endurance. 

The exact numbers will vary depending on who you ask, but no matter how you slice it, something isn’t adding up. If you do 10 reps, are you building muscle size, or are you keeping your muscles “toned”? It can’t be both—unless 10 can work for either goal, in which case the number of reps isn’t what determines the outcome. (Hmm…)

It’s also wrong to think that strength and muscle growth are completely separate from each other, with different ways to build each. So let’s go over some practical advice for deciding what rep ranges you should actually work with.

Strength and muscle size don’t (always) require different training

Beginners in the gym often spend a lot of effort figuring out the “optimal” routine to meet their goals. But as I’ve said before, optimal is optional. Getting the details right is not nearly as important as getting the big picture right. 

And the big picture for most beginner and intermediate lifters is that pretty much everything will build both strength and muscle size. You can lift in the “strength” range and still build muscle. You can lift in the “size” range and find yourself gaining strength. 

You can read a deep dive on this idea here. The author, powerlifter, and coach Greg Nuckols does conclude that lower numbers of reps (like 1-5) have a bias toward strength, and higher reps (15+) have a bias toward muscular endurance. 

But for growing muscles in size, just about anything works. He summarizes: “The ‘hypertrophy [size gaining] range’ of roughly six to 15 reps per set may produce slightly better results per unit of time invested than low rep and high rep work.  However, on the whole, the advantage you get from working in the hypertrophy range isn’t nearly as big as people seem to think; maybe a ~10-15% advantage per unit of effort invested at most.”

He recommends training in a variety of rep ranges if you want bigger or more defined muscles, rather than using the same narrow range every time. That’s pretty much the consensus among good trainers, anyway: most effective training programs have a mix of high- and low-rep exercises. That’s because each rep range has its pros and cons when it comes to particular exercises and purposes, not just a person’s overall goals.

When to use low reps (1-5)

This is traditionally the strength range, and to be fair, it is a good rep range to work on strength. Here, I’m using “strength” to mean increasing the amount of weight you can lift, even if you can only lift it once. 

For strength

If you want to show off in front of your friends by benching more than them, or if you want to enter a weightlifting competition and place well, or if you want to achieve your first pullup, you want to work on strength. 

This means you need to practice with heavy weights. A weight that you can lift 10 times in a row is going to be fairly light, relative to your ability, and it won’t teach your body everything it needs to know for a heavy lift. So you’ll need to work with low reps (at least sometimes!) if you’re aiming for a strength goal. 

To learn technique

Low reps also help you to focus and avoid fatigue. You might get tired or sloppy by the 10th rep of a set, but that’s less likely to happen in a set of three. Olympic weightlifters typically do their tricky competition lifts in sets of just one to three. Beginners who are learning a new exercise, like squats or barbell presses, may also want to work in this range. Do a few reps, take a break, then come back fresh.

For muscle size, alongside other rep ranges

Heavy weights put a lot of mechanical tension on your muscles, and they help you get stronger. These factors mean low-rep sets can still help your muscles to grow, even though they aren’t the traditional muscle-growth rep range. After all, the stronger you are, the heavier the weights you can handle—which means you can go even heavier in your moderate- and high-rep sets.

When to use moderate reps (6-12)

This is a good middle ground that will build strength and size, and will give you plenty of practice moving weight around. Pretty much everybody can benefit from working in this rep range, at least some of the time.

For strength and muscle size

This is the range that’s probably ideal for gaining muscle size, and it will help a lot in supporting your efforts to build strength. Even athletes who focus on strength will include plenty of work in this rep range for the purpose of growing some extra muscle mass. After doing squats in sets of three, you might go and do sets of 10 on lunges or leg extensions or the leg press machine. 

For beginners and for general fitness

While low reps are best for learning an exercise that is complicated or that is brand new to you, beginners are often recommended to work in a medium rep range as soon as they’re comfortable with it—and that makes a lot of sense. 

Doing eight or 10 reps of the same exercise gives you plenty of practice (there are 30 reps in three sets of 10), without having to strain to handle a heavy weight that you haven’t mastered the technique for yet. 

For “toning” 

Toning isn’t a specific strength training goal, and that’s why it doesn’t have its own special rep range. Being “toned” is a look: it means you have some muscle definition while being relatively slim.  

That’s why the same exercises that build muscle in people who want to “bulk” are also appropriate for people who want to “tone.” Or to put it another way: any resistance training that builds muscle will be appropriate for both goals. 

So what makes a “bulky” body different from a “toned” one? Partly nutrition (the more you eat, the bigger your muscles can get) and partly just how long you’ve been training and how hard you’ve worked. It takes a lot of time to build a lot of muscle. 

I might even say there’s a component of mindset: people who recognize how important muscle is for their health and for their fitness goals tend to see their new muscles as part of a healthy, fit look—not necessarily as “bulk.” 

When to use higher reps (15+)

Traditionally, this is described as the “muscular endurance” range, but that’s a misnomer. Higher reps aren’t great at building strength, and may not be your best option for building muscle size, so just about all they have left to offer is that they might help you do high numbers of reps. 

For muscular endurance, alongside lower rep ranges

The thing is, if you want to build muscular endurance—say, you want to be able to do 100 pushups in a row—you will also benefit from using lower rep ranges to build strength. The stronger you are, the easier each pushup will be for you, and the longer you’ll be able to keep going. 

Studies have found that you don’t need to stick to the 15+ rep range to build muscular endurance—the three-to-five and six-to-eight ranges may work even better than spending your training time on high reps. 

If your ultimate goal is to do 100 pushups, I wouldn’t tell you to only do high-rep sets; those low-rep ones are useful too. But I’d still expect you to practice high reps for the skill, conditioning, and mental toughness that will be required to execute your goal. 

For muscle size (and “toning”), if you only have light weights available

To do heavy or moderate reps, you need appropriate weights. So if you’re working with limited equipment, you may have no option but to make the best of what you’ve got. 

Fortunately, research has found that muscles can still grow in size if you use light weights and high repetitions, so long as you take each set to failure. So if it takes 20 or even 30 reps to tire out your arms when doing bench press with a set of light dumbbells, that’s still workable. 

If you’re able to do more than 30 reps, though, we’re starting to leave the realm of strength training and enter a territory that’s more like cardio. At that point, you should really look for harder exercises or find a way to get your hands on heavier dumbbells.

The bottom line: variety in rep ranges is good

Ultimately, you don’t need to decide on one rep range for all your training. You won’t see powerlifters only working in the strength range, or bodybuilders only working in the size range. The guy in your neighborhood who can do 25 pullups at the local park probably isn’t doing 25 of everything in his workout routine. 

So when you go to the gym, you’ll probably want to use low reps for a strength-focused exercise or two, moderate reps for most of your other work, and occasionally some higher-rep work for variety or to make do with lighter equipment. 



jeudi 9 avril 2026

Google's Newest Video Doorbell Is Over 20% Off Right Now

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The Google Nest Doorbell has dropped to $139.99 (originally $179.99), and that’s the lowest price it has hit so far, according to price trackers. The design is familiar if you’ve seen Nest cameras before, with a single camera module up top and a lit doorbell button below in an IP65-rated body that handles rain and dust without issue. This is a wired unit, so it only makes sense if your home already has the right wiring in place or you’re willing to install it—it's manageable if you’re comfortable handling low-voltage wiring (16–24VAC); otherwise, it may be worth calling an electrician.

The main upgrade here is the video and the software. You get 2K HDR footage with a square 1:1 aspect ratio, which shows a full head-to-toe view of whoever is at your door. That also makes it easier to spot packages left on the ground. Daytime video looks sharp, with natural color and good detail. At night, it switches to infrared, which is clear enough to identify people but loses some detail. Motion alerts come through quickly, and the 166-degree field of view covers most entryways without stretching the image too much, notes this PCMag review. You can also talk through it using two-way audio, and it works well with both Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa if you want to pull the feed onto a smart display.

Speaking of software upgrades, Google leans on its Gemini AI features here, so the doorbell can now describe what it sees in plain language and lets you search recordings using those descriptions. You can type something like “package delivery” and find clips quickly instead of scrolling through a timeline. It works well in practice, but the catch is that most of these features, along with full video history, require a $10/month Google Home Premium subscription. Without it, you only get short preview clips. There’s also no local storage and no support for Apple HomeKit or IFTTT.

If you’re already using Google Home, this fits in easily and adds useful automation, but if you want a one-time purchase with almost all the same features and no ongoing fees, the TP-Link Tapo D225 makes for a worthwhile alternative.


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WhatsApp Is Adding Usernames to Keep Your Phone Number Private

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WhatsApp is finally getting a long-awaited privacy feature that allows you to display a username rather than your phone number, which will remain hidden from other users. This feature has been in the works for more than a year, with few details released as to its functionality and ETA. While it's still not rolling out to all users just yet, we now know a little bit more about how it will work.

According to WABetaInfo (and as reported by 9to5Google), WhatsApp is set to launch usernames to a very limited number of accounts as part of a phased rollout. This means that you may not have access to this update now—but you should consider the switch as soon as it becomes available to you.

How to add a username to WhatsApp

Once the username feature is widely available, you should see the option in your WhatsApp profile settings (go to Settings and tap your profile name and photo). On the pop-up, you can choose to create a WhatsApp username or select your existing Facebook or Instagram username instead. According to WABetaInfo, WhatsApp has a handful of rules for new usernames:

  • Usernames can contain only lowercase letters, numerals, periods, and underscores.

  • Usernames must include at least one letter.

  • Usernames cannot start with "www." or end in a domain (such as .com).

  • Usernames must be be 3–35 characters in length.

Usernames on WhatsApp must also be unclaimed across other Meta platforms—so even if a username appears available on WhatsApp, you won't be able to choose it if someone else is using it on Facebook or Instagram. If you have an existing username on either of the latter, consider the potential privacy implications of making your accounts easy to identify across platforms before linking that same name to WhatsApp.

Along with a WhatsApp username, you'll also be able to set up a four-digit code, which other users will need to enter when they message you for the first time. Username keys allow you to limit communication to trusted contacts.



mercredi 8 avril 2026

This TCL QLED TV Is Over $200 Off Right Now

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The 65-inch TCL QM7K is currently selling for $777.99, down from $999.99, and price-trackers show this is the lowest it has dropped so far. The QM7K isn’t a stripped-down budget model—it’s a mini-LED TV with full-array local dimming, wide HDR format support, and brightness levels that push past 2,000 nits. In practice, that means HDR highlights pop, contrast stays controlled, and the screen remains usable even in rooms with a lot of daylight. It doesn’t reach the extreme peak brightness of TCL’s higher-end QM8, but for most living rooms, the difference is negligible. And if you’re also shopping for a solid gaming and streaming setup without dropping over a grand, the QM7K fits the bill.

TCL has packed this one with gamer-friendly specs: a native 144Hz refresh rate, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, and input lag under 5ms for 1080p at high frame rates. Even at 4K60, input lag stays under 14 milliseconds, keeping it comfortably below the one-frame delay PCMag uses as a benchmark for solid gaming performance in a TV. Connectivity is solid, too, with four HDMI ports in total, including two that support 144Hz signals and one with eARC for audio passthrough, plus USB, Ethernet, and optical audio. Google TV handles the smarts, with support for Apple AirPlay, Chromecast, hands-free Google Assistant, and all the big-name streaming apps. The included remote is backlit, easy to use, and comes with shortcut buttons for popular apps. And the interface is easy to navigate.

That said, there are some trade-offs. Color tuning leans warm out of the box and may need adjustment, and the panel doesn’t support ATSC 3.0, so you’re missing out on the newer over-the-air broadcast standard. Also, like most LED TVs, you’ll lose some color saturation and contrast when watching from sharp side angles. But those compromises are minor for most people using it as a living room centerpiece or gaming display. PCMag gave the QM7K “excellent” rating, and our own staff writer, Daniel Oropeza, named the 65-inch model one of the best budget QLED TVs to buy.

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This Flagship Samsung OLED TV Is $800 Off Right Now

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Samsung’s 65-inch S95F OLED TV is now down to $2,199.99 from $2,997.99—just a couple of dollars shy of its lowest tracked price, according to price trackers. That discount makes a difference, but it is still a premium buy. If your budget is tighter, a refurbished unit from Amazon Renewed comes in at $1,926.22. The new unit includes free delivery to your room (you will need to handle setup yourself), and a one-month trial of Xbox Game Pass for new users, which adds some immediate value if you plan to use it for gaming.

OLED TVs are known for deep blacks, but they often look dim in brighter rooms. The S95F pushes past that limitation—it delivers the deep blacks you expect, but it also gets noticeably brighter than older OLED models, so daytime viewing holds up better, notes this PCMag review. The built-in speakers are also better than expected. You get a 4.2.2-channel system that adds some height and depth, so voices come through clearly, and action scenes have more presence than a standard TV setup. It is not a replacement for a full sound system, but it saves you from needing one right away.

For gaming, this 4K Smart TV has a 120Hz panel that supports variable refresh rates up to 165Hz, along with AMD FreeSync Premium Pro and G-Sync compatibility, meaning gameplay stays smooth even when frame rates fluctuate. Its input lag is also low enough to feel responsive, whether you are playing at 4K60 or 1080p120, and all four HDMI ports support modern consoles.

On the downside, Samsung still does not support Dolby Vision, which some streaming services rely on for their best HDR format. It also sticks with Wi-Fi 5 rather than newer standards, so streaming performance may depend more on how busy your home network is. And while the Tizen OS smart interface covers all the major apps, getting around it can feel a bit cluttered, and settings aren’t always quick to find. Even the remote keeps things minimal to a fault, with no quick input switching. Still, the core experience is strong—you’re still getting a bright, capable OLED that handles both movies and gaming with ease.


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