Daily Shaarli
April 29, 2026
TVREV argues that streaming growth is becoming more concentrated rather than expanding broadly, suggesting the market may be maturing in uneven ways. That framing could make for an interesting analysis video about subscriber fatigue, platform fragmentation, and what it means for consumers trying to manage streaming costs.
Microsoft has released the source code for 86-DOS 1.00, the precursor to MS-DOS. This is a significant piece of computing history that would fit perfectly with Lon's interest in retro tech and software origins.
The CW is fundamentally changing its distribution by partnering with Roku for free next-day streaming and with ESPN for sports. This move bypasses traditional cable and broadcast hurdles, offering a new model for how network content reaches cord cutters.
GM is deploying Google's Gemini AI assistant across more than 4 million vehicles, potentially making in-car voice control much more capable for messaging, playlists, and general assistance. This is a significant real-world expansion of AI into consumer products and could be worth covering as a trend piece even if Lon doesn't review cars directly.
A new trend in hardware sales involves a 'memory surcharge' or RAM tax added during the checkout process. This practice has sparked debate over pricing transparency and whether it will become a standard industry tactic for hardware configuration.
Alphabet reported that YouTube ad revenue increased 11% in Q1 2026, a notable data point for the broader streaming and creator economy. This could support a video discussing YouTube's growing dominance in TV viewing, advertising, and how it increasingly competes with traditional television and streaming platforms.
Copy Fail (CVE-2026-31431): a 732-byte Linux LPE — straight-line, no race, no per-distro offsets. Same Python script roots Ubuntu, Amazon Linux, RHEL, SUSE since 2017. Page-cache write bypasses on-disk file-integrity tools and crosses container boundaries. Found by Xint Code.
KitKat has created a novelty wrapper that blocks phone signals like a Faraday cage, turning a candy bar into a tech-adjacent gadget experiment. It's not a core product review item, but it could make for a fun short video or science-style demonstration around signal blocking and device connectivity.
Projections suggest that memory components could account for nearly half of the iPhone's total manufacturing cost by 2027. This sharp increase in material costs likely points toward significant retail price hikes for future flagship smartphones.
The NAB is pushing back on what it says is an unprecedented FCC move involving the early renewal of ABC-owned stations. While regulatory, this could be a worthwhile topic if Lon wants to explain how FCC actions affect major station groups, network affiliates, and the broadcast side of cord cutting.
TI has updated its classic calculator with the TI-84 Evo, specifically designed to be 'distraction-free' for modern classrooms. It's an interesting look at how legacy educational hardware is evolving to compete with smartphones.
Firefox's new leadership is making a fresh pitch for why users should return to the browser, offering a potentially important signal about product direction in a web ecosystem dominated by Chrome. This could work as a broader platform discussion topic, especially if there are user-facing changes worth testing later.
Roku's low-cost, ad-free streaming service, Howdy, has reached a milestone of 1 million subscribers. This growth highlights a potential shift in consumer interest toward affordable, simplified streaming tiers within the Roku ecosystem.