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SAVE $299.01: As of October 23, get the Apple MacBook Air (M2 chip, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD) for $699.99, down from $999, at Amazon. That's a 30% discount and the lowest price we've seen.
Opens in a new window Credit: Amazon Apple MacBook Air (M2 chip, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD) $699.99 at AmazonSome apples are rotten right to the core (yes, that's a Charli XCX reference). But when it comes to MacBooks, you can occasionally score a ruby-red deal. The holidays are almost upon us, so whether you want a new laptop of your own or you want to give the perfect gift to someone else, you can save big right now on a MacBook you'll love using, thanks to its portable size and incredibly lightweight frame.
As of Oct. 24, get the Apple MacBook Air (M2 chip, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD) for just $699.99 at Amazon. That's $299.01 off its normal price of $999 and a 30% discount. That's the lowest price we've seen so far.
SEE ALSO: Snag the Apple Watch Ultra 2 for its lowest price yetThe MacBook Air is the thinnest and lightest MacBook yet at just 2.7 pounds. It has a 13.6-inch Liquid Retina display and boasts over 500 nits of brightness and support for a billion colors. Beyond that, it's powered by the Apple M2 chip, an 8-core CPU, and 24GB of unified memory. It's ready as-is for Apple Intelligence as well, so you don't have to splurge on the newest MacBook to take the new AI-based features Apple has up its sleeve for a spin.
With 18 hours of battery life, a 1080p FaceTime HD camera, and two Thunderbolt ports as well as MagSafe charging, the MacBook Air is super convenient and useful to have around, whether you're using it to stay connected with work or just browsing the internet and catching up on email each day. No matter what you use it for, it's a steal at this price, so grab one while they're still in stock.
We've just entered Week 8 of the NFL season, but — since that's nearly halfway through the regular season — some teams are already pretty much cooked.
There are four teams with just one win: the New England Patriots, Cleveland Browns, Tennessee Titans, and Carolina Panthers. If you're a fan of any of those teams, for instance, your 2024 season is pretty much done, barring a huge miracle. And if you root for one of the seven two-win teams — the Miami Dolphins, New York Jets, Las Vegas Raiders, Jacksonville Jaguars, New York Giants, L.A. Rams, and New Orleans Saints — then you probably need a slightly smaller miracle. As the saying goes, there's always next year.
As a matter of fact, it might be time to start thinking about next year. Pushing off your hopes to the next season is a tale as old as time. As a fan of the Philadelphia 76ers — perhaps the sports franchise most associated with tanking — I empathize with fans of bad NFL teams who have already turned their attention to the 2025 NFL Draft.
SEE ALSO: How a Monday Night Football mishap may have exposed deep problems with Google SearchWe've taken the time to collect some of the best online resources for fans of teams that stink to help you better prepare for next year's draft. After all, hope springs eternal.
TankathonThe NFL has relatively simple draft rules compared with the NBA's arcane lottery system. But Tankathon remains an indispensable resource for teams that suck. It's a website that tracks where each team would stand in the next year's draft, according to the results thus far in the season.
Here's how the 2025 draft would look right now, for instance.
Congrats, Pats fans. Credit: TankathonScroll down a bit, and you can also find Tankathon's Mock Draft for 2025, which is far too early to take seriously but still fun to look at.
The Panthers trying again at QB is interesting. Credit: TankathonIf your NFL team is trash, think of Tankathon as a hub of hope. It's where you go to remind yourself that at least a good draft pick is coming. It's a place where you get to think of the potentially good players of the future rather than the bad ones of the present.
The Ringer's NFL draft coverageI'm a big fan of The Ringer's NFL coverage, especially their podcast — hosted by Danny Kelly, Danny Heifetz, and Craig Horlbeck — that oscillates between covering the draft and fantasy football, depending on the time of year. Right now, the pod is centered on fantasy football, but it will switch over as the draft nears. However, the outlet still provides in-depth coverage of the college games and the draft, which you can find on its NFL Draft landing page. The site also has perhaps the best and most intuitive draft guide around. The 2025 version hasn't been released yet, but it always features incredibly in-depth scouting reports, digestible summaries, and an easy-to-navigate design.
SEE ALSO: How much would it really cost to watch every NFL game on TV? Draft expertsNow's the time to start beefing up on the college players your team might draft. There's a whole cottage industry based around prognosticating players' transition from college to the pros.
Here's a quick list, with links, to some of the NFL draft folks I've read, listened to, or otherwise appreciated over the years. Note that some of these people also cover the NFL at large, so you may get varying content.
Todd McShay, the former ESPN stalwart, just launched a podcast on The Ringer.
Dane Brugler, NFL draft analyst at The Athletic, puts out a yearly comprehensive guide dubbed The Beast.
Lance Zierlein does NFL draft coverage for the league's media outlet.
Ben Solak, who covers the NFL as a whole for ESPN, does a great job with the draft and breaking down how the game works for the average fan.
As previously noted, Tankathon has a constantly updated mock draft, but it's far from alone. If your team is awful, it's fun to constantly check in on who you might take in the draft, according to different outlets. Even this early in the season, you can find mocks on CBS, Fox Sports, and ESPN. And you can keep Googling throughout the year because many outlets update their mock drafts weekly.
YouTube highlightsGranted, this one's a bit kooky, but if your team is crap, then YouTube highlights might be just the thing you need. Hear me out: Instead of lamenting over your bad team, watch old clips from when they were good. Sure, the Patriots are godawful now, but you can watch 30 minutes of every single touchdown pass Tom Brady threw to Rob Gronkowski. Yes, the Titans are hapless at the moment, but you can still watch clips of Derrick Henry running over people while wearing a Tennessee uniform.
Your football present might stink, but at least you have the future draft prognostications and past triumphs to tide you over until next season.
It's happening - albeit a little later than originally planned.
On Wednesday, Tesla had its quarterly earnings call for Q3 2024, with the financials looking healthy: Revenue and earnings went up year over year (8% and 17%, respectively, with Tesla's energy generation and storage business performing exceptionally well (a 52% increase). The company's profitability increased, making up for quarterly deliveries which, at 470,000, were slightly lower than expected.
But after the somewhat disappointing 'We, Robot" event, in which Tesla showed us a robotaxi, robovan and a robot which won't hit the market for years, the big question was: When is the company launching that cheaper car it promised a while ago?
The short answer is: We don't really know what is being launched. But we do know a bit more about when it's being launched.
"Preparations remain underway for our offering of new vehicles — including more affordable models — which we will begin launching in the first half of 2025," the company said in its earnings report.
While this is vague — we don't know how many new models are coming, and which one of them will come first — it gives hope that the company will launch a more affordable Tesla (perhaps the rumored Model 2) fairly soon.
Tesla did provide a little more info about this during the call. "As Elon and Vaibhav both said, it’s our plan to meet that in the first half of next year. Our mission has always been to lower the cost of our vehicles to increase the adoption of sustainable energy and transport. Part of that is lowering the cost for current vehicles," a company rep said, before CEO Elon Musk jumped in and started talking about the Robotaxi (CyberCab) which he says will cost "30k" "with incentive."
When asked for more clarity on when, exactly, Tesla plans to launch the "$25,000 non-robotaxi regular car model," Musk went into a rant about the future being all about "autonomous electric vehicles," before saying that "having a regular 25K model is pointless."
"It would be silly. Like it would be completely at odds with what we believe," he said.
It sure appears he was talking about the Robotaxi, as he reiterated: "What we designed is optimized for autonomy. It will cost on the order of — cost roughly 25K, so it is a 25K car. And you can — you will be able to buy one exclusively if you want. So, it just won't have steering wheels and pedals."
(Do note that Elon is contradicting himself by saying the CyberCab (Robotaxi) will cost $25,000 after claiming it will cost $30,000 with incentives (so, roughly $37,000) just minutes ago).
SEE ALSO: Tesla's Optimus robots at 'We, Robot' event were not very autonomousAll of this makes it incredibly unclear as to what, actually, is being launched in the "first half of 2025," given that the Tesla is planning to launch the Robotaxi "before 2027" but no sooner than 2026. Will the current models get cheaper? Will there be a "more affordable" new Tesla that costs more than $25,000 but still less than the cheapest Model 3, which costs $42,490 before incentives? Will it just be some sort of a trimmed down variant of the Model 3 or Model Y? We'll have to wait and see.