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Plenty of Labor Day deals lingered at Amazon well into the week, but as we head into the weekend, things are a bit more scarce. Not to worry — we still found a few discounts worth adding to your cart.
Here are our top picks for the best Amazon deals of the day on Sept. 6, including top brands like Anker Soundcore and Shark.
If none of these particularly speak to you, be sure to check back at our picks from Sept. 4 and Sept. 5. Many of those are still live — including $130 off the Amazon 50-inch Omni QLED Fire TV and a record-low price on our favorite budget-friendly gaming laptop.
Our top pick Opens in a new window Credit: Anker Soundcore Life Q20 noise-cancelling headphones $39.90 at AmazonOur favorite budget noise-cancelling headphones for travel, Anker's Soundcore Life Q20s are already a fraction of the price of most noise-cancelling headphones. But with this 33% discount, they're practically a steal at just $39.90. That's a new record low (by a whole eight cents). The Q20s may not have the best noise cancellation on the market, but what they lack in ANC power, they make up for in actual power. These babies will last you up to 40 hours in ANC mode and 60 in standard mode. As Mashable's Bethany Allard put it, "Overall, these headphones epitomize the word decent — but that's not a knock against them at all."
Opens in a new window Credit: Shark Shark AI Ultra Self-Empty XL robot vacuum $299.99 at AmazonJoin in the robot vacuum revolution without breaking the bank by snagging this half-price deal on the Shark AI Ultra. It's our favorite budget Shark vacuum with a self-empty dock, and it's back on sale for just $299.99 at Amazon. Equipped with LiDAR vision, it can map each room in your home for a precise clean that avoids obstacles. Plus, its self-cleaning brushroll will prevent pet hair from getting tangled up. The included XL base can also hold up to 60 days of dirt and debris (the largest capacity in the Shark lineup), keeping your cleaning routine hands-off for a couple of months at a time.
Opens in a new window Credit: Tile Tile Mate $17.99 at AmazonTraveling this fall? Do yourself a favor and grab the Tile Mate to accompany your luggage. It's one of our favorite Bluetooth trackers, and it's on sale for $17.99 as of Sept. 6. That's 28% in savings. Attach it to your suitcase, camera bag, keys, phone, wallet, or anything else you'd rather not lose and keep eyes on your gear from afar. We've tested these tiny squares and found that they excel as Bluetooth item finders for both iOS and Android users. If you decide to pay for a Tile Premium subscription, you can even unlock extra features, like notifications when you leave items behind and item reimbursement for things that remain lost.
Opens in a new window Credit: Anker Soundcore Space A40 earbuds $50.15 at AmazonWith 50 hours of battery life, customizable adaptive noise cancellation, and a fast-charging feature that gives you four extra hours of listening in 10 minutes, the Soundcore Space A40 are pretty powerful at full price. On sale, they're a total steal. Our friends at PCMag (which is owned by Mashable's publisher, Ziff Davis) tested them and found that they "fit securely, deliver strong audio performance, and offer excellent battery life," ultimately outshining Anker's older top-rated models. As of Sept. 6, they're down to just $50.15 with an on-page coupon — that's just a dollar shy of the lowest price on record.
None of these deals catching your eye? Check out Amazon's daily deals for even more savings.
50% OFF: As of Sep. 6, get 50% off Calm Premium. Alternatively, new Calm Premium users can try 4 months for free through LinkedIn.
Opens in a new window Credit: Calm Calm $34.99Stressing out about the upcoming election? Feeling not so great emotionally in general? There's an app for that. No, really. Calm is an app that exists to help you do just that: calm down and de-stress. This self-care service is all about helping you take care of yourself so you can take a minute to relax, stay centered, mindful and not lose your head. And right now is the perfect time to try it out thanks to a great deal you can snap up.
As of September 6, you can get 50% off a year of Calm Premium, which makes it just $34.99, down from its usual price of $69.99. Alternatively, if you've never tried Calm Premium before, you can try it for 4 months for free thanks to an offer from LinkedIn. From now through October 30, you can experience what the app has to offer by signing up for the trial through your LinkedIn account. When the offer ends, your membership will auto-renew for $69.99 yearly, so if you're not interested in staying with Calm, be sure you remember to cancel it.
Calm gives you access to over 50,000 minutes of content and tools created to help you better manage anxiety and stress. You get narrated stories and exercises taught by experts and content creators with soothing, warm voices that may even help you get better sleep, with specialized Sleep Stories created just for that purpose. If you've ever wanted to fall asleep to the dulcet tones of Harry Styles' voice, Calm has you covered there too. Create healthy mindfulness habits, take care of your body, and much more with premium Calm.
Grab this discount while you can, as it looks to be a limited-time deal. It's time to start prioritizing your mental health and taking care of you.
SAVE $80: As of Sept. 6, you can get an LG 27-inch monitor (27MP400-B) for just $99.99, down from the MSRP of $179.99, at Amazon. That's a 44% discount.
Opens in a new window Credit: LG LG 27-inch monitor (27MP400-B) $99.99 at AmazonSometimes, your laptop screen just won’t cut it (think design projects, video editing, or long work hours). Thankfully, we live in a tech-first society where you can transform your tiny laptop screen into a full-on desktop computer by hooking it up to a standalone monitor.
SEE ALSO: The best gaming monitor for upgrading your visualsRight now, you can get an LG 27-inch monitor (27MP400-B) for just $99.99 at Amazon. The listing price is $129.99, but we found this same monitor on the LG site for $179.99, so you’re actually saving $80. That's 44% off.
This monitor features a three-sided, virtually borderless design, a 75 Hz refresh rate, AMD FreeSync to reduce screen tearing and stuttering, and a special reader mode to reduce eye strain. It’s also wall-mountable for a more flexible setup.
GET $30 OFF: As of Sept. 5, you can get a Ninja Air Fryer Pro for just $89.99, down from $119.99, at Amazon. That's a 25% discount of $30.
Opens in a new window Credit: Ninja Our pick: Ninja Air Fryer Pro 4-in-1 (5QT) $89.99 at AmazonWith football season in full swing, you might be wondering how you’ll feed your crew without missing the game. Pizza delivery is always an option, but what if you’re hungry right now? With an air fryer, you can whip up crispy, mouthwatering snacks in a fraction of the time it takes to wait for delivery.
As of Sept. 5, you can get a Ninja Air Fryer Pro 4-in-1 (5QT) for 25% off at Amazon, bringing the price down to $89.99 from $119.99. That’s a $30 discount.
SEE ALSO: These air fryer Super Bowl recipes will keep you stuffed during the Big GameThis air fryer features air crisp technology so you can have your faves frozen to crisp without the oil in minutes. It also has a 5-quart capacity — big enough to cook up to four pounds of French fries or chicken wings. The 4-in-1 functionality means it can air fry, broil, roast, and dehydrate.
You’ll also get a recipe book with 20 air fry recipes right out of the box and corresponding cooking charts.
Plenty of horror films have moments that stay with you, but there aren't many with final images as disturbing as Starve Acre's.
The entire last act of Daniel Kokotajlo's movie — based on Andrew Michael Hurley's novel of the same name — is intense, so much so that you may be struggling to make sense of what in the rabbit-nurturing heck you just witnessed.
To try and help piece together the final happenings of this '70s Yorkshire-set horror, we've broken down all the key questions below, from the legend of Dandelion Jack to what really happened to that poor little boy.
SEE ALSO: The 13 best horror movies of 2023, and where to watch them What's Starve Acre about?After their young son Owen (Arthur Shaw) dies from an asthma attack, Richard (Matt Smith) and Juliette (Morfydd Clark) both experience strange happenings while struggling to deal with their overwhelming grief. On a sabbatical from the university where he teaches, Richard digs in a nearby field to try and uncover the remaining roots of a legendary tree written about in his abusive father's diaries.
While digging Richard discovers the skeleton of a hare, which he boxes up and takes home — only to find that the creature seems to be slowly regenerating itself whenever he looks at its remains alone.
Juliette, meanwhile, is haunted by depression, guilt, and visions of her son, leading her to be open to a visit from local medium Mrs Forde (Melanie Kilburn).
A troubled family. Credit: BFI What happens at the end of Starve Acre?The remains of the hare completely regenerate, and the now-living creature comes back to the house after Richard and Juliette try to release it into the wild. Juliette becomes obsessed with it, believing it to be the manifestation of a Pagan spirit the locals called Dandelion Jack.
Richard, meanwhile, uncovers the remains of the perfectly preserved "Whistling Tree" that his father was obsessed with. His colleague Steven (Robert Emms) comes to help him dig, but Juliette has a vision that Steven has come to take the hare away from her. She takes a knife and murders Steven, before persuading Richard that Dandelion Jack has come to give them a second chance after their son's death.
In the final moments of the film, Richard kills Juliette's visiting sister Harrie (Erin Richards), providing Dandelion Jack with the third sacrifice needed to complete the legend and cross over from the spirit world.
What's the local legend about Dandelion Jack?Hang on a minute — who's Dandelion Jack? And what exactly is this local legend? We get glimpses of the story in the writings of Richard's father Neil, but the most concise explanation comes from Richard himself when he tells his colleague what the Whistling Tree is meant to be.
"The womb of nature," says Richard. "The pagan's entrance to the spirit world."
One of these spirits is Dandelion Jack. The legend goes that three human sacrifices are needed to open the doorway and let him in: a child, a woman, and a man. In this case Owen is the first sacrifice, then Steven, and then finally Harrie.
What really happened to their son, Owen?Before he dies, Owen speaks about Dandelion Jack, using the spirit's other name, Jack Grey. He says Jack Grey has been "whistling" to him. The implication is that Dandelion Jack's spirit is able to influence and communicate with members of Richard's family in an attempt to free himself from the spirit world, first telling Owen to do bad things and then causing his mother not to intervene while he's having an asthma attack.
"When Owen had the asthma attack, I didn't freeze up," Juliette tells Richard towards the end of the film. "I had a moment of clarity that we'd be better off without him. And that was thanks to Jack."
It seems as though Dandelion Jack's spirit was pulling the strings all along, with the goal being to make Owen his first sacrifice.
Juliette treats the hare like a new child. Credit: BFI What's the deal with the hare?The hare seems to be a physical manifestation of Dandelion Jack. Richard discovers the remains while digging near the buried Whistling Tree (the doorway to Jack's spirit world), and the hare regenerates after Owen — the first sacrifice — has been made.
Whether the hare is Jack's final form is unclear. The film ends at the moment when all three sacrifices have been made, and Juliette has just begun to "nurture" (ick) the hare like a child.
Maybe it's for the best that we don't stick around to find out what happens next.
Starve Acre is currently showing at UK theatres.
SAVE $50: As of Sept. 6, football fans can shave $50 off an NFL Sunday Ticket subscription by using promo code TICKET50. You can also bundle it with YouTube TV and save $85.
Opens in a new window Credit: NFL NFL Sunday Ticket subscription $429.00 at YouTubeFall is almost officially here, so it's time to start getting excited for all your favorite autumnal staples: Light jackets, pumpkin spice lattes, and of course, football. If you're a football fan, you know there are many options for watching the big games in the age of streaming, and none of them are cheap. That's why you should take advantage of a good deal when you come across one, like a cool $50 off NFL Sunday Ticket.
For a limited time, new NFL Sunday Ticket subscribers can get their first year of the service for $50 off using code TICKET50. You can also bundle your Sunday Ticket with a YouTube TV membership and save $85 in total using the same code. If you choose not to go for the bundle, you can still get $35 applied to your first 4 months of YouTube TV (then pay $72.99 per month after that). Be quick, though, because this flash deal is only live while supplies last.
SEE ALSO: All of the best football streaming deals for the 2024–2025 NFL seasonWhat exactly do you get with NFL Sunday Ticket? Quite a bit, actually. The big draw is that you'll have access to all the out-of-market Sunday football games that you want to watch, with no restrictions based on your location. Bundled with YouTube TV, you'll be able to watch all the local and national NFL games, meaning you'll have pretty much every live game in one place without having to swap streaming apps constantly. Another cool perk is the multiview feature, which lets you stream up to four games at once on one screen so you're never missing any action. You'll also get unlimited streams at home across multiple devices, plus access to highlights from each game.
SAVE UP TO $200: Here are the best deals from Best Buy's 48-hour flash sale. But you'd better hurry; the sale ends today.
Our top picks: Best TV deal overall Insignia 65-inch Class F30 Series LED 4K UHD Smart Fire TV $319.99 at Best Buy (save $130 ) Get Deal Best runner-up TV deal TCL 65-inch Class Q7 Q-Class QLED 4K UHD Smart Google TV (2023) $599.99 at Best Buy (save $200) Get Deal Best budget TV deal Hisense 43-inch Class A6 Series LED 4K UHD Smart Google TV (2024) $179.99 at Best Buy (save $60) Get DealFootball season is here again, and if you’re trying to impress your friends with the ultimate game-day setup, Best Buy is throwing a 48-hour flash sale where you can save hundreds on some of the best TVs on the market.
SEE ALSO: The best time to buy a TV: A guide to the times of year that you'll find the best TV dealsIf you’re not into football (I get it, it’s not for everyone), it might be nice to curl up on the couch and binge-watch your favorite shows or movies on a brand-new, high-quality TV. (Think cozy nights with Practical Magic, Gilmore Girls, and Schitt's Creek.)
As of Sept 6, you can score up to $200 off select Samsung, Toshiba, and Insignia 4K smart TVs during the sale. But you'll want to act fast because once these deals are gone, they're gone.
Here are some of the best TV deals we could find from Best Buy's 48-hour flash sale:
Best deal overall Opens in a new window Credit: Insignia Our pick: Insignia 65-inch Class F30 Series LED 4K UHD Smart Fire TV $319.99 at Best BuyThe Insignia 65-inch Class F30 Series LED 4K UHD Smart Fire TV is $130 off and has everything you’d want from a smart TV, including Alexa voice control, built-in Fire TV, DTS studio sound (with two-speaker playback), and a 4K UHD display for a crisp, clear picture. And at 65 inches, you won’t miss a single play, no matter where you're sitting in the room.
Best runner-up deal Opens in a new window Credit: TCL Our pick: TCL 65-inch Class Q7 Q-Class QLED 4K UHD Smart Google TV (2023) $599.99 at Best BuyIf you’re willing to spend a little more, the TCL 65-inch Class Q7 Q-Class QLED 4K UHD Smart Google TV (2023) offers a few more features, including a 120 Hz panel refresh rate (ideal for action-heavy movies or gaming), motion rate 480 with MEMC frame insertion, and HDR Ultra (Dolby Vision IQ, HDR10+, and HLG). This TV also has IMAX enhanced certification, an auto game mode with AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, four HDMI ports, and Google TV Smart OS.
This TV is a step up from the Insignia feature-wise and great for gaming, streaming, and movies.
Best budget deal Opens in a new window Credit: Hisense Our pick: Hisense 43-inch Class A6 Series LED 4K UHD Smart Google TV (2024) $179.99 at Best BuyIf you need a TV for basic streaming, the Hisense 43-inch Class A6 Series LED 4K UHD Smart Google TV (2024) is under $200 and has a 4K AI upscaler (so classics, home movies, and even the news look better), game mode plus, DTS virtual: X technology, an AI sports mode, and Google TV. It's a bit smaller than the other TVs, but it's an affordable option with smart features and a 4K display. And for less than $200, you can't beat the value.
TL;DR: Every 2024 NFL regular season and playoff game — including the Super Bowl — is available to watch worldwide (except the U.S and China) with an NFL Game Pass.
American Football is the nation's favorite game, but interest in this electric sport has been steadily growing around the world in recent years. You can find fans of the NFL in every corner of the globe nowadays, and we can't see things changing anytime soon.
The good news for this dedicated group of fans is that it has never been easier to follow the NFL. If you want to watch every second of the action this season, we have all the information you need.
What is an NFL Game Pass?The NFL Game Pass offers comprehensive coverage of every single game this season live and on-demand, including the preseason, regular season, postseason, and the Super Bowl. That's a lot of content, but there's actually more. Subscribers also get access to NFL Network, NFL Redzone, NFL originals, highlights, and documentaries.
The NFL Game Pass is available through the DAZN app. Fans can either sign up as a standalone subscription or as an add-on to an existing DAZN package.
Where is the NFL Game Pass available?The NFL Game Pass is available worldwide on DAZN, excluding the U.S. and China.
Usually we would suggest using a VPN (like ExpressVPN) to subscribe to the NFL Game Pass from excluded locations like the U.S. and China, but it looks like DAZN has a block in place. DAZN states that "using a VPN to subscribe to NFL GPI from another country is against DAZN’s terms and conditions and will be blocked by our technology."
How much does the NFL Game Pass cost?The NFL Game Pass price differs around the world:
Australia — AU$289.99
Brazil — R$399.90
Denmark — DKK 2,049
France — €209.99
Germany — €179.99
Italy — €199.99
Japan — ¥28,800
Mexico — MXN 2,700
Spain — €179.99
UK — £159.99
We would usually suggest using a streaming-friendly VPN to bypass geo-restrictions and access a better rate from another country, but due to DAZN's strict block on using VPNs to subscribe to the Game Pass, this doesn't look like an effective tactic at the time of writing.
How to use the NFL Game Pass in the U.S.The NFL Game Pass is available all around the world, except the U.S. and China. This poses a problem for subscribers traveling through the U.S. If you want to access your subscription in an excluded location, you'll need to use a VPN.
VPNs can hide your IP address (digital location) and connect you to secure servers in other locations, meaning you can bypass geo-restrictions to access your NFL Game Pass from the U.S. (or China). It sounds complicated, but the process is actually really simple:
Subscribe to a streaming-friendly VPN (like ExpressVPN)
Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)
Open up the app and connect to a server in any location (except the U.S. or China)
Sign in to NFL Game Pass
Access your NFL Game Pass subscription from the U.S.
ExpressVPN is the best choice for streaming live sport, for a number of reasons:
Servers in 105 countries
Easy-to-use app available on all major devices including iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, and more
Strict no-logging policy so your data is secure
Fast connection speeds free from throttling
Up to eight simultaneous connections
30-day money-back guarantee
A one-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for $99.95 and includes an extra three months for free — 49% off for a limited time. This plan also includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a generous 30-day money-back guarantee.
The Mini is a bite-sized version of The New York Times' revered daily crossword. While the crossword is a lengthier experience that requires both knowledge and patience to complete, The Mini is an entirely different vibe.
With only a handful of clues to answer, the daily puzzle doubles as a speed-running test for many who play it.
So, when a tricky clue disrupts a player's flow, it can be frustrating! If you find yourself stumped playing The Mini — much like with Wordle and Connections — we have you covered.
SEE ALSO: Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more: Play games on MashableHere are the clues and answers to NYT's The Mini for Friday, September 6, 2024:
AcrossPioneering video game in which you slither around and eat applesThe answer is Snake.
The answer is PObox.
The answer is Isaac.
The answer is title.
The answer is real.
The answer is spit.
The answer is nosir.
The answer is abate.
The answer is koala.
The answer is Excel.
If you're looking for more puzzles, Mashable's got games now! Check out our games hub for Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more.
Featured Video For You The Wordle Strategy used by the New York Times' Head of GamesAre you also playing NYT Strands? See hints and answers for today's Strands.
Not the day you're after? Here's the solution to yesterday's Mini Crossword.
What if a ghost could tell its own story but not speak? That is the wildly compelling premise of Presence. Director Steven Soderbergh reteams with Kimi screenwriter David Koepp for an unconventional haunted house story, creating a film that is sharply funny, beguiling, a bit chilling, and ultimately sweet.
And it all begins with a dizzying opening shot.
SEE ALSO: Steven Soderbergh's 'Kimi' is an electric thriller with an encrypted message of hope The camera is a character in PresencePresence opens within a house on the break of sunrise. It's still dark inside as the camera swans around from kitchen to hallway, up the stairs and through the bedrooms and back again. There's a slight fish-eye lens effect, even in the darkness, turning the corners of a house into ominous shadows. And the movement of the camera suggests not some passive viewer, but a perspective, a presence.
The next scene is established with daylight. The presence watches (as do we) as a posh real estate agent (Julia Fox) arrives to show the space to the Payne family. The mother, Rebecca (Lucy Liu), is immediately sold, gushing about how the location means her golden child Tyler (newcomer Eddy Maday) could be in the best school district to follow his trajectory as a trophy-winning swimmer. Meanwhile, dad Chris (This is Us' Chris Sullivan) worries the move would be hard on their other teen, Chloe (Foundation's Callina Liang), who has recently lost her best friend to a presumed drug overdose.
The inherent conflict between Lui's smothering Boy Mom and Sullivan's earnestly vulnerable Girl Dad plays out in passive aggression and outright arguments, all with the wandering eye of the presence floating around as a silent witness. But this being, whose identity, name, and gender are unclear for much of the movie, is most focused on Chloe, who is alone in her grief — until she's not.
Featured Video For You 'Cuckoo' is Hunter Schafer's first movie. How that helped ground her performance.The point-of-view perspective in horror is chiefly used to inspire fear in the audience, implying a sinister force or slasher is sizing up a potential victim. But here, the camera's movement conveys no ill intent, in part because of the way the presence tends to hide in Chloe's closet, as if it is scared, not aiming to scare. Props to Soderbergh, who also serves as the film's editor and cinematographer. Long takes that move from one room to another, following conflict and conversation, create a pulsing vulnerability for a character we cannot see or hear, yet understand all the same. I was in awe that when the camera pans from one hurting family member to another, I could feel the yearning of the presence to be seen, to join in, to scream. Presence is extraordinary for all it tells through its moving camerawork alone.
Presence's cast is extraordinaryOf course, all Soderbergh's sublime cinematography could have been for nought if it weren't for a cast that could grasp the concept. As it is, I'll be absolutely shocked if Presence doesn't get a Best Cinematography Oscar nomination.
The film demands actors play out long takes that sometimes involve complex choreography. Within that, they need their lines to land on camera but casually. And beyond that, there's the creeping shift in behavior as the presence makes itself known. Some in the house begin to sense it, and their gaze must connect to the lens in a way that is present but not concrete. This way we believe that what they see appears as nothing, as the camera will never leave the presence's perspective to reveal the living's. Liang has the heaviest lift here, as she engages most directly with the ghost, sometimes sensing it, but also realizing how it has the power to move things in her room. Sharing this revelation with her family only sparks a fight and more violent paranormal activity.
SEE ALSO: TIFF 2024 preview: 15 movies you ought to know aboutFor her part, Liu is perfectly cold as a corporate shark with a ruthless sense of right and wrong, delivering a monologue to her smirking son that's so electrifyingly frank it sparked laughs from a shocked audience. Sullivan is her foil, playing a human teddy bear desperate to save his daughter from a despair he grapples to comprehend. Maday sizzles as a cruel jock who has little patience for his freaky sister, while Liang shoulders the bulk of the film, balancing her scenes of ghostly intrusion with meditations on grief and a budding secret romance with "the coolest guy in school" (West Mulholland in Jared Leto circa My So-Called Life mode). Together, they feel like a real family, the dialogue current and crisply natural, grounding the real so the uncanny hits all the harder.
Presence is a welcomed genre twistSoderbergh has played in various genres from heist movies like Ocean's Eleven and Logan Lucky, to psychological thrillers like Unsane and Kimi, the espionage actioner Haywire, and the sexy comedies that make up the Magic Mike trilogy. While technically Presence is a horror movie in conceit, Soderbergh doesn't feel bound by the demands to make it spooky. In fact, the house is not remotely creepy. Admittedly, the music has a flare of whining instruments that recall gothic horror movies of the the 1940s, but this clashes with the girly-pop aesthetic of Chloe's bedroom, effectively underlining how the presence feels out of place here.
Credit to Koepp, who like Soderbergh has lept from one genre to another, with screenplay credits on everything from Jurassic Park to Mission: Impossible, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, and my personal favorite, the dark diva comedy Death Becomes Her. But his most relevant work to Presence is the woefully underrated Stir of Echoes, a 1999 horror movie, where Kevin Bacon plays a man with newly awakened abilities to commune with the dead. Now, Presence isn't as overtly eerie as Stir of Echoes, which is a more traditional ghost story in that sense. But they share a similar sensibility in Koepp's carefully constructed characters and final act twist. Essentially, his thumb print is clear.
Koepp employs genre conventions like poltergeist activity: objects moved when the living aren't looking or rooms trashed before their very eyes. But because of Soderbergh's committed POV shots, these actions don't feel like they're intended to scare as much as they are to express a wordless frustration. Likewise, when the family brings in a medium, Lisa (Natalie Woolams-Torres), she looks nothing like you might expect. Rather than a frail white woman in black witchy attire, this supernatural communicator is a robust woman of color, wearing a warm flannel and jeans, as if she's just come from her job as a barista or a kindergarten teacher. These subtle tweaks give a thrilling sense of possibility to Presence, promising the audience it won't play by the rules and so the film could go anywhere. And where it goes it is not only satisfyingly surprising, but smartly sentimental.
In the end, Presence is a remarkable union of a clever concept and a superb execution. In the wrong hands, fumbled or flashy camerawork could have crushed the character building of the ghost. Soderbergh's steady hand is so mindful in its performance that you can practically feel the expressions of a face you cannot see. The cast expertly builds a believable and complex family bond while effortlessly completing choreographed blocking. And Koepp delivers a final act that is stomach-churningly tense yet tender. All of this collides to make a sublimely realized ghost story that is easily one of the best films of the year.
Shame you'll have to wait until next year to see it.
Presence was reviewed out of its international premiere at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival. The film is scheduled for theatrical release in the US Jan. 17, 2025.
We already know that Stephen King thinks his latest story adaptation is "a happiness machine", but his latest post about The Life of Chuck is even more glowing.
SEE ALSO: Every single Stephen King movie adaptation, rankedTaking to X (formerly Twitter) to share his thoughts on Mike Flanagan's upcoming adaptation of his novella of the same name, King described it as "one of the good ones."
Tweet may have been deleted"It's sad, has a touch of the paranormal, but it's also joyful and life-affirming," said King. "Maybe not what you'd expect from me, but there ya go."
It's not such a surprise if you've read the story – a novella in King's If It Bleeds collection – which follows a man whose world falls apart when he starts to see the same mysterious image of a man called Chuck popping up everywhere.
Tom Hiddleston, Karen Gillan, and Mark Hamill star in the adaptation, which will like have Being John Malkovich surreal mystery vibes.
The Life of Chuck's release date is TBC.
Huawei's tri-folding phone, the Mate XT, is seemingly pulling off the greatest trick a folding phone can: It looks ordinary (when folded).
In a new teaser posted by Huawei on Weibo, the phone is clearly visible from the back, fully folded, and you could mistake it for any regular smartphone. The phone is also partially shown fully unfolded, and while we don't get to see all that glorious screen real estate, it really does appear you get something akin to a full-sized tablet.
Can you tell that this is a folding phone? Credit: HuaweiRumors say the size of the display, when fully unfolded, will be 10 inches diagonally, which is comparable to the 8.3-inch iPad mini (though inevitably with a very different aspect ratio, as the Huawei certainly won't be 5.3 inches tall like the iPad mini).
SEE ALSO: What to expect from Apple event 2024: iPhone 16, Apple Watch 10, and moreThe big question, of course, is just how thick the Huawei Mate XT will be when folded. From what we can see in the video, it won't be too bad, but it'll certainly be thicker than an average phone.
Another interesting aspect of the Huawei Mate XT is the timing of its launch. Huawei has a launch event in China that starts hours after Apple's iPhone 16 launch in California.
Check out the full teaser video for the Huawei Mate XT over on Weibo.
No one wants to tag their friends on Instagram anymore.
Instagram is one of the most powerful leaders in the attention economy. Meta knows how much the eyes of its users are worth — a few billion dollars — and has taken virtually every step to cement its role in our social lives. You can post on your grid, like other people's posts, comment on them, and send them to your friends. You can post a note or a song, comment on a note or a song, and respond to someone's note or song. You can post on your Story, repost someone's post on your Story, repost someone's Story on your Story, like someone's Story, respond to someone's Story, and now, you can even comment on someone's Story. You can send private messages, group chats, and make video calls in the DMs.
SEE ALSO: Is Instagram going to ruin your grid with rectangles?Despite Instagram's many faults — and this, too, may be one — it knows how to encourage users to stay on its app with near-constant changes to how we communicate on it. As one kind of action organically changes (people stop posting hashtags, for example), another feature (the explore page) takes its place. Tagging is no different.
Since its inception, we've seen a shift in how users tag one another in posts. Before disclosing branded content on Instagram was mandatory, influencers and wannabe influencers would tag the brands they were — or wanted to look like they were — collaborating with. That would change with the implementation of mandatory disclosures. The trend of tagging your friends or brands maintained its staying power for a bit, but now, no one wants to tag their friends.
A few months ago, Instagram changed how it notified users that they were tagged in a photo. Instead of simply sending a notification, it would send users a notification and a direct message to the tagged user from the tagger of the post. So, if you hosted a party, took a photo, and tagged all 48 attendees, you would have sent 48 DMs. There is no way to turn this feature off. The only way to avoid it is to stop tagging people. People hated it.
Tweet may have been deletedIn response to the change, or perhaps just in the typical way social media interactions evolve, users stopped tagging people altogether. As I scroll through my feed, I see dozens of photo dumps, each including five to 20 pictures of someone and their friends — but none of the friends are tagged. It's unclear if implementing the DM feature spearheaded a new movement away from tagging friends in posts, but the timing can't be denied.
Beyond the DMs, there are plenty of other reasons not to tag your friends in a photo. Privacy concerns, for one. There's also the age-old oversaturation problem; as Instagram shifts from a platform for casual social interactions to one focused on curated, aesthetic, and branded profiles, tagging could distract from a more clean and polished look. It has also been around for so long and has become so common that tagging might have lost its novelty and now leans toward feeling outdated or cringeworthy. Some users on Reddit worry that their posts are seen less if they tag too many people, although there's no proof that this has any bearing in reality.
SEE ALSO: Instagram is currently in its flop eraOr maybe it has less to do with engagement and more with a user's intended vibe. Maybe people want a little mystery. Mystery is hard-fought and rarely won in the age of social media, but perhaps not tagging the people in your photos lends itself to an air of secrecy in a time of oversharing.
It's difficult to pinpoint a single reason for how and why social trends change — tagging included. But if Instagram's history is any indicator, it'll find some new way to steal your attention.
Australian Olympic breakdancer Rachael "Raygun" Gunn has given her first interview since her viral performance earned her international infamy. Appearing via video on Australian talk show The Project, Raygun acknowledged that she's had a tough time since her much maligned Olympic debut, but continued to defend her moves and insist that her critics just don't know much about breakdancing.
"It has been honestly so amazing to see the positive response to my performance," said Raygun, attempting to put an optimistic spin on the overwhelmingly negative situation. "I never thought that I would be able to connect with so many people in such a positive way."
SEE ALSO: Australian Olympic breakdancer Raygun calls response to her viral performance 'pretty devastating'It's surprising that Raygun's Olympic performance apparently inspired enough positive reactions to galvanise her. The 37-year-old university lecturer became the subject of global criticism after she not only lost every round of her Olympic breakdancing battles, but did so with moves the vast majority of viewers considered laughably embarrassing. These included Australian-inspired moves such as hopping like a kangaroo.
Raygun's reaction to the Olympic breakdancing backlashFortunately, Raygun said she wasn't initially aware of the backlash to her Olympic performance, having been advised to avoid the internet shortly after her events. She also quickly got mental health support.
"As soon as I finished my rounds, my media liaison from the [Australian Olympic Committee] said, 'Oh, there's a bit of a storm brewing on social media, you might want to go off socials,'" Raygun told The Project. "And I was like, 'Oh, OK.' I didn't understand the scale of it."
Her blissful ignorance didn't last long though. Raygun got a "sick feeling" when she did eventually see what the internet was saying about her, which was further solidified, she said, when an Australian reporter questioned her about the backlash in the street.
"That really did put me in a state of panic for a while after that, and I was quite nervous being out in public because I just didn't know what was safe, if anyone was going to recognise me [and] how they were going to respond to seeing me," said Raygun.
She also revealed that while she typically doesn't watch past battles regardless, it will be some time before she revisits her Olympic performances. She hasn't seen late night host Jimmy Fallon's skit about her either.
"I don't know whether to hug him or yell at him," said Raygun, acknowledging that Fallon's skit helped bring her to people's attention. "I haven't actually seen the sketch because I don't think I'm in a place yet to watch it, but I will watch it at some point."
Raygun: 'It's just a different approach in breaking' Credit: Photo by Elsa / Getty ImagesRaygun's disappointing Olympic performance led many to question exactly how she was selected for the Australian team, with some even speculating she made it to Paris via underhanded means. Though she previously addressed such rumours in an Instagram video last month, Raygun took the opportunity to refute them once more on The Project, stating that she qualified by winning the 2023 Oceania Breaking Championships and hadn't known any of the nine judges.
"A lot of the responses though is also just due to people not being very familiar with breaking and the diversity of approaches in breaking,'" said Raygun. "It's just a different approach in breaking. You have the athletics style breakers, you also have the more artistic style breakers, and all of them are very valid."
Offering some insight into her Olympic strategy, Raygun said she chose to primarily focus on three of the five judging criteria: originality, vocabulary ("the range and repertoire of movement"), and musicality.
"I knew my chances were slim," said Raygun. "I knew that I was going to get beaten and I knew that people were not going to understand my style and what I was gonna do… I had to go with what I was good at, I had to go with my strengths."
According to Raygun, her Olympic performance was actually fairly typical in the breakdancing community. Even so, she still hasn't been free of admonishment from other breakdancers. While she expressed remorse for the backlash the breakdancing community has received, Raygun noted that she "can't control how people react," and proposed that Australian breakdancing needs more resources to be able to compete on the world stage.
"In the last year I have trained my hardest," said Raygun. "Learning power moves in your mid-30s is not easy, let's just say that! I have really put my body through it, put my mind through it. But if that's not good enough for someone, what can I say?"
Raygun's breakdancing future Credit: Ezra Shaw / Getty ImagesIn the interview, Raygun also briefly touched on discourse regarding the gentrification of breakdancing, though unfortunately she focused on her ethnicity rather than socioeconomic or academic concerns. The breakdancing subculture originated from disenfranchised Black and Puerto Rican youth in America. As such, seeing it become an Olympic event featuring a university academic kangaroo hopping rubbed many people the wrong way.
"I think even if it went to the second or third [place winners], that it still would have been a white girl representing [Australia]," said Raygun.
Second and third place at the 2023 Oceania Breaking Championships went to Molly Therese "Holy Molly" Chapman and Hannah Georgina Belet respectively.
"It's been a bit of a process to try and start dancing again."Despite the global condemnation of her dance moves, Raygun still stands by them. When asked whether she genuinely believes she's the best female breaker in Australia, the Olympian merely stated that she thinks her "record speaks to that," then proceeded to list her breakdancing accolades.
"The record is there, but anything can happen in a battle," Raygun told The Project. "It's always about what happens on the day. That consistency shows my level."
Regardless of this, we won't be seeing Raygun at more breakdancing competitions any time soon.
"It's been a bit of a process to try and start dancing again," she said. "That's actually been tough. It was my medicine, and then it turned into my source of stress. I'm really happy that it gets to go back to being my medicine… I'm looking forward to breaking, but no, I don't think I'll compete for a while."
Credit: Rene Nijhuis / BSR Agency / Getty ImagesUnfortunately for Raygun, her interview with The Project doesn't appear to have pacified her detractors. The overwhelming majority of commenters have reacted with derision, lambasting Raygun for refusing to own up to what was widely considered an embarrassing performance.
"The level of her delusion is Olympic!" commented YouTube user yopomiles.
"'I know people weren’t going to understand my style' nah girl no one expected you to flounder like a fish," wrote MadelinFox18.
"She claims others 'dont understand breaking' when it's clear she is the one who doesn't understand breaking," altruism123 posted.
"'my record speaks to that...' pure narcissism right there," allmightyx7600 wrote.
"The Olympics is not about having fun," said peachstars219. "The Olympics is about seeing the best of the world. Raygun is not the best of Australia."
Following NASA's tense decision to pull its astronauts off Boeing's spaceship for their ride home, lots of eyes will be on Starliner this evening to see how it performs a landing uncrewed.
The capsule, which launched in June, took test pilots Barry "Butch" Wilmore and Sunita "Suni" Williams to the International Space Station for its first human spaceflight. But what was supposed to be an eight-day visit for the pair turned into an indefinite stay after Starliner experienced propulsion problems and helium leaks in space.
SEE ALSO: Boeing's Starliner was mysteriously blooping like a submarine in space. Here's why.After reviewing flight and test data, NASA concluded it would be too risky to send Wilmore and Williams home on Starliner. The agency instead made arrangements for them to return in a SpaceX spaceship in February 2025. NASA officials said the Columbia and Challenger space shuttle disasters informed their safety-focused decision.
"There was just too much uncertainty in the prediction of the thrusters," said Steve Stich, NASA's commercial crew program manager, at a news conference on Aug. 24. "If we had a way to accurately predict what the thrusters would do for the undock and all the way through the deorbit burn and through the separation sequence, I think we would have taken a different course of action."
The above embedded video is where NASA will stream Starliner's undocking and departure from the ISS live.
Starliner will undock autonomously, firing a few short bursts of its thrusters to reverse from the space station. Those little pulses are not likely to cause overheating, which may have played a role in the spaceship's reduced propulsion in June, NASA officials said.
The most concerning maneuver will be the use of thrusters while trying to leave orbit. Doing so will require some thrusters that had previously malfunctioned.
Boeing's team believed Starliner would have safely returned Wilmore and Williams, and it appears NASA's decision has created some friction with the developer. Boeing representatives have not participated in the past few NASA news conferences. But Stich rejected any claims that meetings between the partners were heated.
The above embedded video is where NASA will stream Starliner's reentry and landing live.
"I wouldn't say it was a yelling, screaming kind of meeting," he told reporters this week. "It was a tense technical discussion where we had both sides listening intently to all the data, and, in the end, to make a decision whether to return crewed or uncrewed."
How to watch Boeing Starliner's landingThe return journey will begin this evening with a robotic undocking from the International Space Station. The U.S. space agency will broadcast the departure on YouTube and NASA's website at 5:45 p.m. ET Sept. 6.
The coverage will continue at 10:50 p.m. ET when the empty spaceship attempts to leave orbit, re-enter Earth's atmosphere, and land in a New Mexico desert. If the descent happens on schedule, flight controllers anticipate Starliner will touch down at the Army's White Sands Missile Range a little over an hour later, just after midnight ET Sept. 7.
Tweet may have been deletedStarliner successfully performed an uncrewed landing in 2019. It was the first time a U.S. spacecraft designed for human passengers had landed on soil rather than splashing down into an ocean. A system of parachutes and air bags should cushion Starliner's drop to the ground.
Using a VPN (or virtual private network) on your PC is a good way to reclaim some of your online privacy. But if you're downloading any random VPN app in the Microsoft Store just because it's 100 percent free, you could be risking the safety of your device and personal data. You have to be careful — free VPNs can be doing some really sketchy stuff behind the scenes.
The good news is that some trustworthy premium VPNs do offer free subscription tiers or trials for users' most basic needs. While these options come with fewer features, servers, and support options than the providers' paid subscriptions, they're covered by the exact same airtight privacy and no-logs policies. You know — the whole point of getting a VPN in the first place.
I've tested all of the top VPNs previously for Mashable, and after conducting new testing on Windows devices, I'm ready to recommend the best free VPNs for PC users in 2024.
SEE ALSO: The best VPN services of 2024, tested and reviewedProton VPN is the top pick for most people: It doesn't place data or time limits on its free users, and transparency and digital safety are core tenets of its business model. For new users who aren't very familiar with VPNs, I also endorse TunnelBear: Its app is simple (and adorable), and it gives you 2GB of data per month plus country-level server selection with a free account.
As an honorable mention, CyberGhost VPN's 24-hour trial gives you full, free access to its gigantic server network, which is capable of skirting geo-restrictions on regional content — a decent short-term solution for fans of international TV shows. I felt like it was important to include here because so many people seek out VPNs for this secondary use case, but I want to stress that its track record isn't quite as proven and pristine as the competition. Maybe that matters to you; maybe you just want to binge the latest season of Love Island UK.
Will the e-reader future be in glorious e-ink color?
Probably, but the question of how soon was top of mind as I tested the Kobo Libra Colour, the first color e-reader from a major brand. (Color e-ink e-readers and tablets like the Pocketbook Ink Pad Color 2 and BOOX Tab Ultra C have been around, but generally at a higher price point with a more sluggish performance).
I should also disclose my bias upfront: As a lifelong reader and someone who majored in English, I am unfortunately hardwired to have a superiority complex about preferring physical books. And though that will likely forever be a part of me, I’d be lying if I said that the Kobo Libra Colour didn't help me read in moments I would’ve been scrolling through my phone, and significantly upped my annotation game.
SEE ALSO: Amazon Kindle vs. Kindle Paperwhite: Which one is for you?However, along with the Kobo Clara Colour, the Libra is the brand’s first crack at a color e-reader, so it’s not without its flaws. Whether or not they’re enough to dissuade you from picking it up largely depends on what you want out of your e-reader, so let’s jump into the specifics.
How much does the Kobo Libra Colour cost?If this e-reader put a premium price tag solely because it offers color e-ink, I wouldn't recommend it to anyone. Luckily, this isn't the case, and at $219.99, it feels more than competitively priced with Kindle's offerings. Here’s how it breaks down:
Kobo Libra Colour: $219.99, $289.99 with Kobo Stylus 2 (sold separately for $69.99)
Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition: $189.99
Kindle Scribe with Basic Pen: $339.99
We’ll get more into performance and hardware differences below, but cost-wise alone, the Kobo Libra sits just over $30 more than the Kindle Paperwhite (which we admittedly love but has no color or tablet-like abilities) and $120 less than the Scribe (which has the writing abilities of the Kobo Libra without the color). Plus, the Kindle Scribe’s Premium Pen is a better analog to the Kobo Stylus 2, but the addition of the better pen brings the Scribe’s price up to $369.99, making the Kobo a full $150 cheaper.
SEE ALSO: New iPad mini might be coming soonHonestly, my expectations were that the Amazon Kindles would be a better value: for starters, Kindles don’t offer color e-ink yet, and it’s no secret that Amazon treats its books side of the business as a loss leader. But Kobo surprised me, restraining itself from overpricing a color e-reader and making it more than competitively priced with Kindles.
Along with the e-reader itself, Kobo sent me the Kobo Stylus 2, which as I mentioned above, costs $69.99. They also sent me the Kobo Libra Colour Sleepcover, which retails for $39.99 and worked as an excellent kickstand in both portrait and landscape mode.
Kobo Libra Colour specsThe Kobo's competitive cost falls in line with what it's offering beyond the color display. The basic overview of what this e-reader offers includes:
7-inch E Ink Kaleido 3 screen
300 PPI (pixels per inch) for black-and-white content
150 PPI for color content color content
32GB of storage
Bluetooth compatibility
Dark mode available
You might notice that the color screen isn't made by Kobo, which is why you can find the exact same Kaleido 3 on other e-ink devices — however, as I mentioned up top, they're usually more expensive, and generally, Kobo seems to offer the most streamlined e-reader experience.
As for a comparison with the rest of the specs, the Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition has a 6.8-inch 300 PPI display with 32GB of storage and an estimated 10 weeks of battery life. It's nearly identical, but Kindle does have one over Kobo here: in the roughly two and a half months I used the Kobo (about 10 weeks), I charged it twice.
SEE ALSO: Google Pixel 9 Pro XL: The longest battery life we've ever recordedThat said, I didn't give the battery its best chance — in most cases, the WiFi and Bluetooth were on when I read, mostly because I was trying to use the device as I would normally, and realistically, that would not include optimizing its battery life. Depending on the time of day my brightness could be at 75 percent or 5 percent, so that fluctuated greatly too. Though I wish it lasted a little longer, about five weeks of continuous use under those conditions is still pretty decent.
How much color do you get with the Kobo Libra Colour?The display is arguably the draw of this particular e-reader, so naturally, it's garnered some mixed opinions.
Online, you'll find folks who say the technology still isn't there with the Kaleido 3 screen, with the colors appearing washed out and grainy. Defenders of the Libra Colour will say you shouldn't expect iPad-level performance and that finding the right brightness setting goes a long way.
Personally, I find myself falling more into the defender camp, but rather than try to describe why, I figure some pictures might help me make my case. For starters, the highlights and annotations looked great:
The highlighter colors are vivid and distinct. Credit: Bethany Allard / MashableBefore we get more into the next pictures, I need a second to sing the praises of how nice highlighting and switching highlighter colors felt, especially with the Kobo Stylus 2. Writing notes in the margins, on the other hand, was just OK: Some lag (which I'll get more into below) and truly subpar palm rejection soured the experience, but I appreciated that all my highlights and annotations were saved in one long list.
As for how the display looked beyond annotations, book covers on the lock screen came through clearly, even when in the direct sun:
The picture came through clearly at full, 50 percent, and 0 percent brightness in the full sunlight. Credit: Bethany Allard / MashableEven compared to the cover of the physical book, I could play around with the brightness of the Kobo to get a relatively accurate recreation.
The Kobo at a low brightness doesn't look great next to the original text. Credit: Bethany Allard / Mashable Bumping up the brightness to about 60 percent helped the color pop more without becoming washed out. Credit: Bethany Allard / MashableObviously, the display isn't one-to-one with the color saturation of the real thing, but I was still pleasantly surprised. The above side-by-side honestly feels like the least favorable comparison I was able to draw out of the Kobo — most times, when I saw my lock screen with the title of whatever book I happened to be reading at the moment, I was impressed.
With that said, devout graphic novel readers or fans of full-color manga might prefer to stick to an iPad if they want the most vibrant color possible. I saw the comparison of the Kobo offering newspaper-esque color ink, and that feels fairly apt — if you expect that level of color saturation, you won't be let down.
The “screen door” displayOf course, most of the time, when you're reading an e-reader you won't be seeing color. So how does the Kobo stack up with black and white material?
As I mentioned above, the resolution is the same that you'll find on a Kindle Paperwhite. However, some people find the Kobo's display leans warm whereas they prefer the truer black-and-white display of a Kindle. I didn't have a Kindle to compare, but I felt like I was able to adjust the warmth of the screen to my preferences easily.
Adjusting the brightness and screen warmth is easy. Credit: Bethany Allard / MashableHowever, if you've spent any time on r/Kobo, you'll know a particular gripe of e-reader enthusiasts is that Kobo has the "screen door" effect. The effect is what it sounds like — there's a faint grainy quality to the "page" that again, gives an almost newspaper-like look to the display, where a Kindle might look more akin to a standard tablet display.
A close up on the slightly grainy Kobo display. Credit: Bethany Allard / MashableTo be clear, this doesn't really affect the sharpness of the words themselves. Some folks online mentioned that this graininess made them return their Kobo altogether. While it didn't bug me at all, I can see where having the other preference would turn me off from this e-reader. My advice? Go with a Kindle if you know you like a razor-sharp display.
The tablet features aren't there yetEven though some features were promising, I have to agree with what Mashable’s Alex Perry said about the Kindle Scribe last fall: e-readers just aren’t comparable to tablets yet.
When using the notebook feature on the Kobo, you can pick from over 35 page formats, five different pen types, five pen sizes, four highlighter colors, and 10 pen colors. While I appreciate that the tablet-like functions allow the Libra to offer more ways to use its color e-ink than the Clara Colour, compared to an iPad or on its own merit, writing on a Kobo isn't nearly as fluid for note-taking or drawing. Plus, as I mentioned above, the palm rejection sucks.
In other words, it's hard to see the use case where someone would turn to their Kobo as the place to jot down their to-do lists, meal plans, or Cornell notes over a tablet or a notebook.
The color comes through decently, but the actual drawing experience still needs improvement before its fit for more much than this. Credit: Bethany Allard / MashableThe other major issue that keeps the Kobo from being a viable notebook replacement is the display's occasional ghosting issue. While I really didn't notice a lot of ghosting throughout testing, it cropped up randomly when I was messing around with the notebook features: once, when I was using the resize tool, and another time when I was using the Kobo stylus to erase some text I'd written.
Ghosting defeated the purpose of the resize tool. Credit: Bethany Allard / Mashable Believe it or not, I'd erased the word testing. Credit: Bethany Allard / MashableI was especially surprised by the erasing ghosting — I'd erased plenty of annotations in highlights in e-books with the Kobo stylus and found it to work incredibly well. My guess is that the Kobo's system isn't powerful enough to support to smooth notebook experience it tries to offer.
Kindle vs. Kobo: Pros and consI've already pointed out some key differences between the two e-readers throughout this review, but there are a few more factors to take into consideration beyond the display and battery life.
Library book supportIf you read a lot of library books, the Kobo might be for you for one simple reason: integrated Libby (formerly OverDrive) support. On a Kobo, you can place holds, check out, and download library books directly from your device, which is way more convenient than checking out books via the Libby app like you have to with the Kindle. If you happen to prefer using the Libby app, it syncs with the Kobo without issue.
You can borrow library books directly from the Kobo store. Credit: Bethany Allard / MashableThat said, I'd still appreciate the option to add more than one library card at a time to the Kobo, especially as the Libby app supports that exact functionality.
EPUB filesKindles can't read EPUBs, Kobos can. What that means is that it's much easier for you to access and download files to the Kobo from outside the Kobo store. Whether that be an article or a short story, adding an EPUB file is as easy as uploading it to your Google Drive and seeing it show up directly on your Kobo.
I was skeptical that this process would be one of those features that in theory sounds simple and actually requires an hour of troubleshooting to set it up, but I was able to grab a PDF of an essay without a hitch and watch it load up on my home screen.
Pocket integrationSpeaking of articles, as an avid Pocket user prior to any e-reader use, I was stoked when I found out that the app is integrated with Kobo e-readers.
The color display added a nice touch to the tile view screen. Credit: Bethany Allard / Mashable I could perform basic Pocket functions directly from the Kobo. Credit: Bethany Allard / MashableThe syncing process between my Pocket app and the Kobo was basically seamless, whether I was saving articles from the browser on my laptop or from my phone. I could favorite, archive, and delete articles directly from the Kobo, and the color display added a nice touch when I was viewing everything I'd saved.
The major downside was that the Pocket app didn't support any annotation, so I couldn't mark up any articles the same way I'd enjoyed doing with books and EPUB files. Still, considering that Amazon doesn't offer this kind of Pocket integration at all, this felt like a minor gripe.
Amazon's catalogWhere Amazon does have a huge advantage is its catalog. As Deputy Shopping and Reviews Editor Miller Kern mentioned in her comparison between the two brands, Kindle's catalog is simply bigger. This is especially apparent as Kindle Unlimited, the brand's subscription service, offers over 4 million digital titles to Kobo Plus's 1.5 million.
You can also buy e-books directly from your Kindle, while Kobo requires you to scan a QR code to buy them on a phone or computer.
Honorable mentionsA few more rapid-fire odds and ends that might sway you to one e-reader over the other: the Kobo Libra Colour has page-turning buttons, which Kindle doesn't currently offer (RIP, Kindle Oasis). These buttons work without a hitch in landscape, portrait mode, or even upside down, and can be programmed to suit what makes the most sense for you.
The page-turning buttons could be used in the default or inverted mode. Credit: Bethany Allard / MashableSpeaking of design, I liked that the Kobo's on button was on the back of the device so I couldn't never accidentally lock the device (the Kindle's sits on the bottom, and is much more prone to that issue).
SEE ALSO: PS5 Pro: It looks like a sketch of the design just leakedFinally, I appreciated that the stylus magnetically attached to the Kobo and the sleep cover they sent me — sometimes, if I placed it wrong on the button side it would rest on the button and turn a bunch of pages, so a fix for that in a future generation would be great to see. However, it was easy to troubleshoot by placing it on the left side of the tablet while reading, and keeping it on the case when I wasn't using the device.
Is the Kobo Libra Colour worth it?I'll keep it short and sweet: the Kobo Libra Colour is definitely a first-generation product with a few issues to work out, especially with its notebook feature. However, if you love using your library card, marking up your books, appreciate a color display, and prefer page turn buttons to a full touch screen experience, you'll likely be happy with the Kobo Libra Colour.
For folks who want the best unlimited subscription service, don't like a newsprint-like look, and prioritize the most vibrant colors possible when reading comics or manga, you'd likely be better off with a Kindle or a traditional tablet until Kobo (or another brand) improves on the color e-reader.
Kobo Libra Colour $219.99 at Amazon