To create the new Blandford Cross-Pike Nature Connector, The Nature Conservancy in Massachusetts recently purchased 578 acres of land in Blandford. (The Nature Conservancy photo)The Republican
BLANDFORD — The Nature Conservancy bought 578 acres in Blandford earlier this week, furthering the goal of creating a way for wildlife to cross under the Mass Pike.
The fields and forests are filled only with the sounds of wildlife when visitors stick close to Chester Road in Blandford. But hike into the property, and the air fills with the rumble of traffic on the Massachusetts Turnpike, said Richard Cavanaugh, the land protection manager for The Nature Conservancy in Massachusetts.
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Malcolm-Jamal Warner at the 65th GRAMMY Awards in Los Angeles.
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Actor and Grammy Award winner Malcolm-Jamal Warner, best known for his role as the sweet teenager Theo Huxtable on The Cosby Show, has died at age 54.
Per The Associated Press, Costa Rica’s Judicial Investigation Department confirmed that Warner died on Sunday in a drowning accident while on vacation with his family at a beach along the country’s Caribbean coast. He was pulled into a current. Fellow beachgoers tried to rescue him, but first responders from Costa Rica’s Red Cross were unable to revive him.
TV audiences initially came to know Warner as the only son of Heathcliff and Clair Huxtable, a role he played on the smash hit comedy The Cosby Show between 1984 and 1992 and for which he earned an Emmy Award nomination. Later, he appeared on the sitcoms Malcolm & Eddie and Reed Between the Lines. More recently, he appeared on the Fox medical drama The Resident.
Off-Broadway, he appeared in such plays as Three Ways Home and Cryin’ Shame, for which he received an NAACP Theater Award.
His interests were not limited to acting: “Jesus Children,” a song by the Robert Glasper Experiment featuring vocalist Lalah Hathaway, which also features a spoken-word contribution from Warner memorializing the victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, won a Grammy for best traditional R&B performance in 2015. He was also nominated for a second Grammy, for best spoken word poetry album, in 2023 for his project Hiding in Plain View.
In 2023, he spoke to All Things Considered about that project, and about writing poetry during the COVID pandemic.
“Vulnerability can be a scary thing,” he said, “even when we’re on the mend. Black boys boast bravado not to seem broken. And often, so do Black men. I see you looking for clues, searching for cues, longing to know what I’m not telling you, as if I’m hiding in plain view.”
He also played bass guitar, and told NPR that he found avenues of creative expression through music and poetry that he couldn’t access through acting. In 2024, he launched a podcast, “Not All Hood”; the most recent episode, with co-host Candace Kelley and poet and activist Tamika “Georgia Me” Harper, was published last week.
Warner voiced The Producer on the beloved PBS children’s show The Magic School Bus. He directed episodes of many television series, including The Cosby Show, The Resident, and TheFresh Prince of Bel-Air.
On August 9, the people who previously ran startup incubator Y Combinator’s events and PR, along with a former Andreessen Horowitz social media manager, are holding a small, invitation-only event, TechCrunch has learned.
The To Do List Summit will cap off at 80 early-stage founders and will teach them how to work with the press and run their own social media, the organizers promise. The fee for the event is $600.
YC laid off most of the folks putting on this event between a small layoff about a year ago and a larger one in 2023. These layoffs were surprising at the time because Y Combinator’s events have always been highly popular and were a major force in making San Francisco the hub for the burgeoning AI startup community. (Of course, the center of that universe is YC-affiliated OpenAI, also headquartered in San Francisco and run by former YC president Sam Altman).
The people putting on this event are doing it because they are appalled at how often early-stage startups are led to believe they must pay tens of thousands of dollars to hire PR and social media agencies, one person involved told TechCrunch.
It’s also true that a single social media post can make an early-stage startup go viral these days. The founders of app vibe coding startup Rork were almost broke when a viral tweet led them to raise $2.8 million and nab a spot in a16z’s Speedrun program. Defense tech startup Theseus landed a contract with the U.S. Special Forces, $4.3 million in funding, and a spot in YC from a viral X post.
If the folks behind the new event could help YC founders, they believe they can help founders who aren’t part of the famed program — and on the cheap without giving up equity.
My dream projector delivers the brightest and sharpest image. But it also has to be easy to move around and set up anywhere — especially outdoors. Anker’s Nebular X1 long-throw projector promises all of that with a three-laser engine that beams out a category-leading 3,500 ANSI lumens at 4K resolution. It also has features never seen before on a home projector, like liquid cooling to reduce fan noise and a motorized lens gimbal that automates setup. Plus, it offers good sound that can be upgraded with optional satellite speakers.
The rub is the price. At $3,000 ($3,298 with the satellite speakers for a limited time) it’s one of the more expensive consumer projectors, right up there with models like Epson’s LS11000 or the Valerion VisionMaster Pro2. After testing it, I can say that it offers the clearest, most vivid image quality I’ve seen and has the simplest setup to boot. However, the high price puts it far out of reach for most portable projector buyers.
Engadget/Anker
Anker’s Nebula X1 is marketed as a portable projector but it’s good enough to be used indoors too. However, it’s very expensive.
The Nebula X1 follows in the footsteps of other Anker projectors, like the original Nebula and Cosmos, with a tall rectangular design and handle that neatly retracts with a press. While that makes it easy to carry, it also means the Nebula X1 hangs down more than most indoor projectors when ceiling-mounted.
To eliminate the tedious setup that typically plagues projectors, Anker did a clever thing: it placed the lens mechanism on a gimbal that can tilt up to 25 degrees. When combined with a 1.67x zoom, autofocus, keystone correction and ambient light detection, the projector fully automates setup. First, you have to choose a screen or wall location and position the projector at a prescribed distance between 8 and 35 feet, depending on the screen or wall size. You should center the projector as well as you can to avoid any digital (keystone) correction that can adversely affect image quality. Then the magic happens at the press of a button.
The Nebula X1 uses a function it calls Spatial Adaptation to scan the area in front of it. The lens tilts up and down, before displaying a checkerboard pattern and then beaming the final image pretty much precisely where it should be. It’s not perfect, as some obstacles like small plants or fine wires can throw it off, but it worked nicely for me on both a wall and dedicated screen. The projector can adapt to ambient light and even the wall color, and another function called Spatial Recall lets you save those settings for frequently used locations.
The Nebula X1’s Spatial Adaptation feature in action. (Steve Dent for Engadget)
Laser engines get hot and are normally cooled with fans that can generate distracting noise. However, the Nebula X1 is the first consumer model with liquid cooling which reduces fan noise to a barely audible 26dB whisper. Thanks to this cooling system, the projector can also have a smaller footprint. That’s a big quality-of-life improvement compared to much of the competition.
As for inputs, the X1 comes with two HDMI 2.1 ports, including one with Enhanced Audio Return Channel (eARC) functionality. That standard supports fast refresh rates of up to 240Hz at 4K, though the X1 tops out at 4K 60Hz so it’s not ideal as a gaming projector. It also offers USB Type-A and USB Type-C ports, along with a S/PDIF optical audio port.
Google TV is built in for streaming and projector control. It provides a large library of apps via Google Play along with a familiar interface. You also get Netflix’s official application with support for 4K Dolby Vision without the need to plug in a streaming device, plus Chromecast support and Google Assistant for voice control. The downside is that it can occasionally be sluggish, particularly with menu settings like projector image control.
Image quality
Steve Dent for Engadget
Anker uses what it calls “cinema-grade glass” in the Nebula’s 14-element lens to increase brightness, color accuracy and lens durability. The 4K triple laser engine is rated at up to 3,500 ANSI lumens with a 5,000:1 contrast ratio. At the same time, it offers color accuracy with a Delta E value of less than 0.8 and an impressive 110 percent of the Rec.2020 color spectrum, matching high-end ultra short throw (UST) models from Samsung, LG and Formovie. That 4K Dolby Vision support I mentioned is also rare among the competition.
The result is the sharpest and brightest image I’ve seen on any projector in this price range. It was bright enough for me to comfortably watch a soccer match on a sunny day without the shades lowered. And if you switch it to Conference mode, you can ramp the brightness up further for a viewable image even with lights on, but there’s the downside of a slight blue color cast.
When used in a darkened room or outside at night, the Nebula’s image quality is the best of any projector I’ve tested. Even though it uses the same Texas Instruments 0.47-inch DMD (digital mirror device) as many other 4K models, the image is clearer and sharper thanks to the glass element lens. Contrast and black levels are also tops in this price range and not far off high-end projectors from JVC and Sony that cost twice as much. Once again, that’s due to the optics along with Anker’s 6-blade dynamic iris — another feature usually only found on high-end projectors — and the company’s “NebulaMaster 2.0” picture quality algorithm.
Color accuracy is outstanding out of the box in both HDR and non-HDR modes thanks to the ISF (Image Science Foundation) certification normally reserved for more expensive projectors. In fact, I found the color calibration nearly perfect on my unit in “ISF Night” mode. That meant images were close to how they were calibrated by the filmmakers for TV series and movies like Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, Andor, Dune 2 and Spider-Man: No Way Home. If the colors aren’t quite to your liking, you can make fine adjustments manually. Like many other 4K projectors of this type, the X1 has a slight amount of light spill around the edge of the image. However, it’s well-controlled and only noticeable when the projected image is particularly dark.
Sound
Steve Dent for Engadget
Anker put some extra work into the sound as well. Audio quality is solid thanks to the four built-in speakers with 40 watts total output. The lack of fan noise is a big help here. By itself, the X1 offers decent high-end and bass, but more importantly, dialog is easy to hear and understand.
For a big sonic upgrade, you can add a pair of Anker’s optional Nebula-branded satellite speakers that connect to the projector automatically via Wi-Fi. Each one has a pair of 40-watt front drivers, a 20-watt upward-firing driver and a 20-watt side-firing driver that combine to create a surround effect. Together with the projector, they deliver an impressive 200 watts of sound with Dolby Audio support (though not Dolby Atmos unfortunately). They’re also battery-powered with up to eight hours of use, which is especially handy for outdoor viewing. However, that also means you need to keep them charged.
To test these speakers, I selected several music-oriented movies including A Complete Unknown, Maestro and Rocketman, along with an action movie that has an impressive score and sound effects, Dune 2. In spite of their small size, the satellite speakers kept elements like music, dialog and sound effects crisp, clear and evenly balanced with powerful dynamic bass. You could certainly do better with a dedicated 5.1 or 7.1 surround sound system, but these speakers offer very respectable audio quality, are easy to set up and automatically sync with the picture. The X1 also supports other external Bluetooth speakers, but you may have to adjust the timing in the menus to ensure perfect sync for picture and sound.
Anker also offers a $4,000 package that includes a pair of its Soundcore microphones along with the speakers. Those also connect to the X1 automatically and let you use it as a very expensive karaoke machine. They provide clear sound but you don’t get the usual benefits of a karaoke setup like AI vocal removal and vocal enhancement.
Wrap-up
The Nebula X1 offers a pair of HDMI 2.1 ports along with USB-C, USB-A and S/PIDF (Steve Dent for Engadget)
The Nebula X1 is an odd proposition. It’s marketed as a portable outdoor projector, but it also happens to be the best indoor projector I’ve ever tested. With an impeccably sharp, high-contrast and color-accurate image, the video quality is irreproachable. The ease of setup and overall size also makes it an outstanding choice if you want to move the X1 around. With the optional satellite speakers, it’s the best portable projector you can get, hands down.
The Nebula X1 doesn’t have a lot of competition in the portable category, apart from Valerion’s $3,000 VisionMaster Pro 2, which also has a 4K triple laser engine. However, the X1 beats that model on image quality, portability and ease of setup.
The thing is, most people looking for a portable projector won’t spend more than $500, let alone $3,000. So who is this for? I think it’s ideal for buyers looking at a UST or high-end long-throw projector who want a bit more versatility. Some may even use it as a standalone indoor projector as it can be mounted on the ceiling or on a stand. In other words, if you have the means, use it any way you want — it’s that versatile.
The Wireless Power Consortium has today announced the next evolution of Qi charging with “Qi2 25W,” a faster charging option that will soon include some “major Android smartphones.”
As of today, the Qi 2.2.1 spec has been announced, with the update introducing “Qi2 25W.” The new deviation from Qi2 – which itself was introduced about two years ago – does just what the name implies, boosting the charging speed from the existing 15W cap up to 25W.
Faster wireless charging is the number one consumer-requested feature to improve wireless charging satisfaction, according to WPC market research. Qi2 was a big step in addressing consumer interest in faster charging when it was launched in November 2023 with 15 watts of charging power.
The announcement goes on to note that “several smartphone manufacturers” had their own fast wireless charging protocols, but that this standard introduces a way for any brand to benefit from these higher speeds. Ahead of today’s launch, the WPC had confirmed that Google was helping to boost Qi2 charging speeds.
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That brings us to perhaps the most exciting part of today’s announcement, where the WPC says that “major Android smartphones” are set to support Qi2 25W. No timeline is mentioned, but this support is “in addition to Apple iPhone.” Since these faster speeds require support for the Qi 2.21 spec – Samsung’s devices are on Qi 2.1.0 – it stands to reason that we’re referring to new devices, and there’s an obvious candidate.
As mentioned, Google was involved in making these faster charging speeds happen in the first place, and we’ve already heard that the company is working on “Pixelsnap” as an accessory upgrade for Pixel 10 involving magnetic accessories. Everything is lined up for Google to introduce support, though it’s still unclear if magnets will be built into the phones themselves.
While the exact devices set to support Qi2 25W have yet to be disclosed, the WPC says that “several hundred devices” are in line to be tested.
In addition to Apple iPhone, major Android smartphones will join the Qi2 ecosystem for the first time with this launch. Fourteen devices, receivers, and transmitters completed Qi2 25W certification testing in a limited launch last week. Full-scale certification testing is now open to several hundred devices waiting in the queue to be tested.
Pickle cupcakes have been a big “dill” at the largest fair in New England for a couple of years. But now, the bakery that made them famous is doubling down on its success and expanding its pickle menu.
LuAnn’s Bakery and Cafe in Ellington, Connecticut first made the pickle cupcake for the Super Bowl about six years ago. The bakery continued to offer it during the Super Bowl for “something weird.”
The bakery then brought it to a local farmers’ market’s pickle festival. They sold out.
They decided to perfect their recipe and try it at The Big E in 2023.
Overall, the bakery sold about 10,000 cupcakes during the fair’s 17-day run. And the bakery brought it back for the 2024 fair.
In July, the bakery is diving deeper into its “dill-icious” options — serving up even more pickle-packed treats at the Connecticut Pickle Festival at Mohegan Sun from July 25-27.
The event is calling itself “New England’s largest pickle event of the year.”
The bakery plans to bring pickle focaccia, pickle cupcakes, pickle bagels, dill pickle cream cheese and dill pickle cheesecake fudge.
The options will also be offered at the Ellington farmers’ market on Saturday with two farmers’ market exclusives — the pickle cookies and pickle picnic bread.
Other festival options will include fried pickles, pickle pizza, dill pickle kettle corn, pickle shaved ice and pickle-topped ice cream. Attendees over the age of 21 can double down with pickle shots or pickle martinis.
A pickle eating contest is listed as a “fan favorite” part of the schedule.
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We remember Kenneth Colley, the British character actor who died late last month. Colley was best known as Admiral Piett in the Star Wars movies.
ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:
Imagine being told by a director, I’m looking for someone that would frighten Adolf Hitler. I think you’re it. That’s how the character actor Kenneth Colley described landing apart in the “Star Wars” franchise. He played Admiral Piett, an officer who serves under Darth Vader, in 1980’s “The Empire Strikes Back.”
(SOUNDBITE OF THE LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA’S PERFORMANCE OF JOHN WILLIAMS’ “THE IMPERIAL MARCH”)
MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:
Colley died June 30 at age 87. And you might remember the scene when his character, Piett, gets a promotion after his superior is strangled in mid-sentence by a displeased Darth Vader using the Force.
(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, “STAR WARS: EPISODE V – THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK”)
MICHAEL SHEARD: (As Kendal Ozzel) The fleet has moved out of light speed, and we’re preparing to (choking)…
JAMES EARL JONES: (As Darth Vader) You have failed me for the last time, Admiral. Captain Piett?
KENNETH COLLEY: (As Firmus Piett) Yes, my lord?
JONES: (As Darth Vader) Make ready to land our troops beyond their energy field. And deploy the fleet so that nothing gets off the system. You are in command now, Admiral Piett.
COLLEY: (As Firmus Piett) Thank you, Lord Vader.
SHAPIRO: There was originally no part for Colley in the next movie, 1983’s “Return Of The Jedi,” but fans wanted more, as he told a convention of “Star Wars” fans in 2016.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
COLLEY: Got a call from George Lucas saying, we’ve had a lot of fan reaction to the character. Would you like to be in the next movie? So I said, well, yes. And he said, I don’t have any script for you. You’ll have to turn up, and I’ll write you some scenes. So we did.
SHAPIRO: Colley went on to explain why he thought Admiral Piett resonated with viewers.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
COLLEY: I just think he’s a man doing his job. And all the people out there doing their jobs understand that. He’s learning how to survive in a very, very naughty world.
KELLY: Kenneth Colley had a full career outside the “Star Wars” franchise on stage, in TV and film. He portrayed Napoleon, also Hitler more than once, and Jesus in the 1979 film “Monty Python’s Life Of Brian.”
(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, “MONTY PYTHON’S LIFE OF BRIAN”)
COLLEY: (As Jesus Christ) How blessed are those of gentle spirit? They shall have the Earth for their possession.
TERRY JONES: (As Mandy Cohen) Speak up.
GRAHAM CHAPMAN: (As Brian Cohen) Shh. Quiet, Mum.
JONES: (As Mandy Cohen) Well, I can’t hear a thing.
SHAPIRO: Colley’s agent said in a statement that the actor, quote, “traveled all over the world, yet could never quite grasp why everyone wanted his autograph.”
KELLY: The statement also notes that, quote, “Ken loved his garden, art, cars and the occasional porn star martini.” For those wondering, that is a concoction featuring vanilla vodka, lime juice and passion fruit. Somewhere in a galaxy far, far away, fans are raising a glass.
(SOUNDBITE OF THE LONDON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA’S PERFORMANCE OF JOHN WILLIAMS’ “THE REBEL FLEET / END TITLE”)
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Gupshup, a business messaging startup that began its journey in India over two decades ago and became a unicorn four years ago, has raised a new over $60 million round — but is keeping its new valuation under wraps.
In 2021, Gupshup raised two funding rounds within four months, securing $340 million from prominent investors including Tiger Global, Fidelity Management, Think Investments, and Malabar Investments. These rounds — the startup’s first in roughly a decade — valued Gupshup at $1.4 billion. However, Fidelity, which led the round following its unicorn milestone, slashed its internal valuation of the startup at least three times between 2023 and 2024, bringing it down to as low as $486 million.
The new funding round, which combines equity and debt financing from Globespan Capital Partners and EvolutionX Debt Capital, aims to help the San Francisco-headquartered startup expand its presence across its high-growth markets, including India, the Middle East, Latin America, and Africa.
The startup would not reveal the exact debt portion although its founder and CEO Beerud Seth told TechCrunch that the equity part is “a little more than half.”
In 2004, Gupshup — derived from Indian slang meaning “conversations” — started as a platform to help businesses connect with their customers through text messages. It gained popularity as text messages were not free at the time, and people were seeking ways to send messages to their friends and community groups. However, as communication shifted from short messaging service (SMS) to WhatsApp and Rich Communication Services (RCS), the startup moved to these avenues with its chatbot services. Now, as AI has become a catchall term, and AI agents — software that can perform specific tasks on behalf of users — have emerged everywhere, Gupshup has started enabling businesses to deploy agents.
“There’s a lot of demand coming from enterprises. Everybody needs to build these AI agents, which work through messaging like RCS and WhatsApp or through voice. So, building out these agents, there’s huge demand, and we need to support it,” Seth said.
Globally, AI agents are gaining traction, with startups building them drawing strong investor interest. Tech giants like Amazon, Google, and Microsoft are also exploring how to bring more of these agents to users through their own platforms. The result: competition is heating up.
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Gupshup does not view the rising competition as a threat. Seth pointed to the startup’s substantial install base — which exceeds 50,000 customers across more than 100 countries — and its track record of product innovation, driven by years of experience in business messaging, strategic acquisitions, and internal R&D.
“Businesses cannot use simple foundation models off the shelf and just put them in front of customers. They need a lot of customization to be done, and that’s where Gupshup comes in. That’s what we provide,” he noted.
Since its last round in July 2021, the startup “tripled” its revenue and grew its profitability, Sheth said. However, it is unclear whether that resulted in an increased valuation, as, he said, this latest round was not priced.
“As a founder, you focus on value, and the valuation will follow,” Seth said when asked whether he still considers the startup a unicorn. “We operate ourselves like we are going to be a big company.”
Alongside expanding geographically, the startup aims to utilize its fresh funding to enhance its products, which are used in industries including automotive, banking, e-commerce, fintech, media, payments, retail, and travel. Its products also include click-to-chat ads, an AI campaign copilot, agent assist, and campaign manager.
Gupshup claims to power over 120 billion messages annually for thousands of enterprises. Looking ahead, the startup sees an IPO as its next major milestone.
“We’re talking to all our advisors, lawyers, bankers, accountants, and so on, to figure this out,” Seth said.
The startup has no specific timeline for its public listing, although Seth told TechCrunch that it could happen in 18–24 months.
Gupshup is exploring whether it should list on Indian stock exchanges — a move that makes strategic sense, as the startup views India, where WhatsApp dominates, as a more favorable market. Among the reasons: it’s easier to communicate its story to local retail investors, who are more familiar with WhatsApp and understand how Gupshup’s products, including its AI agents, operate within the platform. However, since Gupshup is domiciled in the U.S., a flip to India would trigger tax liabilities, which could require additional funding.
The IPO “is the one thing that we don’t control entirely. The calendar depends as much on external factors as it does on the company,” Seth said.
Splitgate 2, the follow-up to the hugely successful 2021 Quake–Portal hybrid concept, is returning to beta. The game last month, but developer 1047 Games is pulling it after deciding the release had been rushed. The company doesn’t plan to release the project again until 2026.
“We’ll be heads down until early next year, rebuilding major parts of the game to capture the spirit of what made Splitgate special,” the founders said in a to the game’s Reddit community. “That means reworking progression from the ground up, adding more portals to our maps, simplifying monetization, refocusing on classic game modes you’ve been asking for, and more, which we’ll share soon.”
Not only will the sequel go back into development, but 1047 Games is also cutting jobs. And that’s after it already some team members shortly after Splitgate 2‘s initial release. The company said it will shut down the servers for the original Splitgate in order to reduce expenses and keep more of its team members employed.
1047 Games has been brutalized in the public eye after co-founder Ian Proulx appeared at Summer Games Fest wearing a hat that read “Make FPS Great Again,” which infuriated many of the original Splitgate‘s players. After the initial stance, to the studio’s X account on Splitgate 2’s release date, that he was both “not here to apologize” and that the hat was “not a political statement,” Proulx finally landed on the line that it was all basically a .
Last year, Google announced that Tasks would complement the reminders functionality in Keep, with that migration still set to happen in 2025.
In 2023, Tasks replaced Google Assistant Reminders, with the company wanting to unify that functionality into one product. Last year, the full Tasks app was essentially added to Calendar for Android.
The reminders functionality in Keep is next, with Google in April of 2024 announcing the upcoming change, which was set to happen “over the next year.”
A recently updated support document notes how Google Keep reminders will “migrate to Tasks” in the “second half of 2025.” At that point, “Keep reminders are automatically saved to Tasks” when you tap the bell icon in the top-right corner. (That sheet today says “Saved in Google Reminders.”) They’ll feature a “From Keep” badge.
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Afterwards, you “can find, edit, and complete reminders in Keep, Calendar, Tasks, and Assistant.”
This new capability will make Google Tasks the single solution for managing your to-dos across Workspace. So whether you’re saving something from Keep, Gmail, Calendar, Chat, Docs or Assistant, Google Tasks will make sure it’s up to date and accessible across the Workspace products you use.
Google Keep features a dedicated feed for Reminders in the navigation drawer, with the app offering a better experience if there’s a long note attached to the reminder.
More on Google Keep:
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