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Nintendo Switch 2 now available for purchase online

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Nintendo Switch 2 has now officially released and is available for purchase online (or will be very soon – midnight ET). Years in the making, and years of waiting, it has finally happened and the next-generation of Nintendo gaming is now out in the wild. If you’re not picking up your pre-order in-store, waiting for it to land on your doorstep tomorrow morning, or lining up to buy one on location right now, Walmart and others now have the new console up for sale!

Walmart will be your best source to buy one tonight:

Walmart – Nintendo Switch 2 launch

Nintendo Switch 2 releases today – now available for purchase

If the late April pre-orders of Nintendo’s new console are any indication, and they likely are, Walmart is going to be your best bet to actually score one. It seemingly had the highest number of consoles up for grabs online back in April and might very well again for launch. 

That said, Target, GameStop, Costco, and Walmart are all confirmed to have more units available online tonight and tomorrow at this point, so you should have a good chance at scoring one before the work week is out. 

We have done everything in our power to surface all of the details on each retailer for folks, and while we aren’t sure exactly what time Target and Costco will go live today and tomorrow (June 5 and 6), we will be monitoring listings all night and all day to make sure you get one. Chances are the major retailers are going to go out of stock pretty quickly tonight, and but we might very well get another blast of units going up for sale for a limited time through the early hours of the morning and through the day. 

And you’ll also want to keep in mind that Target has confirmed its online listings will only be available on June 6 (as opposed to tonight). You’ll want to be ready at midnight ET on June 6 for these – although we will be monitoring Target tonight as well just in case. 

Switch 2 at Walmart – midnight ET June 5

Walmart – Nintendo Switch 2 launch

Switch 2 at GameStop – midnight ET June 5

GameStop – Nintendo Switch 2 launch

Switch 2 at Target – midnight ET on June 6

Target – Nintendo Switch 2 launch

Switch 2 at Costco – Online (time unknkown)

Costco – Switch 2 launch

Nintendo Switch 2 + Mario Kart World Bundle

Switch 2 at Best Buy – In-store only midnight June 5

Best Buy – Nintendo Switch 2 launch

Switch 2 at Amazon – ???

Amazon – Nintendo Switch 2 launch (TBD)

For those of you looking to land some Switch 2 games tonight, you’ll find an updated list of the top titles, including both day 1 titles and those releasing later this year, you can scoop up at retail right now below:

  • Donkey Kong Bananza $69
  • Mario Kart World $79
  • The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom Switch 2 Edition $79
  • The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the WildSwitch 2 Edition $69
  • Super Mario Party Jamboree Switch 2 Edition $80
  • Kirby and The Forgotten Land Switch 2 Edition $79
  • Street Fighter 6 $60
  • Sonic x Shadow Generations $50
  • Split Fiction $50
  • Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster $40
  • Hitman World of Assassination – Signature Edition $60
  • Hogwarts Legacy $60
  • Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition $69
  • Daemon X Machina: Titanic Scion $70
  • Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma $70
  • No Sleep For Kaname Date $50

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Asking Eric: How can I support my friends’ band without attending every gig?

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Dear Eric: Since retiring, some friends have put together a band. I went to one of their gigs a couple years ago, and recently a practice session.

They would clearly like me to go to more, or all, of their gigs. The gigs are typically at night, an hour from where I live. I am a morning person. After years of commuting, I am happy to drive as little as possible. I enjoy being with a friend or two but put me in a room full of people and I am ready to go home. Many of the activities I enjoy are solitary, and I cannot remember ever asking anyone to come out and support anything I do.

I love these people and feel like I have to start going to their gigs. I can tell them how great they sounded. And I know the whole time I will be wishing I was home. Any advice on how to proceed?

– Friend of the Band

Dear Friend: Good on you for trying to show up and support your friends, and good on you, in advance, for advocating for what you need and staying home when it suits you.

When giving a performance, or running a marathon, or really anything that would be enriched by an audience, it’s important to right-size the expectation around support. Some friends and members are very willing to show up whenever and wherever to cheer us on. And that’s great. Others, like you, might find that they’re just not the right audience. And it’s fine to give what you can—attendance at a few gigs—without overextending yourself.

Your friends presumably formed the band for the joy of playing. And part of that joy comes from being seen. It’s healthy for them to remember that not everyone they love or care about will be their target audience. And that people can cheer them on from home.

In the past, when I’ve written to people who’ve felt an obligation to support a loved one’s creative endeavors (or written to a loved one who is feeling unsupported), some readers have responded that it’s always our duty to show up and support. After decades of public performances in other areas of my life, I see support as more multi-faceted. I want to perform for people who want to be there, and I understand if it’s not the right gig, venue or even day for someone else.

Try to address the pressure you’re feeling head on, in a non-charged way. “I’m excited you found this, and I think your music is really great. Coming to live shows is hard for me, but I hope you know that it doesn’t diminish how proud I am!” And even if you don’t show, the best advertisement is word-of-mouth, so tell someone else who would really enjoy a night out.

(Send questions to R. Eric Thomas at eric@askingeric.com or P.O. Box 22474, Philadelphia, PA 19110. Follow him on Instagram and sign up for his weekly newsletter at rericthomas.com.)

©2024 Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai dismisses AI job fears, emphasizes expansion plans

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In a Bloomberg interview Wednesday night in downtown San Francisco, Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai pushed back against concerns that AI could eventually make half the company’s 180,000-person workforce redundant. Instead, Pichai stressed the company’s commitment to growth through at least next year.

“I expect we will grow from our current engineering phase even into next year, because it allows us to do more,” Pichai said, adding that AI is making engineers more productive by eliminating tedious tasks and enabling them to focus on more impactful work. Rather than replacing workers, he referred to AI as “an accelerator” that will drive new product development, thereby creating demand for more employees.

Alphabet has staged numerous layoffs in recent years, though so far, cuts in 2025 appear to be more targeted than in previous years. It reportedly parted ways with less than 100 people in Google’s cloud division earlier this year and, more recently, hundreds more in its platforms and devices unit. In 2024 and 2023, the cuts were far more severe, with 12,000 people dropped from the company in 2023 and at least another 1,000 employees laid off last year.

Looking forward, Pichai pointed to Alphabet’s expanding ventures like Waymo autonomous vehicles, quantum computing initiatives, and YouTube’s explosive growth as evidence of innovation opportunities that continually bubble up. He noted YouTube’s scale in India alone, with 100 million channels and 15,000 channels boasting over one million subscribers.

At one point, Pichai said trying to think too far ahead is “pointless.” But he also acknowledged the legitimacy of fears about job displacement, saying when asked about Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei’s recent comments that AI could erode half of entry-level white collar jobs within five years, “I respect that . . .I think it’s important to voice those concerns and debate them.”

As the interview wrapped up, Pichai was asked about the limits of AI, and whether it’s possible that the world might never achieve artificial general intelligence, meaning AI that’s as smart as humans at everything. He quickly paused before answering. “There’s a lot of forward progress ahead with the paths we are on, not only the set of ideas we are working on today, [but] some of the newer ideas we are experimenting with,” he said.

“I’m very optimistic on seeing a lot of progress. But you know,” he added, “you’ve always had these technology curves where you may hit a temporary plateau. So are we currently on an absolute path to AGI? I don’t think anyone can say for sure.”



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Belkin’s new line of Switch 2 accessories include a simple but effective charging case

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Belkin is best known for high-quality smartphone accessories, but just like everyone else, it appears it has a case of Nintendo Switch 2 fever. The company has announced that it will be selling several Switch 2 accessories in time for the console’s launch, including screen protectors and a charging case that comes with a power bank.

The Charging Case for Nintendo Switch 2 is the thicker of Belkin’s two case options, primarily because it has a designated spot for an included 10K external battery. The case also includes a flap for storing Switch 2 game cartridges, a hidden pocket for slotting an AirTag so you can track the case if it’s lost and slots on either side of the battery for cables and other accessories. When you need to prop up your Switch 2 with its kickstand while its charging, there’s also a groove in the case that’s specifically designed to hold it.

Photos and features of the Belkin Switch 2 Travel Case arranged in a grid, including the cartridge pocket and the built-in handle.Photos and features of the Belkin Switch 2 Travel Case arranged in a grid, including the cartridge pocket and the built-in handle.

Belkin

If you’re looking for something more compact and portable, the Travel Case for Nintendo Switch 2 is only moderately thicker than the console itself. Like the charging case, the travel case includes a built-in sleeve for Switch 2 game cartridges and a spot to hide an AirTag. It also has a built-in handle and a wrist strap so you have multiple ways to carry it when you’re out and about.

For an extra layer of protection, Belkin is also selling two different screen protector options: a Tempered Glass Anti-Reflective Screen Protector and a Tempered Glass Blue Light Screen Protector. Both will shield your Switch 2’s screen from major scratches and can be applied in a few steps. In the case of the blue light screen protector, Belkin is also claiming that it’ll help reduce eye strain if you use your console for an extended period of time. Whichever you pick, just don’t remove the Switch 2’s pre-installed protective film before you apply.

All of Belkin’s new accessories are available to order today from Belkin’s website and Amazon. You can get either the Charging Case or Travel Case in gray, tan or green, and the cases cost $70 or $30, respectively. The Tempered Glass Anti-Reflective Screen Protector costs $25 and the Tempered Glass Blue Light Screen Protector costs $30.



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Chrome 137 for Android rolling out rounded menu corners

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Following last month’s update, Google is continuing to round the corners of various interface elements in Chrome for Android, with version 137 today focusing on menus.

With Chrome 136 in May, Google increased the corner radius of the cards in the tab switcher.

Chrome 137 brings these rounded corners to menus across the Android browser. The three-dot menu becomes a little bit less blocky as a result, which better aligns with Material 3 across the operating system.

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The tab switcher’s overflow menu gets the same treatment, while snackbars are no longer rectangular. For example, “Closed [tab]” now floats with rounded corners and colors that better distinguish it from the background. 

With this change, most menus are unchanged. However, Chrome 137 reorders the interface when you long-press on a link. For whatever reason, “Open in new tab in group” is no longer the first item. This personally breaks my muscle memory for this common action as a heavy user of tab groups.

Google Chrome 137 for Android is widely rolling out via the Play Store today. 

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Massachusetts House votes to overhaul Cannabis Control Commission

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The House approved a significant overhaul of marijuana oversight in Massachusetts on Wednesday, passing a bill that would downsize and reorient the scandal-hounded Cannabis Control Commission that has kept tabs on the legal industry since it launched almost eight years ago.

The bill (H 4187), which passed 153-0 just before 4 p.m., would also regulate and tax hemp-based products, raise a cap on retail license control and make structural changes to the medical marijuana side of the industry.

“Overall, this bill provides comprehensive and reasonable reform measures to our existing cannabis laws,” Cannabis Policy Committee Chairman Daniel Donahue said on the House floor. “We are pursuing these reforms because we want our cannabis industry to succeed and thrive, and because we want to live up to the promises explicit in our commitment to social equity when recreational cannabis was first legalized.”

Frustration with the slow pace of regulatory changes, headline-grabbing internal conflicts at the CCC, and a plea from the inspector general for the Legislature to intervene at the “rudderless agency” combined last summer to get lawmakers thinking more seriously about a response.

House Speaker Ronald Mariano recounted Wednesday how he went to Donahue last year to say “we’re going to have to fix this” as Treasurer Deborah Goldberg’s removal of CCC chairwoman Shannon O’Brien dragged on in the courts and shined a light on internal strife at the CCC. That led to a series of hearings and conversations that resulted in the bill before the House on Wednesday.

“It got us where we thought we had to take it away from the treasurer,” Mariano said.

Bill calls for governor to control the commission

Today, the CCC is a five-commissioner independent body, with appointments made singularly and jointly by the governor, attorney general and treasurer, with the treasurer selecting the chair.

Under the House-approved bill, the CCC would be consolidated entirely under the governor. The state’s executive would appoint all three commissioners and select one of them to serve as chair (who would be the only full-time commissioner). The CCC would be “subject to the laws applicable to agencies under the control of the governor.”

Asked what makes the CCC’s existing model unworkable, Mariano said it was a structural problem but gave a conflicted explanation.

“It was created by a ballot question that had no rhyme or reason to it … there was no accountability,” he said.

Mariano: government by referendum ‘doesn’t work’

The speaker, who started his scrum with reporters by raising the subject of “legislation by referendum” and the trend of advocates going around a slow-moving Legislature to make laws at the statewide ballot, added, “We’ve been railing against government by referendum, and this is a perfect example why it doesn’t work.”

The CCC’s existing structure is largely modeled on the Gaming Commission, where five full-time members with specific areas of expertise are appointed by the governor, treasurer and attorney general. But Mariano claimed Wednesday that “the problem is they weren’t written by the same people.”

“The gaming stuff was written by House people,” he said. “The people in the marketplace wrote this bill, and they weren’t interested in controlling it, in making sure there was accountability up and down the line. As a matter of fact, this was a rush to get into the market. Everyone thought they were going to get rich.”

The 2016 ballot law that legalized non-medical marijuana here called for a three-person Cannabis Control Commission entirely under the control of the state treasurer, similar to the structure the House is pursuing with the bill it passed Wednesday.

By the time the Legislature delayed and then rewrote that law in the summer of 2017, lawmakers had decided to move the CCC onto an independent footing, expand it to five commissioners and split appointment authority three ways.

Mariano, who was the majority leader at the time, was the lead House negotiator on the 2017 law that structured the CCC. The structure that was put in place largely mirrored the House’s approach to standing up the CCC.

“This is legislation by referendum, and this is the problem: no one really focused on the writing of the ballot question on how this would be administered. And when it hit, the public had no idea what the problems were going to be and where they were going to be,” Mariano said Wednesday.

IG: Current commission structure ‘unclear and self-contradictory’

Last summer, Inspector General Jeffrey Shapiro’s office said it determined that the Legislature’s 2017 rewrite of the 2016 ballot law “is unclear and self-contradictory and provides minimal guidance on the authority and responsibilities of the CCC’s commissioners and staff.” The office said its review of the Legislature’s 2017 rewrite “affirmed that this confusion has contributed significantly to the current situation at the CCC.”

Mariano was not available to clarify his comments Wednesday afternoon, but a spokesperson sent a statement saying his “main point was that the Legislature was responding to a law that was passed by a referendum, which created a new industry outside of the typical legislative process, forcing the Legislature to address a number of unknowns.”

“In order to safely and effectively carry out the will of the voters, the Legislature has been forced to revise the original language multiple times.” Mariano spokesperson Ana Vivas said. “The legislation that the House is voting on today is better because of what we have learned since 2016, and establishes a new structure, different from the one that the ballot initiative spelled out.”

Regulating intoxicating hemp-based products

The bill the House passed Wednesday also seeks to address intoxicating hemp-based products that largely fall into a gray area of the law and between the regulatory cracks by banning their sale without a license and setting up a new framework to regulate and tax them.

Hemp beverages could only be sold by retailers licensed by the Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission to sell all alcohol and all hemp-based products would need to be registered with the CCC.

“This ban and accompanying regulatory structure will help provide guidance and clarity on hemp products, removing those which are unregulated, of unknown origin or composition, and too easily accessible to minors,” Donahue said Wednesday.

Cap on retail licenses increased

The House bill adjusts the existing cap on retail licenses any one operator can hold. The current limit is three, and the House bill would raise the cap on retail licenses to six over a three-year period (increasing first to four, a year later to five and finally to six). Opponents of that idea have slammed it as a “gift to corporate cannabis and a death sentence for local and social equity businesses.” The existing three-license caps would remain in place for cultivation and manufacturing.

On the medical side of the legal marijuana world, the bill eliminates the requirement that medical marijuana businesses be “vertically integrated,” meaning they must grow and process all the marijuana they sell. Patients and advocates have been calling for that change for years, saying the medical-only options have become scarce across Massachusetts since cannabis was legalized for non-medical use.



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iOS 19: All the rumored changes Apple could be bringing to its new operating system

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As Apple prepares to unveil iOS 19 at WWDC 2025 on Monday, several rumors have surfaced, including a potential new name for the operating system, an entirely new design inspired by the Vision Pro, and more.  

Here’s a roundup of the most notable features rumored to be coming to iOS 19. 

New name

Sources told Bloomberg that Apple plans to rename its operating systems to reflect the release year rather than using version numbers. This means that iOS 19 will be renamed iOS 26, similar to how car model years are designated. This name change will also apply to other software updates, such as iPadOS 26, macOS 26, watchOS 26, tvOS 26, and visionOS 26.

Major design overhaul

Anticipated to be the most significant design change since iOS 7, the operating system may feature a complete visual overhaul, one that’s reportedly inspired by Apple’s Vision Pro headset, according to Bloomberg. This could include translucent panels for navigation and circular app icons. The visionOS-inspired design will be made across Apple’s entire ecosystem with the goal of creating a more cohesive experience.

Dedicated gaming app

Apple is also rumored to be releasing a gaming app that will integrate Apple Arcade and the App Store’s game offerings, featuring a central hub for achievements, leaderboards, and App Store content. This comes after the company acquired its first game studio, RAC7, according to DigitalTrends.

Virtual health coach

Apple may also be developing an AI feature to serve as a personal health coach. This new chatbot is expected to suggest lifestyle changes and provide health advice based on user data collected from the Health app. Additionally, the Health app may be revamped to include a food-tracking feature, allowing users to log their carbohydrate and caffeine intake.

Smarter battery management

Apple could improve iPhone battery health with AI-powered battery management. This new feature is reported to analyze device usage and make adjustments to conserve battery life. There may also be a new charging icon on the lock screen that gives an estimated time for when it’s fully charged.

Another rumor suggests that reverse wireless charging is being tested on the iPhone 17 Pro models, allowing users to charge accessories such as AirPods or the Apple Watch directly from their iPhone.

AI translation for Messages

According to 9to5Mac, the Messages app is set to get an Apple Intelligence-powered translation feature that can automatically translate messages as soon as they hit users’ inboxes. 9to5Mac also reports that Apple Intelligence could power a polling feature that lets people in group chats vote and offers AI-generated poll suggestions.

What about Siri?

One notable absence from all the rumors is the impressive Siri capabilities highlighted in Apple’s 2024 presentation, which featured a more context-aware assistant that can gather information and perform actions across different apps. The company stated in March that the new features are delayed. 

While we can expect some AI-related announcements, the primary focus is likely to be on design changes. Reports indicate that improvements to existing Apple Intelligence features will also be introduced, along with some new additions. 

This story was originally published June 3 and will be updated as more rumors come out.



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Edmund White, who broke ground in gay literature, has died : NPR


Edmund White at his home in 2019.

Edmund White at his home in 2019.

Mary Altaffer/AP


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Mary Altaffer/AP

Pioneering writer Edmund White has died. He was one of the most important authors of his era, whose work, including A Boy’s Own Story in 1982, made an indelible impression on gay culture and how LGBTQ experiences were more broadly understood during the dawning of the AIDS crisis and beyond. He was also one of the founders of the Gay Men’s Health Crisis in 1982, the long-running HIV/AIDS service organization in New York City.

White died Tuesday at his home in New York City of natural causes, according to his agent Bill Clegg. He was 85 years old.

“Ed was a groundbreaking writer whose candid depictions of gay life reshaped American literature. As a novelist, critic, memoirist and biographer, he expanded the boundaries of identity and desire on the page and in the culture,” Clegg shared in a statement. “He was also a wickedly funny, deeply generous, brilliant man who was beloved by many. He will be much missed.” 

Growing up in Evanston, Ill., White was sent to see psychologists by his mother, who was a child psychologist herself.

“It was because I was gay,” he told WHYY’s Fresh Air in 2006. “On the one hand, I was lusting after boys my own age and even older men. And that’s what I really wanted, and I was obsessed with that idea of having some sort of sex with older people. But, on the other hand, I knew that it was a bad thing. And I also knew that it would limit me as a writer because that was very much the idea in the air that a writer could only be successful if he could touch on universal topics.”

White attended the University of Michigan, where he studied Chinese, and ended up following a boyfriend to New York, where he was present, he told NPR, for the Stonewall Riots in 1969.

“I was actually just walking by with a friend, and we saw the disturbance. And then pretty soon, we had mixed in with the melee,” he told Scott Simon on Weekend Edition in 2022.

“And then all of a sudden, the police raided the bar. So we resisted. Everybody remembers it as being terribly solemn because it was sort of like our Bastille Day. But the truth is, everybody was laughing. And even saying slogans like ‘gay is good,’ which was meant to echo ‘Black is beautiful,’ struck us as funny because we’d been so oppressed for so long that the idea of claiming our rights seemed vaguely humorous to us.”

White became an editor for mainstream publications: Time-Life Books, Newsweek, and the Saturday Review. He published his first novel, Forgetting Elena, in 1973.

But White will be primarily remembered for a series of autobiographical novels that broke ground in gay representation. They include A Boy’s Own Story, The Beautiful Room is Empty, from 1988, and The Farewell Symphony, from 1997. He was part of an early generation of openly gay writers that also included Andrew Holleran, Larry Kramer and Felice Picano.

“They were the first people to come out publicly and to risk their careers doing it,” editor Michael Denneny, a lauded editor and LGBTQ activist, told Fresh Air in 1987. Denneny was an early champion of White’s work.

White wrote more than 30 novels over the course of his career.



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Apple’s iPad Air M3 is cheaper than ever right now

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The iPad we consider to be the best iPad for most people is on sale for a record-low price at the moment. You can pick up the new iPad Air M3 for $499 right now, which is $100 off its regular price.

You’ll find the 17-percent discount on the 128GB models of the M3 Air in all color options. We gave the new iPad Air (M3) an 89 in our review, thanks, in part, to that M3 chip. Its single- and multi-core scores came in 16 percent higher compared to its predecessor when tested with Geekbench.

Image for the large product module

Apple

The iPad Air M3 also has a much better screen and multitasking abilities this time around. Plus, it’s compatible with a much improved Magic Keyboard. The add-on is akin to the one you’d get with Apple‘s iPad Pro M4 while also dropping by $30 from the previous model. But, it will still cost you $269 for the 11-inch model and $319 for the 13-inch one.

Check out our coverage of the best Apple deals for more discounts, and follow @EngadgetDeals on X for the latest tech deals and buying advice.





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Google Pixel 10 will launch in August, leaker claims

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According to a known leaker, Google will launch the Pixel 10 series on August 13, right in line with last year’s updated schedule – or at least it was…

The schedule for launching Pixel phones has shifted over the years. The first few events took place in October, but Google would push things forward or backward by a few weeks. Last year, the Pixel 9 series made its debut early, with the company moving the event up to mid-August.

It appears the same schedule will be repeating this year, right down to the date.

@MysteryLupin, a fairly reliable leaker on Twitter/X, says that the Pixel 10 series will launch on August 13 in their usual, relatively cryptic way. This lines up exactly with last year’s event being on the same date.

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Update: Shortly after publishing, Android Headlines chimed in with their own information on this topic, confirming the August 13 date as Google’s event date as well as the opening of pre-orders. Google will apparently ship devices on August 20, the publication reports. That’s a bit earlier than last year, as Google shipped devices on August 22 last time around.

Update 6/4: In a correction to their previous report, Android Headlines says that Pixel 10 will be launching on August 20 and shipping on August 28. The publication says that its source on the matter reached out to say that the date has “moved back a week.”


That’s despite Google having revealed that it will show its new devices, presumably including the entire Pixel 10 series, to a small group of invited “Superfans” at the end of June. That invitation sparked speculation of a much earlier Pixel event, but that certainly doesn’t seem to be the case.

Google is expected to make only minor updates with the Pixel 10 series, with the TSMC-made Tensor G5 being the biggest overall upgrade. Leaks thus far have shown that Pixel 10, 10 Pro, 10 Pro XL, and 10 Pro Fold all have virtually identical designs to the current Pixel 9 series, but there have been hints of display improvements, new colors, major camera changes, and more.

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