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Marshall’s new Heddon hub adds multi-room audio to speakers with Auracast

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Marshall plans to add seamless multi-room audio to its Bluetooth speakers via a newly announced music streaming hub called Heddon. The $300 hub makes it possible to connect and synchronize multiple older Marshall speakers together, not unlike Sonos’ audio devices.

Rather than use Wi-Fi to get multiple speakers playing the same audio, though, the Marshall Heddon uses Auracast. The hub connects to services like Spotify Connect or Tidal over Wi-Fi, or other devices through Google Cast and AirPlay, and then shares that audio over Auracast to the Marshall Acton III, Stanmore III and Wobrun III speakers. You can control playback over a connected Marshall app and the Heddon also has RCA ports to connect other speakers or a record player to the system.

Because the Heddon requires a Wi-Fi connection, Marshall says it could add features to the system over-time, but even in the short term, the hub should meaningfully extend the life of the company’s speakers. Rather than switch to newer models with built-in Wi-Fi, you can just grab a Heddon. Sonos offers similar functionality through its Sonos Port and Sonos Amp accessories, and third-party hubs from companies like WiiM can add even more options. The Marshall Heddon is more streamlined in comparison, but if you’re already invested in the company’s speakers, or planning to build out your audio system with them, the hub could be a helpful tool to have.

The Marshall Heddon is available to purchase now for $300. Marshall says that customers purchasing an Acton III, Stanmore III or Woburn III can get a Heddon at half price, and the hub is included for free when you buy two or more eligible Marshall home speakers.



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Pixel 9a gets extended sale that ends before rumored 10a launch

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Ahead of the Pixel 10a, the Google Store is running a rather extended sale on the Pixel 9a that ends on February 15. 

The Pixel 9a is once again $100 off to $399 for the 128 GB model, while the 256 GB variant is $499. It’s available in Iris, Peony, Porcelain, and Obsidian, with Amazon running a similar deal.

This Google Store sale started today (January 21), just a few days after the last round of New Year’s offers ended. The Pixel 9a is on discount until February 15, which is quite a prolonged period at over three weeks.

That falls on the usual Sunday, with the next day being Presidents’ Day in the US. The Pixel 10a is rumored to get an unveil on Tuesday, February 17.

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The timing more than lines up. It will be very interesting to see how Google markets the Pixel 10a in light of the many specification similarities. The design is mostly unchanged, though there are tweaked dimensions that are hopefully meant to support Pixelsnap.

Meanwhile, by launching in February, Google gets a six-month gap between the A-Series and flagships. We’d expect this schedule to continue going forward.

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Mass. snowstorm forecast: Experts see a ‘perfect scenario’ for big storm

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A significant winter storm is expected to affect Massachusetts Sunday into Monday. But exact snowfall amounts remain uncertain.

StormTeam 5 Meteorologist Mike Wankum said “predicted snow totals can change dramatically” between Wednesday and Sunday but that it is the “perfect scenario for getting a big storm to develop.”

The worst of the storm is expected in Texas through the mid-Atlantic states as ice and power outages are expected.

The storm arriving late this week and into the weekend is shaping up to be a “widespread potentially catastrophic event from Texas to the Carolinas,” said Ryan Maue, a former chief scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, told the Associated Press.

“I don’t know how people are going to deal with it,” he said.

Adam Frederick, amateur meteorologist known as New England Weather Guy, expects those in the south to feel like it’s New England’s Blizzard of 78. But he doesn’t expect actual blizzard conditions in New England.

Still, he’s warning New England residents that heavy snow is expected and to be prepared to have school canceled Monday and Tuesday.

Here’s what meteorologists and forecasters across Massachusetts are predicting as of Wednesday night.

How much snow could Mass. get Sunday night?

Frederick is predicting anywhere between 2 inches to 10 inches.

“Maybe more, maybe less,” he wrote, adding on Wednesday that he has “models showing anything from 2-4 inches up to 18-20 inches for us up here.”

Snow chances for New England have increased significantly in the last 24 hours, according to NBC Boston.

“Our probability of 6 inches of snow or more for Boston has increased to now a 40% to 60% chance Sunday into Monday,” the news outlet reported, adding that the snow is expected to be fluffy.

Dave Hayes The Weather Nut stated that the storm is moderate to major with some possibility of double-digit snowfall accumulations.

“While timing, potential snowfall amounts, and the rest of the forecast are still up in the air, I will say that you should be prepared to stay inside Sunday and Monday, and potentially Tuesday as well,” Frederick wrote.

Bad travel expected across U.S.

People with travel plans should consider moving them if possible, both Frederick and the Boston Globe’s Dave Epstein warned.

Even if the storm doesn’t hit Massachusetts, it could move south and hit New York and Washington, D.C. — still causing major issues for airlines.

“I would rebook now if you can and either leave Saturday or late Tuesday,” Frederick said on Facebook.

When will snow forecasts be ready?

National Weather Service forecasters said they “won’t be able to lock in to a forecast with confidence until Friday,” including expectations for snow totals.

“So bottom line, while there is certainly a risk of a major snowstorm for (Southern New England) this is a day 4-5 forecast and a subtle shift back to the south would keep the significant impacts to the south,” the weather service stated.

Hayes expects to talk about the snow forecast on his Facebook page Thursday morning. But he warned there is still a lot up in the air.

And Epstein also stated his forecasts wouldn’t be complete until Friday.

“I know this can be frustrating, but this is the nature of long-range forecasting,“ he wrote for the Globe. ”The best information right now is that we have potential for a storm late in the weekend. I am comfortable with this.”



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X copies Bluesky with a ‘Starterpacks’ feature that helps you find who to follow

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Bluesky’s “Starter Packs,” the curated lists of suggested users to follow, have proven a popular way to help people connect with others on the social network — so popular, in fact, that X is now copying the feature.

On Wednesday, X’s head of product Nikita Bier announced that the Elon Musk-owned app will soon introduce its own version of these lists, which it’s calling “Starterpacks.” (How original!)

The idea behind the new feature is to help users find accounts that match their interests across a range of categories, including News, Politics, Fashion, Technology, Business & Finance, Health & Fitness, Gaming, Stocks, Memes, and more.

Bier shared the announcement in a post on X, detailing how the new feature will work.

However, unlike Bluesky’s Starter Packs, which anyone on the platform can make and share with others, X created its own lists internally.

As Bier explains in his post on X, the company “scoured the world for the top posters in every niche and country” over the past several months to compile its lists. In other words, the packs are based on X’s internal data — not on individual users’ personal recommendations.

Bier notes the Starterpacks will roll out to everyone on X in the “coming weeks.”

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Suggested user lists are nothing new to X — they’ve been utilized on the social network since its earliest days, back when it was known as Twitter. As one of the first interest-based social apps, Twitter users didn’t necessarily want or need to only find and connect with their friends, as they had on other apps like Facebook. Instead, they wanted to find people whose ideas and interests aligned with their own. To help them get started, Twitter offered up a list of suggested users that would make for a good follow.

Still, the feature was controversial at the time because it massively boosted users’ popularity and follower base when they were added to the Suggested Users List. Others felt this system was unfair, leading Twitter in 2010 to revamp the editorially-created list to become one determined by algorithms.

X is not the only social app to copy Bluesky’s ingenious idea for Starter Packs. Meta’s Threads began testing its own version of Bluesky’s Starter Packs in December 2024, which were also curated lists created by individual users. These collections of suggested users were shown to users when they first sign up to Threads and at other times within the For You feed. The decentralized social network Mastodon has also more recently been developing “Packs” to help in user onboarding.



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Amazon is adding AI-powered assistant to One Medical

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Amazon an AI-powered assistant to One Medical, the tech-forward primary care provider it . Dubbed ‘Health AI,’ Amazon says the tool “provides 24/7 personalized health guidance based on your medical records.”

The company says Health AI can explain lab results, help manage medications, and book appointments for patients. Amazon also says it can “analyze images” but doesn’t specify whether this means medical imaging or user uploaded photos. While the company specifically says the tool “complements, but does not replace,” a patient’s healthcare provider, it also vaguely says the AI can “answer general and complex health questions” while “considering your unique health history.”

“Health AI recognizes when symptoms, situations, or specific queries require or benefit from human clinical judgment,” reads the company’s announcement, while giving few details on just how much medical advice the AI tool is empowered to give.

Use of AI tools brings up data privacy concerns, and Amazon says it follows HIPAA-compliant privacy and security practices. The company says that a user’s conversations with Health AI are “not automatically added to your medical record.” This of course implies the option to do just that. It also says the company doesn’t sell members’ protected health information.

One Medical has a limited number of brick-and-mortar offices in major metros throughout the US, but the focus of the company seems to be telehealth services. These services are offered as part of an annual subscription, which is discounted for Amazon Prime members. This is only the latest investment Amazon has made in the healthcare space. In recent years the tech giant has begun in certain markets, and built for prescription drugs.

Health AI follows the trend of AI companies competing to enter healthcare with their AI-powered chatbots. Google added an AI health coach to the Fitbit app , and OpenAI announced a within ChatGPT in January.



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YouTube previews 2026 updates: Music, customizable TV multiview

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Every year, YouTube outlines its priorities, and the 2026 edition previews what product updates to expect. 

The first tentpole from YouTube CEO Neal Mohan is “Reinventing entertainment: Creators are the new stars & studios.” In terms of the end user (watcher) experience, YouTube will “bring even more variety to Shorts by integrating different formats – like image posts – directly into the feed.” The format now “averages 200 billion daily views.”

On the Music front, YouTube’s investment includes “helping you find your next go-to artist, uncovering the stories behind the songs that move you or making it easier to discover and experience new releases.” That sounds like more discovery features and the AI “Beyond the Beat” moving beyond the experimental stage.

Mohan reiterates that 10 genre-specific YouTube TV Plans across sports, entertainment, and news are coming, as well as “fully customizable multiview.” 

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The other tentpoles are:

  • Building the best place for kids & teens: Giving parents control over Shorts usage/consumption
  • Powering the creator economy: More ways to earn, including shopping (“buy it without leaving the YouTube app”), brand deals, fan funding 
    • “We’re also giving creators new tools to make these partnerships successful, like the ability to add a link to a brand’s site in Shorts or swap out a branded segment once a deal concludes, transforming back catalogs into recurring revenue streams.”
  • Supercharging & safeguarding creativity

On the last priority, YouTube says “more than 1M channels used [its] AI creation tools daily in December.” Creators this year will be able to “create a Short using your own likeness, produce games with a simple text prompt, and experiment with music.”

YouTube says “AI will remain a tool for expression, not a replacement” and equates it to how the “synthesizer, Photoshop and CGI revolutionized sound and visuals.”

There’s an interesting section on “Managing AI Slop.”

The rise of AI has raised concerns about low-quality content, aka “AI slop.” As an open platform, we allow for a broad range of free expression while ensuring YouTube remains a place where people feel good spending their time. Over the past 20 years, we’ve learned not to impose any preconceived notions on the creator ecosystem. Today, once-odd trends like ASMR and watching other people play video games are mainstream hits. But with this openness comes a responsibility to maintain the high quality viewing experience that people want. To reduce the spread of low quality AI content, we’re actively building on our established systems that have been very successful in combatting spam and clickbait, and reducing the spread of low quality, repetitive content.

From the viewer perspective, YouTube says “more than 20 million users learned more about the content they watched” through the Ask tool on videos in December. Autodubbed videos are another example of AI for watchers. 

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Agawam man arrested in Holyoke after traffic stop uncovers drugs, trench knife

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HOLYOKE ― An Agawam man was arrested in Holyoke early Friday after police recovered crack cocaine and a trench knife during his traffic stop, officials said Wednesday.

Michael Jenks, 56, faces charges for drug possession, carrying a weapon, and driving a car that was uninsured, unregistered and had improper license plates.

On Jan. 16 around 2 a.m., an officer saw an unregistered car with revoked insurance and improper license plates near Cabot and Main streets, Holyoke Police Chief Brian Keenan said Tuesday on social media.

The officer stopped the car near Cabot and Bigelow streets, as other officers arrived to help. Police said the driver, identified as Jenks, did not follow orders and was detained at that time.

Police said officers saw what they suspected was crack cocaine in the car and later recovered the trench knife, which is knife with built-in brass knuckles, and additional drugs during a search, leading to Jenks’ arrest. An adult female passenger was released, police said.



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Language learning marketplace Preply’s unicorn status embodies Ukrainian resilience

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Language learning marketplace Preply is now valued at $1.2 billion after raising a $150 million Series D round that marks a new chapter for the 14-year-old company, whose previous backers include Horizon Capital, Hoxton Ventures, Owl Ventures and Techstars Berlin.

While Preply has been connecting language learners with tutors since 2013, it has now been EBITDA profitable for twelve months. Not coincidentally, it has also ramped up AI integration to support its 100,000 tutors and continue scaling.

That’s a fine line — Duolingo faced backlash after declaring it would become an “AI-first company,” and tutors have been a key differentiator for Preply. The company is adamant it won’t replace them — but AI can also bring consistency to a model that relies on self-employed instructors. The future of learning “is going to be human-guided and amplified by AI,” Preply CEO Kirill Bigai told TechCrunch.

According to Bigai, Preply already applies AI to features such as lesson summaries and homework, but also to match learners to tutors that best fit their needs. To further develop these capabilities, he said Preply is now hiring AI talent across its four offices — Barcelona, London and New York but also Kyiv, which the company hasn’t left despite the Russian invasion.

Although Preply is headquartered in the U.S., where it got its first start, Bigai and his cofounders are Ukrainian and the company has been very actively supporting their home country. They have been doing that in several ways since the war started, including as an employer. “We are very committed [to the] Ukrainian office,” said Bigai.

Out of Preply’s 750 employees, approximately 150 people work from Kyiv, despite Russian strikes regularly forcing them into shelters and causing power outages that have made the current freezing winter particularly challenging. “Our office has different generators so we have electricity, Internet, and the office is warm and it’s open 24/7 so any Ukrainian team member can come to the office at any time,” Bigai said.

These employees may be grateful to Preply — but Bigai is grateful to them and has deep admiration for his people. “Ukrainians are going through very challenging times, and it builds a significant resilience and creativity,” he said. Having to adapt to the reality and uncertainty of war also transformed Preply. “I think the fact that the company went through this experience — and how so many people helped other people — made us stronger, more resilient, more creative,” he added. 

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With its new funding, the edtech company has now joined the growing cohort of unicorns with Ukrainian roots, including Fintech-IT Group and Grammarly. But it may also follow in the footsteps of Airbnb, whose former CFO Laurence Tosi led the Series D through his growth equity firm, WestCap. While Bigai said Preply has no timeline or concrete IPO plans yet, he noted WestCap’s “phenomenal experience in [taking] companies public, which is one of the things that we will continue to think about.”



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The FTC isn’t giving up on its antitrust case against Meta

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The Federal Trade Commission lost its antitrust case against Meta last year, but the regulator hasn’t given up on its attempts to punish the social media company for its acquisitions of WhatsApp and Instagram. The FTC is appealing a ruling last year in which a federal judge found that the government hadn’t proven that Meta is currently operating as a monopoly.

“Meta has maintained its dominant position and record profits for well over a decade not through legitimate competition, but by buying its most significant competitive threats,” the FTC’s Bureau of Competition Director Daniel Guarnera said in a statement. “The Trump-Vance FTC will continue fighting its historic case against Meta to ensure that competition can thrive across the country to the benefit of all Americans and U.S. businesses.”

The FTC originally filed antitrust charges against Facebook in 2020 during President Donald Trump’s first term in office. The government argued that by acquiring apps it once competed with, Instagram and WhatsApp, the company had depressed competition in the space and ultimately hurt consumers. A trial last year saw testimony from several current and former executives, including CEO Mark Zuckerberg and former COO Sheryl Sandberg, who spoke at length about the pressure to compete with TikTok.

US District Judge James Boasberg was ultimately persuaded by Meta’s arguments, writing that the success of YouTube and TikTok prevented Meta from currently “holding a monopoly” even if the company had acted monopolistically in the past. If the FTC had won, it could have tried to force Meta to undo its acquisitions of WhatsApp and Instagram. Should it be successful in its appeal, that remedy could once again be on the table.

News of the FTC’s plan to appeal is also a blow to Zuckerberg, who has spent the last year courting Trump and hyping Meta’s plans to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on AI infrastructure in the United States. In a statement, Meta spokesperson Andy Stone said that the original ruling was “correct,” and that “Meta will remain focused on innovating and investing in America.”



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Galaxy S26 Ultra colors leak, with nothing all that exciting

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New leaks have revealed the likely lineup for Samsung’s Galaxy S26 Ultra colors, and it sounds pretty tame.

Leaker Evan Blass (@evleaks) posted the six-color lineup for Samsung’s upcoming Galaxy S26 Ultra. Apparently, it’s set to include:

  • Black
  • White
  • Silver Shadow
  • Sky Blue
  • Cobalt Violet
  • Pink Gold

None of these sound particulalrly flashy, and they look pretty muted too.

Another leaker, Ice Universe, posted images of alleged Galaxy S26 Ultra SIM card trays – so there’s still a physical SIM, yay – with silver, black, light blue, and purple colors. The purple, presumably “Cobalt Violet,” is the most saturated hue of the bunch, but they’re all fairly muted. It’s worth noting that these four are probably the main colors Samsung will be selling, just based on the parts showing up this early, with the other three potentially limited to Samsung.com, but that’s an educated guess on our part.

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It’s rather surprising Samsung didn’t go for something to stand out this year. The popularity of the “Cosmic Orange” iPhone 17 Pro was perfect inspiration, and it’s frankly shocking to see that Samsung didn’t just copy it entirely, as we’ve seen a few other Android brands do. Google Pixel has continued on its own path with fun colors – sadly, mainly on the base models – but it’s really rather surprising to see Samsung of all brands not following Apple’s lead here.

The Galaxy S26 series is expected to debut in late February, following a big delay when the entire lineup was shaken up.

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