Millions of Dell laptops hit by ‘critical’ security vulnerability

https://www.pcworld.com/article/2870014/millions-of-dell-laptops-hit-by-critical-security-vulnerability.html

Time and again, dangerous security vulnerabilities are discovered in the hardware of certain manufacturers. Lenovo AIO PCs landed in the news as recently as last week, and now Dell laptop owners need to watch out. Certain Dell models—we’re talking over 100 different models and millions of affected devices—are affected by a chip security vulnerability that can lead to serious problems.

Dell has issued a warning about it, categorizing it as “critical” and stating that it’s a flaw in Broadcom BCM5820X series chips, which are mainly installed in Dell’s Precision, Latitude, and Pro laptops. A list of all affected devices can be found in Dell’s support article.

We’re looking at a total of five individual vulnerabilities with designations CVE-2025-24311, CVE-2025-25215, CVE-2025-24922, CVE-2025-25050, and CVE-2025-24919. It’s a problem with the ControlVault3 function, which is used to store passwords and biometric data, among other things, which is why the problem is particularly dangerous.

In the worst-case scenario, attackers could exploit the flaws to steal data and remotely execute malicious code. Due to the nature of the vulnerability, it’s also likely that stored passwords are no longer secure.

What you can do if you’re affected

Dell told The Register the following when asked:

Working with our firmware provider, we addressed the issues quickly and transparently disclosed the reported vulnerabilities in accordance with our Vulnerability Response Policy.

Customers can review the Dell Security Advisory DSA-2025-053 for information on affected products, versions, and more.

The vulnerability was first disclosed on June 13, but further details have apparently only now been communicated. Dell strongly recommends that users update their devices with the latest Dell security updates to protect against attacks and ensure the safe use of affected devices.

Affected users can find the relevant download links in Dell’s support document. Alternatively, you can search for updates in the Dell Command Center and should at least install the critical patches being offered.

via PCWorld https://www.pcworld.com

August 6, 2025 at 10:59AM

Should Lyft and Uber Charge More if Your Battery Is Low? California May Soon Ban That

https://gizmodo.com/should-lyft-and-uber-charge-more-if-your-battery-is-low-california-may-soon-ban-that-2000639499

Originally published on themarkup.org

It’s late at night, and you badly need a ride. Your cellphone’s battery is dangerously low.

Should a ridehailing company such as Uber or Lyft be able to charge you more because its artificial intelligence programming thinks you’re desperate since it knows your phone is about to die?

Not if Hayward Democratic Sen. Aisha Wahab has her way.

Her Senate Bill 259 would prevent retailers from using artificial intelligence to jack up prices using the information stored on customers’ phones. That could include the phone’s battery life, whether it’s an older model, what apps are installed, what time of day it is, where its user is located and where they live.

“Our devices are being weaponized against us in order for large corporations to increase profits, and it has to stop,” Wahab told the Assembly Judiciary Committee last month.

Wahab’s bill to limit surveillance pricing that’s coasting through the Legislature is the latest example of California lawmakers trying to reign in the explosion of AI technology this year. Their 29 other legislative proposals this year include a ban on using algorithmic systems to set rent prices and a measure to protect people from automated discrimination by AI models that make critical decisions about a person’s employment, education, housing, health care, finance, criminal sentencing and access to government services.

Wahab’s measure has been an easier sell than some of the other AI proposals that have already failed thanks, in part, to it being billed as part of Democrats’ post-election pledges to cut costs for Californians.

It also has the backing of the state’s influential labor unions, which tend to get their way in the Legislature.

Its labor supporters include the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) and the California Labor Federation. In total, those labor groups have donated at least $8.5 million to lawmakers in the last 10 years, according to CalMatters Digital Democracy database.

‘A high-tech assault on working people’

The unions argue that using algorithms and AI to generate higher prices for customers is inherently discriminatory and should be illegal.

Ivan Fernandez, a lobbyist with the California Labor Federation, called the practice of surveillance pricing a “high-tech assault on working people” during a hearing before the Assembly privacy committee in June. He argued that people are already struggling to afford the high cost of living in California, and companies should not be able to “use our data to squeeze every cent they can.”

“Using data such as a person’s geolocation or their phone battery to determine how much to upcharge them for a good or service further exacerbates this issue of affordability for our affiliate members and for workers,” Fernandez said.

On the other side are business and tech groups that also have donated heavily to legislators but tend to get their way less often than labor does.

Opponents include the California Chamber of Commerce and the Silicon Valley lobbying organizations TechNet and Chamber of Progress. The 17 groups opposed to the measure have given at least $11.7 million to legislators since 2015, according to Digital Democracy.

The opposition argues that the bill is unnecessary under California’s existing data privacy laws, would stifle innovation, cut into tech company profits and lead to higher prices.

“The bill would unfairly cause companies to overhaul their pricing models and strategies at significant cost, to the detriment of both the businesses themselves and their consumers,” wrote Ronak Daylami, a policy analyst with CalChamber, in an opposition letter to the Assembly Judiciary Committee. That committee voted 10-4 to send the bill to the Assembly floor.

CalChamber spokesperson John Myers declined to comment further.

So far, the bill has faced little resistance from lawmakers. Only Republicans have voted against it as it easily passed the California Senate and as it made its way through the Assembly.

“This overregulation is impeding how we do business and how people want to do business,” said Assemblywoman Diane Dixon, a Republican who represents the Huntington Beach area, during an Assembly judiciary committee hearing. “I just believe that the market resolves these issues.”

A few Democrats, such as assemblymembers Chris Ward of San Diego and Lori Wilson of Suisun City, asked about enforcement and also some exceptions for “legitimate uses” of geolocation data, but Wahab has mostly received kudos.

“It’s modern-day redlining,” Assemblymember Liz Ortega, a Democrat who represents the Hayward area, told the Assembly privacy committee, referring to racist lending practices that relegated Black and other non-white families into less safe and less desirable neighborhoods prior to the Fair Housing Act of 1968. Proponents of SB 259 argue that without additional guardrails, companies could use consumers’ data to engage in similarly racist price discrimination.

“It was not OK then, and it’s not OK today,” Ortega said.

Notwithstanding her concerns about equitable pricing, Ortega’s support for the union-sponsored proposal isn’t surprising. She is the former statewide political director for one of AFSCME’s local unions. Since 2023, she voted with AFSCME and its affiliate unions’ positions on legislation 100% of the time in 127 opportunities, according to Digital Democracy. She’s also received $77,800 in campaign donations from AFSCME and its affiliates.

Testing Newsom’s tech loyalty

As she pitched her proposal, Wahab has frequently referred to herself as “a former tech worker in Silicon Valley” and leaned on her experience working with tech companies as a business IT consultant. Yet she is also strongly aligned with labor and unions, voting their way more than 90% of the time. Since 2021 she has received nearly $50,000 in campaign contributions from the California Labor Federation and AFSCME, according to the Digital Democracy database.

Wahab painted the companies in her former industry as profit-hungry villains that unscrupulously use Californians’ personal data to pad their bottom lines.

Wahab pointed to a ProPublica report that exposed the test prep company Princeton Review charging higher prices for online SAT tutoring to customers in zip codes that had a high percentage of Asian residents, even in neighborhoods with low median incomes.

“You are being discriminated against based on your perceived socioeconomic status,” Wahab told CalMatters.

She also cited reporting from SFGate that alleged hotel booking platforms would upcharge users whose devices showed they were browsing from the Bay Area, sometimes up to $500 a night more than users in other parts of the country.

And she highlighted a report from the advocacy group Consumer Watchdog that alleged ridehailing apps such as Uber and Lyft charged higher prices to riders whose phone batteries were low – a claim that the companies deny.

“Suggestions that our systems manipulate pricing unfairly or discriminate are simply false and not supported by evidence,” wrote Zahid Arab, a spokesperson for Uber, in an emailed statement. Shadawn Reddick-Smith, a representative for Lyft, said in an emailed statement that the company “does not base fares on battery percentage.”

At least one expert on tech says the critiques from business groups that the bill would stifle innovation and lead to profit losses are inaccurate, specious and “wildly overblown.”

“Industries have built a business model around systematically violating our privacy in ways that we do not want, and generally do not consent to,” said David Evan Harris, a former research manager at Meta and a lecturer at the UC Berkeley Haas School of Business. “People shouldn’t have to be misled into consenting to things.”

Robert Boykin, a representative for the trade group TechNet, noted that California’s privacy law already gives consumers “meaningful rights,” such as the ability to opt out of the sale of precise geolocation and protection from discrimination should they choose to do so.

He said the law also allows companies to offer customers “benefits like loyalty programs and pricing discounts, as long as they’re tied to the value of the data and meet strict standards.”

Wahab’s measure is likely to be heard by the full Assembly when lawmakers reconvene from their summer recess in mid-August. It could end up on Gov. Gavin Newsom’s desk soon after.

The governor has a friendlier relationship with tech companies than the Legislature does. Last year, Newsom vetoed a handful of bills that sought to regulate AI. They included bans on self-driving trucks and weaponized robots as well as a comprehensive measure compelling testing of AI models.

In July, Newsom convened a panel of California tech executives to identify inefficiencies in state government operations, a nod to Trump’s deployment of Tesla CEO Elon Musk to remake the federal bureaucracy. He reportedly even sent “burner” phones to nearly 100 tech executives so they could contact him confidentially.

Tara Gallegos, a Newsom spokesperson, told CalMatters the governor’s office does not comment on pending legislation.

This article was originally published on The Markup and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com/

August 6, 2025 at 09:00AM

Ludoscene, A Game-Discovery Tool Inspired By Dating Apps, Is Out Now

https://www.gamespot.com/articles/ludoscene-a-game-discovery-tool-inspired-by-dating-apps-is-out-now/1100-6533726/

If you’ve been struggling to find some new games to play recently, a newly released tool called Ludocene might be the thing you’re looking for. Having successfully completed a Kickstarter earlier this year, Ludoscene is a dating-app-inspired tool that helps you find new games based on what you already like. If a game comes up and you don’t like it, swipe it away. If you love it, swipe it towards you, and the app will start to recommend games based on that choice, removing and adding more suggestions as you refine what you do and don’t like.

The unique thing about it is that, according to its Kickstarter page, it uses "rich human-researched data to build your catalogue of games." Curation is the key thing here as opposed to something like Steam, which sometimes seems like it’s just taking a guess at what you actually like.

?LUDOCENE LAUNCHED ? So excited (and nervous) to send our game-finder into the world. Ludocene.com If you want a better way to find amazing games that rewards experts and is in the hands of players, this is our shot. Thank you to the 1000’s backers and supporters.This is just the beginning.

[image or embed]

— Andy Robertson (@geekdadgamer.bsky.social) August 6, 2025 at 9:34 AM

While it’s a bit awkward to use with a mouse–the Tinder-like quality makes it more suited to smartphones or tablets–there are a huge range of games it can suggest. You can start "runs" in a few different ways, like starter packs based on the staff’s personal picks, new and upcoming games, and recent discoveries. You can also start from specific games you like, or even based on the tastes of "experts." These include developers, journalists, streamers, and more.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

via GameSpot’s PC Reviews https://ift.tt/SOKRzoQ

August 6, 2025 at 09:08AM

In-Memory Computing Chip Is a Processing Breakthrough for On-Device AI Applications

https://www.techbriefs.com/component/content/article/53572-in-memory-computing-chip-is-a-processing-breakthrough-for-on-device-ai-applications

EnCharge AI, a California-based startup, recently launched the EnCharge EN100 artificial intelligence (AI) chip, developed with a scalable analog in-memory computing architecture.

via NASA Tech Briefs https://ift.tt/TZOtbI9

August 4, 2025 at 06:03AM

Space hurricanes are real — and they wreak more havoc than we thought

https://www.space.com/astronomy/earth/space-hurricanes-are-real-and-they-wreak-more-havoc-than-we-thought

Hurricane season has a new contender, and it’s swirling above the poles.

Behold, the space hurricane. Just like its terrestrial namesake, it spins in vast spirals and has a calm, eye-like center. But instead of clouds and rain, these electromagnetic tempests are made of plasma, charged particles whipped into motion by Earth’s magnetic field.

Now, a new study reveals that space hurricanes can mimic the effects of a geomagnetic storm, shaking Earth’s magnetic field and scrambling GPS signals even when space weather appears calm.

The study examined satellite and ground data from the first known space hurricane, which was observed in 2014. It shows, for the first time, that this stealthy, swirling structure was an active electrodynamic storm, capable of triggering real and potentially disruptive space weather effects.

"The space hurricane formed during very quiet conditions," lead author Sheng Lu of Shandong University in China, told Spaceweather.com. "Solar activity was low."

The 2014 hurricane was spotted in imagery from the U.S. Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP). The large spiral pattern, centered over the magnetic north pole, with curved arms and a dark central "eye," glowed faintly with auroral light.

But this was no ordinary aurora.

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Two satellites flew through the 2014 storm just minutes apart. DMSP F17 passed through the center, while the European Space Agency’s Swarm B clipped the edge. The data they collected painted a striking picture. This was an active, swirling system in Earth‘s ionosphere, complete with fast-moving plasma flows, density shears, and upward electric currents, just like a hurricane’s convection engine, but electromagnetic.

To try and understand what this silent storm was up to, the team turned to ground and satellite data from the Canadian High Arctic Ionospheric Network (CHAIN). And that’s where things got even more weird.

GPS signals passing through the storm’s outer regions were affected by phase scintillation, a kind of "twinkling" that occurs when plasma turbulence interferes with radio signals. One GPS satellite, PRN 11, showed a particularly strong disturbance, with a scintillation index of 0.81, enough to significantly degrade positional accuracy.

Meanwhile, ground-based magnetometers in Greenland picked up sharp, localized changes in Earth’s magnetic field, up to 400 nanoteslas, values normally associated with minor geomagnetic storms.

"These disturbances are comparable in magnitude to those observed during geomagnetic storms," the authors wrote in the study.

The stealth storm no one saw coming

What makes space hurricanes so surprising is how they can form during the most unlikely of scenarios, calm space weather conditions.

Most geomagnetic storms and subsequent impressive aurora displays occur when the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) aligns southward, essentially "opening the door" in Earth’s magnetic field, allowing the charged particles of the solar wind to pour in. That’s when you’ll often find aurora chasers and space weather forecasters alike on high alert for some activity.

Space Weather and Earth’s Aurora – YouTube
Space Weather and Earth's Aurora - YouTube

Watch On

But researchers found that the space hurricane formed under a northward-aligned IMF, which typically "closes the door" to geomagnetic activity. As a result, these storms often go unnoticed by standard space weather indices and could be more common than we think.

"Note to forecasters: Not all storms come from the sun," Spaceweather.com warned.

So how do space hurricanes form under such calm conditions? The study suggests that, instead of entering through the usual "front door," energy from the solar wind sneaks in through the magnetic "lobes" at the back of Earth’s magnetosphere. This process, called lobe reconnection, sends energy straight into the polar cap. There, it sets up circular flows of plasma and electric currents, creating a swirling storm — a space hurricane — right above the pole.

What does it mean for us?

As GPS, satellite communications, and polar aviation continue to expand, so does our reliance on stable signals in space. That makes understanding high-latitude disturbances like space hurricanes increasingly important, especially since these events often go undetected by standard geomagnetic indices. As our technology reaches farther into the polar skies, recognizing hidden storms like these could be key to keeping our systems safe, even when the sun looks quiet.

The new study was published in the July 2025 issue of the scientific journal Space Weather.

via Latest from Space.com https://www.space.com

August 4, 2025 at 08:08AM

What do TSA bag scanners actually see?

https://www.popsci.com/technology/what-do-tsa-bag-scanners-see/

Despite the best of intentions, travelers aren’t always in the clearest headspace when making a mad dash to the airport. So although we theoretically know the rules, plenty of passengers have a story of a Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officer spotting something mortifying in their carry-on. The snafus range from embarrassing—a buzzing vibrator that sounds like a potential bomb threat—to stressful—cannabis products purchased legally, then accidentally carried into a state or country where they carry criminal charges.

Some of these prohibited items seem pretty obvious, but others beg the question, How the heck did they know that was in there?  If you’ve ever caught a glimpse of the squiggly, multicolored visual display on the X-ray scanner as you trudge to the body scanner, you may have found yourself wondering exactly how much information the Transportation Security Officers (TSOs) can decipher from it. 

A lot, as it turns out. If you have a pile of money or a container of pills in there, they’re gonna know. Ditto any electronics or, more importantly, any items sneakily hidden inside of them. 

That’s a good thing, since TSA agents pick up a whole lot of hazardous stuff, including knives, guns, and explosives.  “Prohibited items brought to checkpoints add up to hundreds of pounds a year at smaller airports to as much as 2,000 pounds or a ton per month at the largest airports,” says a TSA spokesperson. According to the administration, last year the government agency screened more than 2 billion carry-on bags and 494 million checked bags. Here’s how they did it.

Related Aviation Stories

How it works

Since 2002, when the TSA leveled up in the wake of September 11, virtually all agents have relied on Computed Tomography (CT) systems. “CT is a proven and highly effective screening technology that is widely used in the medical field,” says a TSA Spokesperson. 

Essentially, a TSA CT X-ray scanner sends low doses of X-rays through your luggage, which pass through the different materials at different rates. So the scanner can tell if there are metals, liquids, or even organic materials in there. 

“CT technology applies sophisticated algorithms and creates three-dimensional images by gathering hundreds of pictures with an X-ray camera spinning around the items,” says a TSA Spokesperson. “The images can be rotated 360 degrees on three axes, allowing for more detailed visual analysis by Transportation Security Officers and the detection of a broader range of threats without having to open the bag.”

Although the basic concept has remained the same, the tech is vastly more sophisticated these days. That’s a big part of why this year the TSA finally decided to let travelers keep their stinky feet shod while going through security. In fact, the newer models of CT scanners are so adept at reading your luggage that you can safely leave your laptops in your carry-on. Some can even tell if the liquids in your luggage contain explosives. While those aren’t widely available yet, there’s hope in the future that we might finally be able to fly with normal-sized shampoo again. 

Three knives, a camping axe, a knife hilt designed to look like a bat, and a BMW car key multitool are laid out on a blue surface.
The TSA at Miami International Airport displays confiscated carry-on items, including some very colorful knives. Image: Joe Raedle / Getty Images Joe Raedle

What they find in there

“TSA officers encounter everything from fireworks and replica grenades to snakes and literal kitchen sinks,” says a TSA Spokesperson. “Knives, martial arts items and large tools are among the most common items.”

Some of the finds are so outlandish that the TSA started pulling together an annual roundup on their official YouTube channel. For instance, last year, a passenger at Chicago Midway International Airport tried to hide a vape in a tube of toothpaste. In 2023, passengers tried to smuggle a knife in a loaf of bread and a DIY explosive in a soda can. And in 2022, drug mules got creative by putting narcotics in hair scrunchies and Fentanyl in candy.  

While ninja throwing stars (yes, really) and pipebombs are obviously out, it’s always a good idea to check the TSA’s guidelines if you’re not sure about a particular item. 

Even if you mess up and throw your full-sized skincare routine in your carry-on, don’t stress too much. Agents don’t actually confiscate most prohibited items, so unless you’re channeling Walter White or Tony Montana, you have a good chance of hanging onto them. You’re generally allowed to hand items to a friend or family member at the airport who isn’t boarding with you. Alternatively, you can usually go back to the ticket counter and ask to put it in your checked luggage.

Oh, and it’s an urban myth that TSA officers swipe the fancy bottle of Scotch you bought on the trip for themselves. The majority of the items surrendered (or just forgotten) at airport security actually wind up in a state-sponsored auction on GovDeals.com. Think about it this way: If you’re still mad about losing your favorite shampoo, you can score some terrific deals on everything from kitchen knives to Macbooks. It’s like the airport security circle of life. 

The post What do TSA bag scanners actually see? appeared first on Popular Science.

via Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now https://www.popsci.com

August 1, 2025 at 08:00AM

The Kindle Colorsoft Will Make Your Books Look Worse

https://lifehacker.com/tech/kindle-colorsoft-makes-books-look-worse

Amazon’s Kindle Colorsoft is now the company’s most expensive e-reader (with the exception of the Kindle Scribe, although that’s more of an e-note than an e-reader), but that doesn’t automatically make it the best Kindle money can buy. Let’s say you have the cash to burn and want the best reading experience Amazon offers: If you only read novels, or even black-and-white comics like manga, you might actually be better off saving your money and getting the Kindle Paperwhite instead. Shelling out extra won’t give you an upgraded experience—it could actively make your books worse.

What is a color e-reader?

At its core, the Kindle Colorsoft is essentially a Kindle Paperwhite, but with one key difference. It’s got the same lighting options, weighs just about the same, looks exactly like a Paperwhite, and has the same size screen. The defining factor is that the Colorsoft has a color filter in its display, which allows content that passes through it to produce up to 4,096 colors.

Kindle Colorsoft library page

Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt

It can still display black-and-white content, but when you read something like a comic book on it, it cuts the resolution in half from 300 ppi to 150 ppi, then cleverly arranges the pixels so they shine through the exact right spots to produce the needed colors.

There’s a bit more to it than that—Amazon also has some proprietary materials in play that allows it to achieve better color accuracy and fewer artifacts than competing devices—but that’s the gist. It’s pretty clever, even if the core concept isn’t unique to the Kindle Colorsoft. It doesn’t just work on comics, either, but also on things like book covers or color-collated highlighting.

Sounds pretty cool. Even if you don’t use it all the time, it’s a nice bonus, right? You can get color when you need it, at the cost of some resolution, but you can also display black-and-white works at the same resolution as the Kindle Paperwhite. Unfortunately, the reality’s not so cut and dry.

The rainbow effect

While the Kindle’s software can recognize when it’s showing you black-and-white content and when it’s displaying color, the hardware can’t. Even in something like a novel, the physical color filter is still there. And while its individual color dots are too small to make out, your eyes can still notice the color layer as whole.

Enter the rainbow effect. At its best, it’ll put a light shimmer on your screen, giving it a somewhat grainy texture that can lower the contrast. At its worst, it’ll show full on spectrums of color on content that should be monochrome.

Take this page from Dune, which shows a fairly mild rainbow effect.

"Dune" on the Kindle Colorsoft (left) vs. Kindle Paperwhite (right).
"Dune" on the Kindle Colorsoft (left) vs. Kindle Paperwhite (right).
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt

And this page from Berserk, which shows a more aggressive rainbow pattern.

"Berserk" shown on the Kindle Colorsoft (left) vs. Kindle Paperwhite (right).
"Berserk" shown on the Kindle Colorsoft (left) vs. Kindle Paperwhite (right).
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt

It’s unavoidable. No matter what you read on the device, it’ll show up to some degree. The question is how you’ll react to it.

Can you fix the rainbow effect?

Because the rainbow effect is a hardware issue, there’s no way to get rid of it completely. The competition has slight fixes for it, with the most notable being Kobo’s “reduce rainbow effect” toggle, which slightly blurs the image to try to line it up in a way that the color filter isn’t as noticeable. Amazon, unfortunately, has not opted to include such a solution on its device.

That said, the Kindle Colorsoft does ship with two color modes, standard and vivid. These won’t affect black-and-white content, but it’s worth noting that the way the color filter works in the Colorsoft can sometimes cause artifacting in color content as well. If you notice this, changing color modes could help you out. The Kindle is less prone to artifacting than I’ve seen on other devices, but its Vivid mode doesn’t use the full range of 4,096 colors, instead compressing it to boost saturation. Most of the fellow Colorsoft users I’ve spoken with prefer to swap over to Vivid and leave it on for everything, but the lower range of colors can cause pixelation, so if you notice that, it’s worth trying out Standard mode again. Sure, this isn’t exactly the same as the rainbow effect, but it’s a similar enough issue, and points out that even color users aren’t free from problems on this device.

Is dealing with the rainbow effect worth it?

How much the rainbow effect will bother you depends on what you read and how pristine you like your pages to look. To my husband, who reads all of his black-and-white books on a color e-reader, it doesn’t bother him much. He actually kind of likes the shimmering, saying it kind of looks like the grain you might get on real paper.

But to me, I can’t stand it. It’s bright and distracting, and if you spend most of your time on your Kindle reading traditional books, buying a Colorsoft will mean you’ll be paying extra just to have to deal with that. I suppose that might be worth it if you want to see your book covers in color when scrolling through your library, or if you highlight a lot. It does look nice, for the few seconds covers or highlights are on your screen. But for most of your time actually reading, you’re not going to be using the color, and you will be seeing the rainbow effect.

The news only gets worse if you read black-and-white illustrated works, like manga. To follow along with a book, all you have to do is make out the words— but with manga, the artwork will be actively worsened. Lines might look fuzzier, or facial expressions might give off an entirely different vibe underneath all the shimmering. But worst of all, you might get those unintended splotches of color, like I got in Berserk. To me, that’s not worth it.

The Kindle Colorsoft is only for people who read color content

It might sound obvious, but the Kindle Colorsoft is only for people who read color content regularly, like comic books—and even then, I don’t recommend it.

This isn’t like the ‘90s, when the Game Boy Color could play certain games in color, but could also play black-and-white games the same as an original Game Boy. The Kindle Colorsoft is not just a regular Kindle with optional color that readers with deep pockets can count on as an occasional added bonus, but as something they can otherwise ignore. Instead, using it is an entirely different experience.

via Lifehacker https://ift.tt/1oIF94p

July 31, 2025 at 04:25PM