Content producers are churning out data in unprecedented volumes, with high-definition images and 4K/8K video content consuming an enormous amount of storage space. Creators typically need to store several versions of their projects, including the initial raw files, edited versions, and the published format.
Catering to this need, Western Digital has launched a new external SSD, the SanDisk Desk Drive, which comes in 4 and 8TB capacities.
External SSDs can operate at incredibly high speeds compared to their HDD counterparts, which means that content creators can not only store, but also edit their photos and videos directly from the drive itself, decreasing the time spent on transferring files, accelerating work efficiency while ensuring that the data is securely stored.
16TB versions planned
“As digital content creation continues to soar, there is an increasing need for high-performing and high-capacity storage solutions to help manage and preserve it. Expanding our SSD portfolio is the first step in offering creators backup solutions that deliver the speed and flexibility they need to unlock their creativity,” says Susan Park, Vice President, Consumer Solutions, Western Digital.
The SanDisk Desk Drive boasts read speeds up to 1000 MB/s, and fast backup capabilities using Apple Time Machine or the included downloadable Acronis True Image for Western Digital backup software. The device also sports a modern Red Dot award-winning design.
Retailing at $379.99/£359.99 and $699.99/£663.99 for the 4TB and 8TB versions respectively, these devices can be purchased now from the Western Digital Store and other retailers.
Western Digital doesn’t intend to stop at 8TB however. Susan Park says, “By next year, we expect to double the capacity of the SanDisk Desk Drive from 8TB to 16TB on a single desktop SSD.”
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An AlphaFold3 model of a bacterial enzyme bound to a chemical.Credit: Isomorphic Labs
Since the powerhouse artificial intelligence (AI) tool AlphaFold2 was released in 2021, scientists have used the protein-structure-prediction model to map one of our cells’ biggest machines, discover drugs and chart the universe of every known protein.
Despite such successes, John Jumper — who leads AlphaFold’s development at Google DeepMind in London — is regularly asked whether the tool can do more. Requests include the ability to predict the shape of proteins that contain function-altering modifications, or their structure alongside those of DNA, RNA and other cellular players that are crucial to a protein’s duties. “I would say ‘no, you can’t put that into AlphaFold’,” Jumper says. “I would rather solve their problems.”
What’s next for AlphaFold and the AI protein-folding revolution
The latest version of AlphaFold, described on 8 May in Nature1, aims to do just that — by giving scientists the ability to predict the structures of proteins during interactions with other molecules. But whereas DeepMind made the 2021 version of the tool freely available to researchers without restriction, AlphaFold3 is limited to non-commercial use through a DeepMind website.
Frank Uhlmann, a biochemist at the Francis Crick Institute in London who gained early access to AlphaFold3, has been impressed with its capabilities. “This is just revolutionary,” he says. “It’s going to democratize structural-biology research.”
Another revolution
“Revolutionary” is how many scientists have described the impact of AlphaFold2 on biology since it was unleashed2 (the first version3, released in 2020, was good, but not game-changing, Jumper has said). The AI predicts a protein’s structures from its amino-acid sequence, often with startling accuracy that is on par with that of experimental methods.
A freely available AlphaFold database holds the predicted structure of nearly every known protein. The availability of the AlphaFold2 code has also allowed other researchers to easily build on it: an early hack enabled the prediction of interactions between multiple proteins, a capability included in an update to AlphaFold2.
Jumper’s ennui over explaining AlphaFold’s inability to predict other aspects of a protein’s ecosystem stems from their importance: protein modifications, such as the addition of a phosphate molecule, can allow cells to respond to external cues, an infection, for instance, and set off a chain of events in response. Interactions with DNA, RNA and other chemicals are essential to many proteins’ duties.
Real-world examples of these interactions are readily available in the Protein Data Bank (PDB), a repository of experimentally determined structures that is the foundation of AlphaFold’s capabilities. An ideal tool would be able to predict structures of a protein alongside its accessories, says Jumper. “We want to solve the whole PDB.”
Major upgrade
To create AlphaFold3, Jumper, DeepMind chief executive Demis Hassabis and their colleagues made large changes to its predecessor: the latest version depends less on information about proteins related to a target sequence, for instance. AlphaFold3 also uses a type of machine-learning network — called a diffusion model — that is used by image-generating AIs such as Midjourney. “It’s a pretty substantial change,” says Jumper.
AlphaFold’s new rival? Meta AI predicts shape of 600 million proteins
AlphaFold3, the researchers found, substantially outperforms existing software tools at predicting the structure of proteins and their partners. For instance, scientists — especially those interested in finding new drugs — have conventionally used ‘docking’ software to physically model how well chemicals bind to proteins (usually with help from the proteins’ experimentally determined structures). AlphaFold3 proved superior to two docking programs, as well as to another AI-based tool called RoseTTAFold All-Atom4.
Uhlmann’s team has used AlphaFold3 to predict the structure of DNA-interacting proteins involved in copying the genome, a step that is essential to cell division. Experiments in which proteins are mutated to alter such interactions suggest that the predictions were usually spot on, Uhlmann says. “It’s an amazing discovery tool,” he adds.
“The structure-prediction performance of AlphaFold3 is very impressive,” says David Baker, a computational biophysicist at the University of Washington in Seattle. It’s better than RoseTTAFold All-Atom, which his team developed4, he adds.
Restricted access
Unlike RoseTTAFold and AlphaFold2, scientists will not be able to run their own version of AlphaFold3, nor will the code underlying AlphaFold3 or other information obtained after training the model be made public. Instead, researchers will have access to an ‘AlphaFold3 server’, on which they can input their protein sequence of choice, alongside a selection of accessory molecules.
How AlphaFold can realize AI’s full potential in structural biology
Uhlmann likes what he has so far seen of the server, which he says is simpler and quicker than the version of AlphaFold2 that he has access to at his institute. “You upload it and 10 minutes later, you’ve got the structures,” he says. For most scientists, “the server is really going to smash it. Everybody can do it.”
Access to the AlphaFold3 server, however, is limited. Scientists are currently restricted to 10 predictions a day, and it is not possible to obtain structures of proteins bound to possible drugs.
Isomorphic Labs, a DeepMind spin-off company in London, is using AlphaFold3 to develop drugs, both through its own pipeline and with other pharmaceutical companies. “We have to strike a balance between making sure that this is accessible and has the impact in the scientific community as well as not compromising Isomorphic’s ability to pursue commercial drug discovery,” says Pushmeet Kohli, DeepMind’s head of AI science and a study co-author.
Because of the restriction on modelling protein interactions with possible drugs, “I can’t see it having the impact AlphaFold2 had”, says Brian Shoichet, a pharmaceutical chemist at the University of California, San Francisco, who has been using AlphaFold structures to hunt for therapeutic candidates.
Sergey Ovchinnikov, an evolutionary biologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, had hoped to develop a web version of AlphaFold3, as he and his colleagues have done for AlphaFold2 shortly after its code was released. But based on the ample information provided in the latest Nature paper, it shouldn’t take long for other teams to create their own versions, he says. “I would expect open-source solutions before the end of the year.”
Samsung Australia is rolling out a new Fortnite Creative map for mobile gamers. The new experience called Clash of Commuters features “a uniquely Australian and public transport-inspired map.” And for a limited time, players will have the opportunity to win Samsung prizes.
The new map features Australian icons, including so-called bin chickens and the Sydney train. Clash of Commuters has a post-apocalyptic theme, and gamers will be tasked with defending an Aussie public bus across 5 checkpoints.
Virtual Galaxy S24 Ultra phones will also be hidden throughout the post-apocalyptic Australia Fortnite map, and players finding these hidden objects can unlock special bonuses.
As for the Australian player base, Samsung Electronics research suggests that 48% of Aussies most frequently use smartphones as their gaming devices. Meanwhile, 26% of Australians use consoles, and 24% use desktop PCs and laptops.
Play the map for real prizes
Clash of Commuters players have the chance to win prizes if they participate in the event before May 30.
This Fortnite Creative campaign consists of five rounds, and players who complete all five in the shortest amount of time will be eligible to win a Samsung gaming pack worth over $8,000.
This gaming pack prize consists of a 55-inch OLED TV, an Odyssey OLED G9 monitor, the Galaxy Buds 2 Pro earbuds, and the Galaxy S24 Ultra.
Samsung Australia offers additional prizes for players who compete in the event exclusively on mobile devices, and for players who complete the most side quest phones. Lastly, four winners will be picked at random from all completed time submissions.
Through this event, Samsung also invites Australians to experience the game on the Galaxy S24 Ultra at interactive pop-up locations in Melbourne and Sydney.
Apple Card users can get extra Daily Cash back this week for Nike purchases thanks to a special Apple Pay promotion Apple is running with Nike.
From April 25 through May 2, Apple Card owners will get 10 percent Daily Cash back on Nike purchases made using Apple Pay. The deal is available on the Nike website, the Nike app, and at U.S. Nike Stores.
Customers can earn up to $50 back, which means the extra cash is available for up to $500 in purchases.
Daily Cash is a benefit available to Apple Card owners. With each purchase, immediate cash back rewards are available. Apple typically provides two percent cash back for Apple Pay purchases, three percent for Apple Pay purchases at Apple locations, and one percent for everything else. Some retailers, such as Nike, have special deals with Apple where users can get three percent cash back.
The limited time deal is a seven percent total increase in Daily Cash back on Nike purchases.
Apple has announced it will be holding a special event on Tuesday, May 7 at 7 a.m. Pacific Time (10 a.m. Eastern Time), with a live stream to be available on Apple.com and on YouTube as usual. The event invitation has a tagline of “Let Loose” and shows an artistic render of an Apple Pencil, suggesting that iPads will be a focus of the event. Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more …
Apple has dropped the number of Vision Pro units that it plans to ship in 2024, going from an expected 700 to 800k units to just 400k to 450k units, according to Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo. Orders have been scaled back before the Vision Pro has launched in markets outside of the United States, which Kuo says is a sign that demand in the U.S. has “fallen sharply beyond expectations.” As a…
Apple today released several open source large language models (LLMs) that are designed to run on-device rather than through cloud servers. Called OpenELM (Open-source Efficient Language Models), the LLMs are available on the Hugging Face Hub, a community for sharing AI code. As outlined in a white paper [PDF], there are eight total OpenELM models, four of which were pre-trained using the…
Apple is finally planning a Calculator app for the iPad, over 14 years after launching the device, according to a source familiar with the matter. iPadOS 18 will include a built-in Calculator app for all iPad models that are compatible with the software update, which is expected to be unveiled during the opening keynote of Apple’s annual developers conference WWDC on June 10. AppleInsider…
The upcoming iOS 17.5 update for the iPhone includes only a few new user-facing features, but hidden code changes reveal some additional possibilities. Below, we have recapped everything new in the iOS 17.5 and iPadOS 17.5 beta so far. Web Distribution Starting with the second beta of iOS 17.5, eligible developers are able to distribute their iOS apps to iPhone users located in the EU…
At first glance, the Maiyunda M1 doesn’t look all that special. It’s a mini PC with a large on/off button on the front, alongside a TF card slot, a USB 3.0 port, and two USB 2.0 ports. On the rear, there are HDMI 2.0 and DP ports to allow the device to drive two screens simultaneously (4K/60Hz). There are also four 2.5GbE RJ45 ports plus two additional USB 2.0 slots.
With dimensions of just 165 x 147.5 x 59mm, not including the 52mm leg pads, the M1 with its all-aluminum shell looks like any mini PC, and even its manufacturer describes it as “unassuming”.
But the Maiyunda M1 has something that sets it apart from the competition – four quick release NVMe SSD slots on the front (behind a fascia) so you can add additional drives without having to open the enclosure. The M1 can also hold an internal 2280 NVMe SSD, bringing the total amount of available storage to 40TB.
Choice of processors
At the heart of the M1 is either an Intel N100 or Core i3-N305 Alder Lake-N processor and the device comes with 16GB of LPDDR5 RAM upgradeable to 32GB.
The manufacturer claims the M1 can handle temperatures of 0°C to +70°C and withstand humidity levels of 5%-85%.
Although it runs Windows, the creators say it supports a variety of other systems, including Linux, Proxmox VE, ESXI, Ubuntu, Debian, CentOS, Unraid, and OMV (OpenMediaVault).
The M1 is currently only available in China sadly, where it retails for a very reasonable 1380 CNY (about $190) on Taobao. There’s no information yet on the price differences between the various configuration options.
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Best Buy this week continues to offer all-time low prices on the 15-inch M2 MacBook Air, which is available for $300 off right now at the retailer. Anyone can get these deals and you don’t need a My Best Buy Plus or Total membership to see the discounts.
Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with Best Buy. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.
Starting with the 15-inch 256GB M2 MacBook Air, you can get this model for $999.00, down from $1,299.00. The 512GB model has hit $1,199.00, down from $1,499.00. Both of these are record low prices on the 15-inch M2 MacBook Air.
If you’re shopping for the new 15-inch M3 MacBook Air, you can find the first discounts on this computer at Amazon. However, anyone looking to save money should focus on Best Buy’s discounts on the M2 MacBook Air, which is still a solid option for most workflows and everyday tasks.
Be sure to visit our full Deals Roundup to shop for even more Apple-related products and accessories.
While the iPhone 16 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro Max are still months away from launching, there are already over a dozen rumors about the devices. Below, we have recapped new features and changes expected for the devices so far. These are some of the key changes rumored for the iPhone 16 Pro models as of April 2024:Larger displays: The iPhone 16 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro Max will be equipped with large…
A first look at iOS 18’s rumored visionOS-style redesign may have been revealed by a new image of the Camera app. Alleged iOS 18 design resource. MacRumors received the above iPhone frame template from an anonymous source who claims they obtained it from an iOS engineer. It will allegedly be included as part of the Apple Design Resources for iOS 18, which helps developers visually design apps …
Apple is exploring various “personal robotics” projects in an effort to create its “next big thing,” according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. Amazon’s Astro robot One of these projects is described as a “mobile robot” that would “follow users around their homes,” while another is said to be an “advanced table-top home device that uses robotics to move a display around”:Engineers at Apple have…
Nearly one year after it launched in the U.S., the Apple Card’s high-yield savings account will be receiving its first-ever interest rate decrease. Starting on April 3, the Apple Card savings account’s annual percentage yield (APY) will be lowered to 4.4%, according to data on Apple’s backend discovered by MacRumors contributor Aaron Perris. The account currently has a 4.5% APY. 4.4% will …
Apple has yet to release the first beta of iOS 17.5 for the iPhone, but two changes are already expected with the upcoming software update. iOS 17.5 will likely allow iPhone users in the EU to download apps directly from the websites of eligible developers, and the update might include some changes to how Apple ID recovery contacts work. More details about these potential changes follow. W…
Apple today added a handful of devices to its public-facing vintage and obsolete products list, including some older iPhone and iPad models. Apple now considers the iPhone 6 Plus to be “obsolete” worldwide, meaning that Apple Stores and Apple Authorized Service Providers no longer offer repairs or other hardware service for the device. Apple says it considers a product “obsolete” once seven…
Best Buy is discounting a large collection of M3 MacBook Pro computers today, including both the 14-inch and 16-inch versions of the laptop. Every deal in this sale requires you to have a My Best Buy Plus or Total membership, although non-members can still get solid second-best prices on these MacBook Pro models. Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with Best Buy. When you click a link and…
Apple researchers have developed an artificial intelligence system named ReALM (Reference Resolution as Language Modeling) that aims to radically enhance how voice assistants understand and respond to commands. In a research paper (via VentureBeat), Apple outlines a new system for how large language models tackle reference resolution, which involves deciphering ambiguous references to…
Looking for a better office chair? You don’t have to spend several hundred dollars or more. I’ve found the Silybon Ergonomic Office Chair does a good job for about $110 after a discount.
With a history of back trouble, I was a little nervous about the purchase. But it’s a good, comfortable chair paired with a standing desk, so my back is fine.
This post contains affiliate links. Cult of Mac may earn a commission when you use our links to buy items.
Silybon Ergonomic Office Chair review
Back when I moved to a condo and re-established my improved computer setup there, I reviewed some items. Like an inexpensive but good-quality standing desk. But I left out my then-new chair. I just never got to it. But it remains a good investment, so here we go.
About 85% of the Silybon chair’s Amazon reviews are 4 or 5 stars. Its overall rating is 4.4 based on 1,395 reviews. That’s reassuring and more or less explains why I chose it.
I bought the Silybon Ergonomic Office Chair, along with loads of other furnishings, when I got ready to move back in October 2023. One of the many, many boxes held the chair. It, like so many things for sale on Amazon, came all the way from China, at least originally.
Spend $750 to $1,000? Nah.
This chair and the option to stand occasionally with the motorized desk has kept my back from troubling me. Photo: David Snow/Cult of Mac
Unwilling to throw down $750 or more on something like a Herman Miller office chair (often seen in our setups coverage), I took a wild stab at a much-cheaper option that looked OK. I paid $159.98 for the Silybon Ergonomic Office Chair. Recently, I saw it at that price with an additional $50 coupon to click on, which would bring it down to a low $110 or so.
I realize there are better bets out there to effectively guarantee yourself great seating that will last a long time, but so far my choice is holding up.
To my relief, the chair has remained in good working order without needing adjustments since I bought it in early October 2023. That’s six months of me dropping into it, leaning back a lot, rocking, standing up abruptly and so forth.
Reasonably good build quality and materials
Of course, something like this doesn’t arrive assembled. It came in a pretty flat box. Once I had all the parts out, it took me maybe an hour to put it all together. The instructions were clear. It came with tools. One person can do it without help, although it would be a little easier with two people.
The chair is like many others you can buy on the cheap: nylon/cotton mesh over padding (2.8 inches thick in the seat) and a mostly plastic frame with some metal parts. It includes a choice of feet or rolling casters.
I chose the casters, and I’m glad I did. They roll nicely on the rug I have in the office under the desk and chair. But the chair is perfectly stable, too. And it rocks up to 30 degrees (or not), which I like.
Ergonomic and comfortable design
The lumbar support against the seat back raises and lowers to suit you. Photo: David Snow/Cult of Mac
The chair is ergonomically designed to support the back, hip and hands. The lumbar support seems on-point. I found I could slide that plastic piece up or down about 1.5 inches to find the most support.
I found it easy to adjust the seat height in the usual way, using a lever under the seat. The seat also provides 360-degree free rotation. Silybon says the seat and its effective rotation should last for 10 years.
I noticed I could pull the armrests up and out of the way, too. For me, that allows for more comfortable guitar playing while seated in the chair. But I’m sure there are other reasons for the feature, like keeping the arms from bumping a desk or table.
The breathable mesh on the chair is quite comfortable. Airflow keeps things cool. The chair is designed to support 300 pounds in daily use (thankfully I’m well below that!). The seat’s nearly 3-inch-thick padding is good for hours of comfort, but eight hours on end starts to aggravate the rear end.
Silybon Ergonomic Office Chair: Nab the $50 off coupon
You can get the chair in four color variations: black mesh/black frame; black mesh/white frame; dark gray mesh/white frame; and light blue mesh/white frame. Mine has medium-gray mesh, but I don’t see that option on Amazon currently.
The chair comes with a three-year warranty.
You can pick up the Silybon Ergonomic Office Chair at Amazon for $159.98. Select the $50 off coupon box to make that price $109.98.
This home office task chair is made from breathable mesh and other materials. It swivels, rocks and provides adjustable lumbar support. It also offers flip-up arms and adjustable height.
A drug that uses messenger RNA technology has shown early success in addressing the core deficiency behind a rare genetic disorder. The results have ignited hope that the technology — which first gained attention through its breakthrough use in COVID-19 vaccines — could realize its long-awaited promise of generating therapeutic proteins directly in the body.
This clinical advance, reported today in Nature1, provides a boost to current mRNA applications, which remain limited to vaccines.
“This is a first step in the right direction,” says Katalin Karikó, a Nobel prizewinning pioneer of mRNA technologies who is affiliated with the University of Szeged in Hungary and the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
Yet challenges remain — especially the fleeting nature of mRNA and the side effects it causes, which complicate the path towards widespread adoption.
Metabolic makeover
Designed by Moderna in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the current therapy uses mRNA technology to restore metabolic function in people with propionic acidaemia.
This rare genetic disorder, which affects about one in 100,000 individuals worldwide, arises from mutations in either of two genes that together encode an enzyme necessary for the efficient breakdown of certain protein components. Without this enzyme, cells can’t process some nutrients properly.
That leads to the accumulation of toxic chemicals in the blood and tissues, and damages vital organs, including the heart and the brain. Symptoms, such as vomiting, usually start within the first few days after birth.
Why rings of RNA could be the next blockbuster drug
People can manage the condition with measures such as special diets. But there are currently no treatments that tackle the underlying cause directly.
Moderna’s drug, known as mRNA-3927, aims to address that gap. It contains two mRNA sequences that each craft parts of the otherwise faulty enzyme. These mRNAs are encased in a tiny fat bubble — called a lipid nanoparticle — similar to the carrier used in the company’s COVID-19 vaccine.
The therapeutic mRNA drug is administered slowly through hours-long infusions every two or three weeks. It is also given in doses hundreds of times greater than those of COVID-19 vaccines. Once the therapy enters the bloodstream, the lipid nanoparticles help to direct the mRNA to cells in the liver, where the functional enzyme is made.
Trade-offs and benefits
Initial results from a small trial of mRNA-3927 indicate that the restoration of enzymatic activity is beneficial. Eight of the 16 participants had experienced life-threatening episodes connected to their impaired metabolism in the year before starting treatment. For those eight, the likelihood of experiencing another such event decreased by an average of 70–80% while taking the therapy.
This outcome, based on a small number of people, did not reach the threshold of statistical significance. Nonetheless, “it’s a very encouraging step”, says Jerry Vockley, a medical geneticist at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center in Pennsylvania who helped to design the trial but who was not involved in its execution.
According to Kyle Holen, head of therapeutics development at Moderna, the company is now recruiting more trial participants as it advances mRNA-3927 towards the goal of marketing approval.
Moderna is also analysing other outcome measures related to quality-of-life metrics — indicators that, anecdotally at least, seem to be improving for some recipients of the treatment.
Nassrine Fawaz in Livonia, Michigan, has witnessed a transformation in her 4-year-old daughter, who has received mRNA-3927 for the past 2.5 years. After each infusion, “she’s focused, she’s energetic, she’s up and ready for the day — all of those great things”.
Room for improvement
Developers of mRNA therapeutics had long worried that repeated administration might trigger immune responses against the treatment. However, with individuals having now received regular infusions of mRNA for months or even years without issue, this concern has been alleviated.
“That’s pretty big,” says Alex Wesselhoeft, director of RNA therapeutics at Mass General Brigham’s Gene and Cell Therapy Institute in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
mRNA COVID vaccines saved lives and won a Nobel — what’s next for the technology?
But there are trade-offs: most people reported side effects in response to the treatment. These ranged from infections to severe swelling of the pancreas. However, as study investigator Andreas Schulze, a metabolic-disease specialist at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, Canada, points out, many of the reactions are more likely to be “related to the underlying disease” than to the treatment.
Still, with a side-effect profile close to what Wesselhoeft describes as the “upper limit of tolerability”, and only modest clinical gains, he and others think that further refinements are needed before mRNA technologies can provide a fully corrective and long-term solution to genetic diseases.
“I’m just doubtful this is going to be a long-term therapy,” says Romesh Subramanian, a biotechnology consultant in Framingham, Massachusetts, who, in a previous job, worked in collaboration with Moderna scientists to develop mRNA therapies for rare diseases. “I think it needs to be much less frequent dosing with better [nanoparticles] or more potent mRNA.”
Meanwhile, many families affected by propionic acidaemia are maintaining a wait-and-see attitude. “The verdict is still out,” says Jill Chertow, founder and president of the Propionic Acidemia Foundation, a non-profit organization based in Deerfield, Illinois.
“We can only be hopeful since, right now, that’s all that we have.”
A new trailer Apple TV+ dropped Sunday for upcoming LA-noir detective series Sugar, starring Irish actor Colin Farrell, asks an important question: Who is John Sugar? Well, apparently he’s a tough dude who “does one thing and one thing only: Find the missing.”
A legendary film producer played by veteran actor James Cromwell says the line. And having cast members like Cromwell adds some serious gravitas to a moody and engrossing-looking series (as if Farrell was not enough).
You can see that trailer and the previous one below. They should whet your appetite for some good ol’ fashioned-yet-contemporary LA crime noir. It comes up from time to time to great acclaim (see LA Confidential among others).
Check out 2 Sugar detective series trailers before Colin Farrell’s show premieres Friday, March 5
The trailers for Sugar below don’t disappoint when it comes to note-perfect film noir dialogue, like you’d see in some James Cagney tough-guy detective series from the 1940s.
“Finding people that are lost — that part of the job I like,” Farrell’s narration says as he drives his convertible around Los Angeles after midight. “I’m really good at what I do. I don’t like hurting people [intercut brutal fight scenes]. But maybe I’ve been here too long. Tip the world on its side and everything loose lands in Los Angeles.”
Here’s how Apple TV+ describes the show:
Sugar is a contemporary, unique take on one of the most popular and significant genres in literary, motion picture and television history: the private detective story. Academy Award nominee Colin Farrell stars as John Sugar, an American private investigator on the heels of the mysterious disappearance of Olivia Siegel, the beloved granddaughter of legendary Hollywood producer Jonathan Siegel. As Sugar tries to determine what happened to Olivia, he will also unearth Siegel family secrets; some very recent, others long-buried.
Colin Farrell has had a long career, with roles in independent films and blockbusters, including The Batman. He received two Golden Globes plus a nomination for an Oscar for best man in The Banshees of Inisherin.
Sugar was created by Mark Protosevich, who worked on The Cell, I Am Legend and Thor. He executive produces along with Audrey Chon and Simon Kinberg from Genre Films (Invasion). Oscar-nominee Fernando Meirelles (City of God, Constant Gardner, Two Popes) directs Sugar.
Watch Sugar on Apple TV+ April 5
Sugar debuts with its first two episodes of eight on Friday, April 5, 2024 on Apple TV+. A new episode follows on Fridays.
The service is available by subscription for $9.99 with a seven-day free trial. You can also get it via any tier of the Apple One subscription bundle. For a limited time, customers who purchase and activate a new iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, Mac or iPod touch can enjoy three months of Apple TV+ for free.
After launching in November 2019, “Apple TV+ became the first all-original streaming service to launch around the world, and has premiered more original hits and received more award recognitions faster than any other streaming service. To date, Apple Original films, documentaries and series have been honored with 471 wins and 2,090 award nominations and counting,” the service said.
In addition to award-winning movies and TV shows (including breakout soccer comedy Ted Lasso), Apple TV+ offers a variety of documentaries, dramas, comedies, kids shows and more.
Cult of Mac writer Ed Hardy contributed to this report.
Earlier this year, Samsung unveiled its 2024 lineup of home appliances at the CES 2024 expo. Now, the company has launched those home appliances in South Korea. It is holding a promotion where newly-wed customers or those starting a new phase of life can get various benefits if they buy these new home appliances during the promotional period.
Newlyweds or people moving into new homes can get benefits while buying Samsung home appliances
From April 1 to May 31, qualifying customers can benefit from Samsung’s ‘New Spring with Samsung AI’ promotion. Across Samsung Stores in South Korea, people can buy the company’s new ACs, air purifiers, dryers, refrigerators, washers, TVs, and vacuum cleaners and get benefits and offers. Those who buy two more products can get Samsung Electronics Membership points or cashback of up to 5 million won.
Customers moving into new homes and buying Samsung appliances worth KRW 6 million will get a gift worth KRW 50,000 ($37). They would need to display proof of moving and get themselves enrolled into ‘Bespoke Wedding Club’ or ‘Bespoke Moving Club.’ Samsung wants to be the biggest AI home appliance brand. It added AI features to Bespoke AI Combo, Bespoke Grande AI, Bespoke Jet AI, and Bespoke Refrigerator.
What’s new with Samsung’s new home appliances
The Bespoke AI Combo has a 7-inch touchscreen display and can be operated from a smartphone. It also displays smart home controls for ease of use. The Bespoke AI Family Hub+ Refrigerator has SmartThings AI Energy Saving mode, AI Vision Inside (internal camera for food item tracking), and SmartThings Hub.
The Bespoke Cube Air Infinite Line can preemptively clean the room by checking indoor and outdoor pollution levels. Other AI-equipped home appliances from Samsung, including the Bespoke Grande AI, Bespoke Jet AI, and Bespoke Windless Air Conditioner, have upgraded AI features.
A Samsung Electronics official said, “We prepared this event to provide more benefits to consumers as the wedding and moving season involves purchasing multiple products at once. I hope you will see changes in your daily life.”