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Android 17 is getting its own version of Apple’s Handoff
Tech/AI

Android 17 is getting its own version of Apple’s Handoff

by admin May 20, 2026
written by admin

‘Continue On’ lets you start tasks on your phone and pick them up elsewhere.

‘Continue On’ lets you start tasks on your phone and pick them up elsewhere.

May 20, 2026, 11:07 AM UTC
continue-on-launcher
continue-on-launcher
Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston is a news editor with over a decade’s experience in journalism. He previously worked at Android Police and Tech Advisor.

Google is adding a new Android feature that resembles Apple’s Handoff, allowing you to start a task on your Android phone and continue it right where you left off from a compatible tablet.

“Continue On” is designed to eventually be bidirectional, but Google says that at launch it will only support tasks moving from a smartphone to a tablet. Android tablet users will see the Continue On icon in the dock suggesting the most recently used app from their phone, assuming it’s also installed on the tablet.

It should allow Android users to directly open documents they were working on, or jump straight into the email they just had open. In some circumstances, it can open up the tablet’s browser to the best page to continue a task on the web instead.

Google says that Continue On will be available to test in Android 17’s RC1 build, its first release candidate version, though hasn’t yet detailed when that will arrive. It also didn’t say when tablet-to-mobile handoffs will be supported. Together with last week’s announcement of Android-powered Googlebook laptops, it opens the door to wider Android interoperability that could finally match Apple’s impressive inter-device coordination.

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  • Dominic Preston
  • Google I/O 2026
Dominic Preston8 minutes ago
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May 20, 2026 0 comments
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Target beats Wall Street estimates, hikes sales outlook as shoppers start to return
Economy

Target beats Wall Street estimates, hikes sales outlook as shoppers start to return

by admin May 20, 2026
written by admin

In this article

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Facade of Target store in San Ramon, California, April 18, 2026.
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Target on Wednesday posted earnings and revenue that beat Wall Street expectations, and reported that net sales grew more than 6% year over year as the retailer tries to win back customers amid slumping sales. 

Target’s same-store sales jumped 5.6%, its first positive same-store sales number in five quarters.

The retailer said it saw broad-based strength across its categories, with traffic across stores and digital platforms growing 4.4% compared with the first fiscal quarter last year. Digital comparable sales increased 8.9%, growth the company attributed to same-day delivery through its membership, Target Circle 360.

“Even with this early progress, we know our work is just beginning, and we have confidence we’re on the right path because guests are responding in areas where we are leaning in and driving change,” CEO Michael Fiddelke said on a call with reporters. “These are areas where we bring style, design, and value to not only the products we sell, but how we sell them, creating a distinctly Target experience.”

Notably, non-merchandise sales spiked nearly 25%, including from what the company identified as strong growth in its membership revenue and the Target+ marketplace. Target, like Walmart and Amazon, has tried to grow those business units both to offer more convenience to customers and boost its profits.

The company said it saw sales increase across all six of its core merchandising categories, with particularly strong responses from consumers in its health and wellness, toys and baby segments. It opened seven new stores in the first fiscal quarter, with more than 100 remodel projects in progress.

Here’s what the retailer reported for its fiscal first quarter compared to what Wall Street expected, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:

  • Earnings per share: $1.71 vs. $1.46 expected
  • Revenue: $25.44 billion vs. $24.64 billion expected

As it reported the first-quarter beats, Target also hiked its full-year revenue outlook. The retailer said it expects net sales growth of 4% compared to 2025, an increase of 2 percentage points from its prior outlook. It also expects its earnings per share to come in near the high end of its previously provided guidance range of $7.50 to $8.50. Analysts were expecting earnings of $8.14 per share. 

“Despite our updated guidance, we’re maintaining a cautious outlook given the work we know we have in front of us and ongoing uncertainty in the macroeconomic environment,” Fiddelke told reporters.

Shares of the company rose slightly in premarket trading.

For the three-month period that ended May 2, Target reported net income of $781 million, or $1.71 per share, down from $1.04 billion, or $2.27 per share, in the year-ago period. Adjusted earnings per share were $1.30 in the year-ago period. 

It reported merchandise revenue of $24.89 billion, beating estimates of $24.18 billion. Target’s revenue beat reported Wednesday was the largest since November 2021.

Some of Target’s strongest strength this quarter was in its baby and kids category, Fiddelke told reporters, with a more than 5 percentage point acceleration in the second half of the quarter, in addition to product additions in the health and wellness category that drove double-digit sales growth in that segment.

Target’s gross margin came in at 29% for the first quarter, compared to Wall Street estimates of 28.7%. 

The company has been struggling as it works to prove to investors that it can end its sales slump and win back brand loyalty from consumers. Wednesday’s earnings come as Wall Street keeps a keen eye on a more selective consumer, hit by soaring gas prices and macroeconomic uncertainty.

Despite high gas prices and an overall pullback in discretionary spending, executives said the consumer continues to show interest in new items that Target is bringing into its assortment.

“We see a consumer that continues to be resilient, even though they faced a mix of headwinds and tailwinds in the first quarter,” Fiddelke said.

Target said it’s focused on improving its merchandising, guest experience and technology as it hopes to return to sustainable growth.

CFO Jim Lee said in March that Target would increase its spending this year to accelerate its turnaround, with capital expenditures totaling about $5 billion for the year, a more than $1 billion increase from last fiscal year. Those investments will go toward its supply chain and investment in its stores, among other areas.

For the current second fiscal quarter, Target said its key priorities include what it called its “largest food and beverage transition” in more than a decade, in addition to launching the Target Beauty Studio across more than 600 stores and overhauling nearly 75% of decorative accessories. 

“We will not confuse this progress with potential,” Fiddelke said. “Our focus is on delivering consistent growth, not just in 2026 but for decades to come.”

Lee told reporters the company is “working through the process” of applying for tariff refunds and acknowledged that the tariff environment remains dynamic. He said it’s early to determine how policy changes are affecting margins.

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May 20, 2026 0 comments
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Trump's Greenland envoy faces uphill battle on mission to make 'friends'
Global

Trump’s Greenland envoy faces uphill battle on mission to make ‘friends’

by admin May 19, 2026
written by admin

“It’s only four months ago that we felt very threatened by the US, so the timing is not appropriate,” says Greenlandic businesswoman and former politician, Maliina Abelsen, who thinks Landry should have waited and who declined an invitation for a meeting.

May 19, 2026 0 comments
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FBI seeks US-wide access to license plate cameras, wants "data in near real time"
Tech/AI

FBI seeks US-wide access to license plate cameras, wants “data in near real time”

by admin May 19, 2026
written by admin

The FBI intelligence division’s plan to obtain direct access to an extensive network of cameras could help expand that information sharing. As the FBI notes, its intelligence division shares information with a variety of federal, state, local, and tribal law enforcement agencies.

Flock: Sharing is “opt-in” for local police

Flock itself temporarily provided access to Customs and Border Protection, Homeland Security Investigations, the Secret Service, and Naval Criminal Investigative Service as part of a pilot last year. Flock confirmed the pilot to the office of Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), according to Wyden. Flock says it has federal customers “including National Parks, Veterans Affairs hospitals, and military bases,” but that it does not work with ICE.

Federal attempts to access data could be limited by company policies. Flock says that communities using its cameras may grant data access to federal agencies, but that sharing with federal agencies is disabled by default. In March, Flock said it was “defining a new relationship with federal law enforcement,” including conditions to maintain local control over the sharing of data.

“Flock data belongs to the agency that owns the cameras. There is no backdoor into Flock. Any access is explicitly permission-based and opt-in by the local agency,” the company said.

We contacted Flock and Motorola Solutions and will update this article if they provide any comment.

There are also state laws limiting data access. California prohibits state and local agencies from sharing ALPR camera data with out-of-state or federal law enforcement agencies. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) said in January 2024 that dozens of California law enforcement agencies violated the law by sharing ALPR information with out-of-state agencies.

A Virginia law enacted last year imposed similar limits. The FBI’s request for proposals said contractors must identify the location of servers where data is stored to verify compliance with state and local laws on license plate reader data.

May 19, 2026 0 comments
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Roundtables: Inside the Musk v. Altman Trial
Tech/AIUncategorized

Roundtables: Inside the Musk v. Altman Trial

by admin May 19, 2026
written by admin

Available only for MIT Alumni and subscribers.

Listen to the session or watch below

Elon Musk lost his suit against OpenAI, in which he alleged CEO Sam Altman and President Greg Brockman had deceived him over the company’s non-profit status.

Watch as AI reporter and attorney Michelle Kim, who covered the trial for MIT Technology Review, joins in conversation with editor in chief Mat Honan to go behind the scenes of the trial and the implications for the AI race.

Speakers: Mat Honan, Editor in Chief, and Michelle Kim, AI Reporter

Recorded on May 19, 2026

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May 19, 2026 0 comments
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Home Depot says core shopper is resilient in the face of higher gas prices, sales rise 5%
Economy

Home Depot says core shopper is resilient in the face of higher gas prices, sales rise 5%

by admin May 19, 2026
written by admin

In this article

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Home Depot said Tuesday its core homeowner shopper remains resilient in the face of higher gas prices and plummeting consumer confidence, leading the retailer to reaffirm its full-year guidance after beating fiscal first-quarter expectations. 

“The homeowner in a relevant sense is perhaps more protected financially than other customer cohorts and so we continue to see engagement,” finance chief Richard McPhail told CNBC in an interview. 

Still, in the face of rising geopolitical tensions, plummeting consumer confidence and a broken housing market, those shoppers are engaged “up to a certain point,” said McPhail. 

“They continue to tell us that they are going to defer their spend on larger projects,” he said. “That’s consistent with what they’ve told us the last few years.” 

Shares rose slightly in premarket trading.

Here’s how Home Depot did compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG:

  • Earnings per share: $3.43 adjusted vs $3.41 expected
  • Revenue: $41.77 billion vs. $41.52 billion expected

The company’s reported net income for the three-month period that ended May 3 was $3.29 billion, or $3.30 per share, compared with $3.43 billion, or $3.45 per share, a year earlier. Excluding one-time items including costs related to the value of certain intangible assets, Home Depot reported adjusted earnings per share of $3.43.

Sales rose to $41.77 billion, up almost 5% from $39.86 billion a year earlier. 

The company said it continues to expect fiscal 2026 sales to grow between 2.5% and 4.5%, compared to expectations of roughly 4%, according to LSEG. It’s expecting adjusted earnings per share to grow as much as 4%, compared to expectations of 2.4% growth, according to LSEG. 

While Home Depot’s report beat on the top and bottom lines, that came after Wall Street estimates have fallen in recent months, lowering the bar.

The report suggests that pressures impacting the company continued into the quarter. Though sales were up in the midst of an M&A boom for the company, comparable sales came in lighter than expected at 0.6%. That was behind StreetAccount expectations of 0.8% and marked the third quarter in a row that figure failed to rise or fall more than 0.5%.

Comparable transactions fell 1.3% — the fourth straight quarter of declines — as gross margin also came in lighter than expected at 33%, lower than expectations of 33.2%, according to StreetAccount.

Home Depot and the home improvement sector overall has been under pressure as it has contended with lower housing turnover, economic uncertainty and an ongoing delay in pricier projects. 

Earlier this year, there was optimism that Home Depot could see a reprieve as mortgage rates started to dip, but those hopes were dashed after the conflict in the Middle East began, leading mortgage rates to spike once again. 

In the meantime, Home Depot has been focused on winning over more pro shoppers, like contractors and roofers, which currently make up about 50% of its revenue. In 2024, the retailer acquired SRS Distribution, a company that sells supplies to roofing, landscaping and pool professionals, for $18.25 billion, and last year, it bought GMS, a specialty building products distributor. 

Last week, SRS completed its acquisition of Mingledorff’s, a wholesale distributor of HVAC equipment, parts and supplies that serves residential and commercial customers. The deal allows Home Depot to tap into a total addressable market worth around $100 billion, it said.

“All of the things we’re doing to build out our pro capabilities — and through the acquisitions we’ve made over the past several years — is to help us gain more share in the $700 billion pro market,” said McPhail. “We have a right to win that $700 billion, but we just don’t quite have the ability to win yet.” 

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May 19, 2026 0 comments
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Google I/O 2026: How to watch and what to expect
Tech/AI

Google I/O 2026: How to watch and what to expect

by admin May 19, 2026
written by admin

  • Google I/O 2026

Gemini will be the star at Google’s annual developer conference.

Gemini will be the star at Google’s annual developer conference.

May 19, 2026, 11:00 AM UTC
Stevie Bonifield
Stevie Bonifield is a news writer covering all things consumer tech. Stevie started out at Laptop Mag writing news and reviews on hardware, gaming, and AI.

Google’s annual developer conference has arrived. We’re expecting plenty of updates to Gemini, Search, and every other product that Google has stuffed AI inside of. The keynote kicks off later today — here’s what to expect.

When Google I/O will happen and where you can watch it

Google I/O starts at 10AM PT / 1PM ET today, May 19th, with a keynote presentation, which will be livestreamed on Google’s YouTube channel and on the Google I/O site. Unlike last week’s Android Show, the I/O keynote is usually pretty long, around two hours, so plan accordingly if you’re hoping to watch the whole thing.

The Verge will also be covering the event live. Come back when the show starts to follow along with our live blog.

Another year of Gemini updates

It shouldn’t come as a surprise that Gemini and AI updates will likely be the focus of Google I/O. This year, those updates could include a new version of Gemini and agentic AI features, which have been steadily gaining popularity over the past several months with agentic AI tools like Claude Code.

Google gave us a peek at what it might have in store for I/O during the Android Show, where it announced “Gemini Intelligence,” which includes a wider range of AI task automation features and a tool that allows users to generate custom widgets. At I/O, Google could announce similar features for search and its other services.

Android XR

Along with AI announcements, Google I/O could also include an update on Android XR. The Verge’s Victoria Song got to try out a pair of prototype smart glasses running Android XR during last year’s I/O, but no glasses with Google’s operating system have actually launched yet. Google announced multiple smart glasses partnerships at the time, as well. It’s possible Google has some glasses from those partnerships ready to show off this year.

Samsung’s upcoming Galaxy Glasses, which are expected to run on Android XR, could make an appearance at I/O, too, but there are also rumors that Samsung is saving them for a July Galaxy Unpacked event. The Galaxy Glasses are expected to be display-free, similar to the original Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses.

Gemini smart home speakers

Glasses aren’t the only new hardware Google could have in store for I/O. Google is due to give an update on the Google Home speakers it originally announced last year. According to recent leaks, Walmart is launching its own new Gemini smart home speaker, too, which could hint at expanded support for third-party hardware.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

  • Stevie Bonifield
  • Google I/O 2026

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Here’s why Elon Musk lost his suit against OpenAI
Tech/AI

Here’s why Elon Musk lost his suit against OpenAI

by admin May 18, 2026
written by admin

On Monday, the jury in Musk v. Altman dealt Elon Musk a major blow—reaching a unanimous advisory verdict that he had sued OpenAI too late and, as a result, his claims are barred by the applicable statutes of limitations. US District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers immediately accepted it. 

Musk announced on X that he will be appealing the decision. “The judge & jury never actually ruled on the merits of the case, just on a calendar technicality,” he wrote.

OpenAI was cofounded by Musk and a group of researchers in 2015 as a nonprofit with a mission to develop AI for the benefit of humanity, unconstrained by a need to generate financial returns. Musk donated $38 million to the company during its early days, allegedly on the basis that OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and president Greg Brockman had promised to keep the company a nonprofit committed to the mission.   

Musk brought two claims against OpenAI. First, he argued that Altman and Brockman breached the charitable trust he created through his donations by breaking their promise to keep the company a nonprofit and creating a for-profit subsidiary that ballooned over the years. Second, he argued that Altman and Brockman unjustly enriched themselves at Musk’s expense. He sued OpenAI in 2024. 

Musk asked the court to unwind a 2025 restructuring that converted OpenAI’s for-profit subsidiary into a public benefit corporation and to remove Altman and Brockman from their roles.

OpenAI argued that the time for Musk to sue the company had run out before he brought the case. The statute of limitations on the breach of charitable trust claim is three years, while the statute of limitations on the unjust enrichment claim is two years. This means that Musk should have discovered, or had reason to discover, Altman and Brockman’s alleged breach of charitable trust no earlier than 2021 and their alleged unjust enrichment no earlier than 2022. 

While Musk argued he discovered that Altman and Brockman had broken their promise only in 2022, OpenAI claimed that Musk had reason to think this well before 2021. 

Musk told the jury that he has gone through “three phases” in his beliefs about OpenAI: In phase one, he was “enthusiastically supportive” of the company. In phase two, “I started to lose confidence that they were telling me the truth,” he said. In phase three, “I’m sure they’re looting the nonprofit.” 

Here’s a deeper dive into a timeline of the events as testified in the trial. You can read my dispatches from all three weeks of the trial here and here and here. 

2017: Musk proposes creating a for-profit subsidiary

In 2017, two years after OpenAI was founded, Musk and the other cofounders tried to create a for-profit subsidiary to raise enough capital to build artificial general intelligence—powerful AI that can compete with humans on most cognitive tasks. They fought a bitter power battle over who would get to control the entity. Musk also proposed merging OpenAI with his electric-car company, Tesla. 

During the trial, OpenAI’s lawyers pressed Musk on these discussions, suggesting that Musk knew in 2017 about Altman and Brockman’s plans to pivot the company—even participating in such plans—and had reason to sue then.

“I was not opposed to there being a small for-profit that provides funding to the nonprofit,” Musk told the jury, “as long as the tail didn’t wag the dog.” 

2019: OpenAI creates a for-profit subsidiary with capped profits

In 2019, OpenAI created a for-profit subsidiary, under which employees and investors would receive a capped return on their investment. At the same time, the company secured a $1 billion investment from Microsoft. OpenAI argued that Musk again had reason to sue the company then. 

But Musk testified that he didn’t think the move was violating the nonprofit’s mission. “If you’ve got a capped-profit situation, it hasn’t violated the nonprofit’s goal,” Musk told the jury earlier in the trial. “There was no basis for me to file a lawsuit at that time.”

2020: Microsoft snags an exclusive license 

In 2020, when Microsoft secured an exclusive license to OpenAI’s GPT-3 model, Musk posted on X: “This does seem like the opposite of open. OpenAI is essentially captured by Microsoft.” OpenAI once again argued that Musk had reason to sue then. 

But Musk testified that after reading the post, Altman reassured him that “OpenAI was staying on the mission as a nonprofit.” Musk said although he was skeptical, he still had no reason to sue the company at that point.

2022: Microsoft prepares to invest $10 billion in OpenAI

It was only in 2022, Musk testified, that he discovered OpenAI had abandoned its nonprofit mission. At that time, Microsoft was preparing to invest $10 billion in OpenAI—a deal that closed in 2023. 

“I was disturbed to see OpenAI with a $20B valuation,” Musk texted Altman after reading the news. “This is a bait and switch.”

Musk told the jury this was the moment that made him realize “the for-profit is the tail wagging the dog.” He thought Microsoft would give $10 billion only if it expected “a very big financial return.” He argued that this was the point he realized “OpenAI had become, for all intents and purposes, a for-profit company with a $20 billion valuation.” 

“The 2023 deal was different,” Steven Molo, one of Musk’s lawyers, hammered home during his closing argument.

The jury sides with OpenAI

It was up to the jury to decide whether the evidence supported Musk’s claim that he first realized in 2023 that OpenAI was no longer a nonprofit committed to its mission. In the verdict announced today, they found Musk did in fact have reason to think that he was being misled by Altman and Brockman before 2021. They did not address whether he was in fact misled. 

Courts often decide cases on procedural grounds like statutes of limitations when they can, because it can be the cleaner way to resolve a case than to grapple with its merits.

Musk has said he will appeal the decision to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, a federal appellate court that reviews decisions from district courts in California and other states.

May 18, 2026 0 comments
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Selling children to survive: Afghan fathers forced to make impossible choices
Global

Selling children to survive: Afghan fathers forced to make impossible choices

by admin May 18, 2026
written by admin

Here, though, there are no formal records of deaths. The graveyard is the only place to find evidence of a surge in child deaths. And so, like we’ve done in the past, we counted the small and big graves separately. There were roughly twice as many small graves as big ones – suggesting twice as many children as adults.

May 18, 2026 0 comments
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Ebola outbreak: WHO declares emergency, US restricts travel, American infected
Tech/AI

Ebola outbreak: WHO declares emergency, US restricts travel, American infected

by admin May 18, 2026
written by admin

There are four virus strains known to cause Ebola disease in humans, and three have caused large outbreaks (Zaire, Sudan, and Bundibugyo). The most common strain is Zaire, for which treatments and vaccines have been developed. The viruses spill over from animals, including non-human primates and bats, and cause severe hemorrhagic fever, marked by diarrhea, vomiting, and bleeding. Person-to-person spread occurs via contact with bodily fluids and symptoms can develop between two and 21 days—though most often eight to 10 days—after an exposure.

CDC response and infected American

On Monday morning, the CDC announced on its website that it is implementing new travel restrictions, including screening and monitoring Americans arriving from DRC, Uganda, and South Sudan, while also barring the entry of non-US passport holders who have traveled in those countries in the past 21 days.

Additionally, in a CDC press briefing on Monday afternoon, Captain Satish Pillai, incident manager for CDC’s Ebola response, said that one American in the DRC has been infected after being exposed as part of their work there. The person developed symptoms over the weekend and tested positive late Sunday. The CDC is now working to transfer that person, along with six other Americans, to Germany, where they will receive care. Pillai did not answer questions about the person’s identity or their work.

Serge, a Christian missionary organization, announced that the infected person is Dr. Peter Stafford, who has been working in the Nyankunde Hospital in Bunia, DRC, since 2023. The other six people the CDC is working to relocate are his wife, Dr. Rebekah Stafford, the couple’s four children, and a third doctor with the organization, Dr. Patrick LaRochelle. All three doctors had exposures, the organization said, but Rebekah Stafford and LaRochelle are currently asymptomatic.

Pillai noted that the CDC considers the risk to the American public to be low.

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