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Ironheart's MCU Connection Traces Back To First Iron Man Movie
Game Reviews

Ironheart’s MCU Connection Traces Back To First Iron Man Movie

by admin June 25, 2025



Image: Disney

Ironheart creator Chinaka Hodge assuaged any fears newcomers to the Marvel Cinematic Universe may have by letting the world know you don’t need to watch any of the previous Marvel movies to enjoy Ironheart. That’s true—but if you’re a Marvel diehard, you’ll be excited to know the first three episodes of the new Disney Plus show has a surprising connection to the very beginning of the MCU that expands the history of one of Marvel’s most beloved characters.

Ironheart’s New Trailer Delivers A Couple Cool Surprises

In the first three episodes, we follow Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne) as she goes through the typical Marvel origin story—forced to build herself back up from square one, motivated by the loss of loved ones, and dealing with supernatural bad guys. She also finds a quirky yet brilliant sidekick to sheepishly help her optimize her Ironheart suit, with an interesting twist. After meeting McGillicuddy (Alden Ehrenreich) and visiting his shady bunker full of black market weapons, Riri gets him to confess that his name is actually Ezekiel Stane. And he has a Ziploc bag full of the ashes of Obadiah Stane—his father!

Those who have been MCU fans since it began with the first Iron Man movie in 2008 will remember Obadiah (Jeff Bridges) as the ruthless Stark Industries executive who orchestrated Tony’s kidnapping in Afghanistan and horrifyingly pulled the arc reactor out of the Stark Industries founder’s chest. In the show, Ezekiel says he is 36 years old, which would make him roughly 17 when his father was killed by Iron Man. That’s still young enough for him to have developed the sort of trauma that’ll turn someone into the type to hoard weapons of mass destruction as a “hobby.”

Interestingly enough, Ezekiel tells Riri that he and his father weren’t close (hence the Ziploc bag urn) and references his father’s nefarious Iron Monger alter ego. However, in Iron Man, it’s never publicly revealed that Obadiah was the Iron Monger, which could suggest Ezekiel either had intimate knowledge of his father’s crimes from being involved, or that he was told about them later in life. Either way, Ironheart adds a cool expansion to the MCU history books—without making that the central appeal of an already great show.



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June 25, 2025 0 comments
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Nexar One dash cam
Product Reviews

Nexar One dash cam review: a 4K dash cam with interior view and constant cloud connection

by admin June 19, 2025



Why you can trust TechRadar


We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Nexar One: One-minute review

The Nexar One is a 4K dash cam that employs a clever modular design and an always-on LTE data connection to offer automatic cloud uploads with unlimited storage, wireless video transfer, and remote streaming. It can be bought with either 128GB or 256GB of internal storage, but there’s no microSD card support. Rear and internal cameras are also available.

Unlimited cloud storage and live streaming for as little as $71.90 a year feels like good value, but the One is reliant on a strong cellular signal to work properly; if you have patchy 4G at home, this might not be the dash cam for you.

(Image credit: Future / Alistair Charlton)

Nexar One: price & availability

The Nexar One is priced from $329.95 for the 128GB model (which can hold up to 37 hours of recordings), or from $379.95 for the 256GB model (which has space for up to 78 hours). Adding the interior camera featured in this review increases those prices to $379.95 and $429.95 respectively.


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Nexar’s LTE Protection Plan costs $9.99 a month or $71.90 a year. This includes the ability to live stream from the dash cam to your phone, plus unlimited cloud storage, a 24/7 parking mode, real-time GPS tracking, emergency alerts, and rear camera compatibility.

Nexar says the One will be available in the UK soon, but hadn’t announced prices at the time of review in June 2025. The cost of the LTE Protection Plan is also unknown for now, and the One is not available in Australia.

Nexar One: specs

Swipe to scroll horizontallyNexar One specs

Video

4K resolution at 25 to 30 frames per second

Row 0 – Cell 2 Row 0 – Cell 3

Field of view (FoV)

140 degrees (forwards), 160 degrees (interior)

Row 1 – Cell 2 Row 1 – Cell 3

Storage

Internal (128GB or 256GB), cloud (unlimited, fees apply)

Row 2 – Cell 2 Row 2 – Cell 3

GPS

Yes

Row 3 – Cell 2 Row 3 – Cell 3

Parking Mode

Yes, with remote streaming

Row 4 – Cell 2 Row 4 – Cell 3

App support

Nexar Connect app

Row 5 – Cell 2 Row 5 – Cell 3

Dimensions

3.5 x 2.75 x 1.2 inches / 88.9 x 69.8 x 30.5mm

Row 6 – Cell 2 Row 6 – Cell 3

Weight

7.4oz / 210g

Row 7 – Cell 2 Row 7 – Cell 3

Battery

Yes, used to record parking events

Row 8 – Cell 2 Row 8 – Cell 3

Nexar One: Design

The Nexar One is a clever piece of design, as far as dash cams go. It doesn’t have a screen, so there’s no chance of being distracted while you’re driving, and the unit itself is relatively slim, but with the LTE data module and interior camera connected, it’s quite large.

The clever bit is how the Nexar One uses magnets. Firstly, it connects to its windshield mount with a very strong magnet. You then stick the mount to your windshield with an adhesive strip, and a power cable runs from the mount to your car’s OBD2 port for a constant power supply, even when it’s parked and turned off. Power is then sent to the dash cam itself as soon as the magnets snap it into place.

(Image credit: Future / Alistair Charlton)

There are more magnets on either side of the main unit. You can remove a cover from one end to attach what Nexar calls the connectivity add-on, which is basically an LTE (4G) antenna that gives the dash cam a cellular data connection for live streaming to your phone and cloud video storage – more on that later.

Removing the cover from the other end enables you connect the optional interior camera, which sold separately but was also provided by Nexar for this review. Overall, it’s a clever design that’s been nicely executed, and I especially like how Nexar includes an OBD2 cable in the box, rather than a USB cable and a 12-volt socket adapter.

As mentioned, there’s no microSD card slot, with the One relying entirely on internal storage.

(Image credit: Future / Alistair Charlton)

Nexar One: Performance

The setup process requires the Nexar Connect smartphone app and, for the dash cam, a decent 4G connection. Although I live in London, my street has awful cellular coverage, so it wasn’t a surprise to see the One fail to get itself online. I drove about half a mile, parked up, and the dash cam then quickly connected to Nexar’s cloud service and completed the setup process.

While video quality is the most important aspect of any dash cam, there’s more to this model than video recording. You can use either the Nexar Connect app or Nexar’s online dashboard to view every journey completed with the One installed. Your driving route is shown on a map, along with the distance and duration of your journey. It’s then easy to either view a low-resolution timelapse of a journey, or download a high-resolution portion.

(Image credit: Future / Alistair Charlton)

If you’re away from your car (and therefore not connected directly to the dash cam via Wi-Fi), you can view the mapped routes and timelapses. And, while you can request to download a high-res portion of between 30 seconds and five minutes, the download won’t happen until the next time you turn your car on. Instead, it’s best to get in your car, connect directly to the dash cam over Wi-Fi, and transfer high-res recordings to your phone.

Another feature is live streaming, where the Nexar One’s LTE connection lets you view a live feed from the dash cam on your phone. This takes about 30 seconds to start and when using LTE (instead of a direct Wi-Fi connection) you’re limited to three minutes of live viewing at a time. This is understandable, given how much data would be swallowed up by longer streams. It’s a handy way to check up on your car, and means you can view a live feed right after the dash cam detects a collision while parked, as it will automatically start recording.

Since I live in an area with patchy cellular coverage, some driving routes and timelapses failed to upload right away. This process happens after you park up, while the dash cam is powering down, but a poor data connection can stop the upload from happening. The downloads are then unavailable until the next time you turn your car on and drive to an area with better signal.

(Image credit: Future / Alistair Charlton)

If you live and mostly drive in an area with strong LTE coverage you’ll be fine, but if not – and you want to regularly use the Nexar One’s connected features – you’ll need to think twice about buying it. The Nexar One is designed to connect to a range of networks, instead of just one, so it should always hunt out the best signal. But I found it sometimes failed to connect, especially in known blackspots.

Incidents – where the dash cam detects a collision, either while parked or driving – are sorted into their own section of the app and dashboard, making them easy to find.

The app lets you pick from three video quality options, but frustratingly these use names – Basic, Standard and Premium – instead of recognizable numbers, like 1080p or 4K. Tapping on ‘Learn more’ opens Nexar’s website and explains that Basic is 720p (and 540p for the interior view), Standard is 1080p (and 720p for the interior), and Premium is 4K (plus 720p again for the interior).

Standard is the default option. These Full HD recordings look great on the phone app, but quality takes a dip when blown up onto a larger computer screen. Footage is okay, but details like the license plates of oncoming vehicles, even at just 20mph in bright daylight, are often difficult to read.

(Image credit: Future / Alistair Charlton)

Bump the Nexar One up to Premium and the 4K videos are noticeably sharper, with more legible license plates and street signs. Files are also larger, with a five-minute clip weighing in at 1.5GB from the front-facing camera and 360MB from the lower-spec interior view.

The larger size of 4K files highlights the Nexar One’s slow Wi-Fi transfer speeds. Moving those five-minute, 1.5GB and 360MB clips to my iPhone, over a direct Wi-Fi connection, took a full five minutes.

The interior camera is of a lower spec, but still provides a decent view of the driver and front-seat passenger. Since I drive a small two-seater (a Mazda Miata, or MX-5 for non-US readers), this camera manages to capture an acceptable view out of the rear windshield too. However, due to my car’s tiny front windshield, I’ve had to partially hide the Nexar One behind the mirror, which blocks some of the camera’s interior view.

If I bought the Nexar One myself, and still owned a car tight on space, I’d likely do without the interior camera. That said, if you’re a taxi or ride-share driver, having recordings of your interior (and a sign telling your passengers as much) could be useful.

Lastly, there’s a parking mode. This works when the Nexar One is connected either with the included OBD II cable, or the optional hardwiring cable that powers it from the fuse box. When a collision is detected, the camera springs into life and starts recording. These videos appear in chronological order in the app, but can only be downloaded when you next switch your car on – and so long as the camera has a good cellular connection.

(Image credit: Future / Alistair Charlton)

Parking mode, unlimited cloud storage, live streaming and other functions – including emergency alerts, GPS tracking and rear camera compatibility – are all part of a subscription plan. This is priced at $9.99 a month or $71.90 for a full year. Although the Nexar One works like any other offline dash cam without this fee, storing footage locally, not subscribing removes much of its functionality. If you don’t want to pay for a subscription, you’d be better off buying a different dash cam.

That said, I can see the value here – especially if you live in an area with solid cellular coverage. Having videos available online, through the app or any computer browser, takes away the usual dash cam pain point of having to eject the microSD card and transfer footage manually. I also like the idea of being able to check in on my car while I’m away from home, but my local cellular coverage made that tricky.

The dash cam occasionally sent phone notifications, promising more information when tapped. But doing so simply opened the app and showed me the home screen. It also sometimes told me a recording was in process (while the car was parked and switched off), then saved a five-minute journey in the Activity page of the app. Tapping on this brought up a page full of error messages, a map with no indication of where the car was, and the promise of a timelapse and high-res clip being “available shortly”.

Nexar told me it has had some issues with a recent firmware update, but after reinstalling the latest firmware I still experienced connectivity problems. The One connects to multiple phone networks, but it seems that none could provide the coverage it needed to function where I live. It worked fine elsewhere, but poor signal at home takes away a chunk of the One’s functionality.

I asked Nexar if it can be connect to home Wi-Fi for video uploads and firmware updates but, and was told that while this is on the roadmap, there’s no timeline for launch.

(Image credit: Future / Alistair Charlton)

Nexar One: Sample videos

Front camera

Interior camera

Should you buy the Nexar One?

(Image credit: Future / Alistair Charlton)

Buy it if…

Don’t buy it if…

How I tested the Nexar One

  • I installed the Nexar One in my own car
  • I used the dash cam during multiple journeys over the course of a week
  • I downloaded footage, adjusted settings and experimented with the live streaming function.

I installed the Nexar One in my car and used it as my dash cam for about a week. I used it on numerous journeys, and recorded footage every time I used my car. I then downloaded (and uploaded) footage from the dash cam to check its recording quality, and used the live streaming function to see how well that worked.



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June 19, 2025 0 comments
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A photo of a pride banner hung in a street gettyimages-2099610127
Gaming Gear

Looking for Meaningful Connection This Pride Season? This AI App May Help

by admin June 18, 2025


Enter: me, a queer person who’s never quite fit neatly into any one box. The whole idea of online dating always felt a little intimidating, particularly when I don’t easily fit into predefined categories. Yet, I was willing to try out an app to connect with the community. 

I found and liked the LGBTQ+ dating app, Taimi, specifically for its use of artificial intelligence in support of community, depth and user safety. The idea of scrolling through profiles and picking from rigid options felt limiting, but this felt like only a small step outside my comfort zone. 

Generative AI supporting technology — in support of humans. I could work with that. Okay, let’s begin.

What is Taimi, and how does it use AI?

Taimi initially launched under the name “TameMe,” founded by Alex Pasykov, who also founded Hily, a dating app for straight singles. While straight, Alex is known for outspoken allyship and received the Gay Times Honours Community Entrepreneurship Award in 2020 for his efforts to support LGBTQ+ folks (specifically during the COVID-19 pandemic). At the time of writing, Taimi has over 25 million users across 138 countries. 

Taimi uses AI in three key areas: its matching algorithm, safety and moderation, and its feedback loop. This is to provide its users with maximized compatibility outcomes and deliver tailored suggestions over time. 

I appreciate Taimi’s use of AI to help shift matching away from pairing based on age, gender and location and instead focus on relationship building from your profile’s personality. It’s pretty community-focused, steering away from casual swiping and toward purposeful connections.  

How to use Taimi to connect with others

The Taimi home page.

Taimi/Screenshot by CNET

Setting up an account on Taimi is pretty easy, and its AI features work in the background to provide you with a tailored algorithm — powered by AI and data signals from app activity —  for matches. 

  1. Download Taimi from the App Store or Google Play store. 
  2. To set up your profile, add photos, a short bio and your preferences. This helps the algorithm learn your specific needs when searching for friends, dates or other members to digitally (and hopefully literally) connect with. 
  3. The more you use Taimi, the smarter the algorithm gets at understanding your tastes and compatibility. So, as you swipe and message folks, your preferences are being assessed. 
  4. Taimi’s AI will highlight profiles and groups it thinks you’d align with to help ease the overwhelm and connect with folks more likely to appreciate you and form actual connections. It will also feature smart recommendations that contain nearby events or meetups, and community spaces for creating and fostering healthy relationships. 
  5. You’ll get the most out of Taimi by providing feedback about your experience — that includes liking, passing and blocking profiles — which allows the algorithm to evolve alongside your preferences and become more accurate over time. 

As with any dating app, safety and privacy are key here, especially since the LGBTQ+ community is more vulnerable to discrimination. Taimi also uses AI-assisted content filtering to identify, report and remove key indicators of harm like harassment, suspicious profiles, hate speech and inappropriate messages. 

For example, I could not screenshot or utilize a workaround photo-taking software within Taimi — even for tabs that didn’t contain sensitive information — to showcase how the app works. While annoying at the moment, I’m proud of Taimi for diligently keeping information private throughout its user experience.   

Should you use Taimi?

Taimi is built for LGBTQ+ folks who want AI-powered matching and strong moderation to help keep things real and respectful, which matters when you want meaningful interactions online. It’s also built for a lot more than dating, which can be an easy entry for folks who are wary of dating apps or the pressure to find solely romantic connections through them. 

What comes in each Taimi subscription.

Taimi/Screenshot by CNET

I see Taimi as great for people who want to experiment and figure out how to use the platform for their unique goals. Relationships from dating apps don’t always happen overnight, so being flexible about outcomes can make the whole experience way more rewarding. 

You can access most of its features on its free plan, so there’s also not much commitment on the app’s side. (Maybe Taimi’s keeping that for the actual connections happening within the app.)

Now, if you’re only into quick hookups or want a super niche dating pool, Taimi’s broader social and advocacy vibe might not be your best option, as it’s designed for diversity and connection within the LGBTQ+ community. 

It’s also fair to mention that you shouldn’t expect to open the app and immediately walk away with a partnership; meaningful relationships take time, both online and off. 

But like anything else, I am a strong advocate for trying it out before you buy it, and see how you find yourself engaging with others on the platform. Having millions of users is impressive, but what matters is if it works for you. 

Enjoy your time and happy pride.



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June 18, 2025 0 comments
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William Duplessie
Gaming Gear

Another Crypto Investor Arrested in Connection to Bizarre Chainsaw Torture Episode

by admin May 28, 2025


Yet another white-collar crypto investor has been arrested in connection to a bizarre and violent criminal case involving an Italian crypto millionaire.

Last week, Michael Valentino Teofrasto Carturan, 28, reportedly broke loose from a ritzy apartment in Manhattan’s Nolita neighborhood and alerted a traffic agent to his imprisonment and torture at the home over a period of roughly two weeks. The ordeal he later described to cops sounded like something out of a horror movie: Carturan claimed to have been entrapped in the 17-room townhouse, where he was tied up with electrical tape, pistol whipped, shocked with a taser while his feet were placed in water, and even threatened with a chainsaw. He also claims his captors dangled him off the roof of the building. Police sources say that Carturan’s account is largely backed up by Polaroids that were taken of the crimes and left at the scene. The apparent motive for putting Carturan through all of this was to get the key to his crypto account, which was worth millions of dollars, according to a criminal complaint.

This week, 33-year-old William Duplessie, of Florida, turned himself in to police for his alleged role in that violent episode, the New York Times reported. He has been described as a crypto investor. Duplessie’s arrest follows the arrest of 37-year-old John Woeltz, who was taken into custody last week for his alleged role in the alleged kidnapping and torture of Carturan. Woeltz, described as a crypto investor from Kentucky, was reportedly renting the $30k-a-month apartment where Carturan’s grisly ordeal is alleged to have taken place.

A 24-year-old woman named Beatrice Folchi was also arrested last week and was similarly charged with kidnapping and unlawful imprisonment. However, Folchi was released after the Manhattan DA’s Office declined to prosecute her pending further investigation, the New York Post reported. Folchi was later seen out on the streets of New York and denied to reporters that she had been arrested. It’s unclear what her exact connection to Woeltz and Duplessie is. She has alternately been described as an “actress,” a marketing specialist, and Woeltz’s assistant.

New York Police Commissioner Jessica S. Tisch subsequently said that Duplessie would be “charged, with Mr. Woeltz, with kidnapping and false imprisonment of an associate.”

A swell of violent crime has swept the crypto community over the past year. Kidnappings, assaults, and murders have targeted high-profile HODLers, as organized (and not so organized) criminal groups have smelled opportunity in the offline holdings of crypto investors.



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May 28, 2025 0 comments
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