All posts tagged: redesigned

We tested Anthropic’s redesigned Claude Code desktop app and ‘Routines’ — here’s what enterprises should know

We tested Anthropic’s redesigned Claude Code desktop app and ‘Routines’ — here’s what enterprises should know

The transition from AI as a chatbot to AI as a workforce is no longer a theoretical projection; it has become the primary design philosophy for the modern developer’s toolkit. On April 14, 2026, Anthropic signaled this shift with a dual release: a complete redesign of the Claude Code desktop app (for Mac and Windows) and the launch of “Routines” in research preview. These updates suggest that for the modern enterprise, the developer’s role is shifting from a solo practitioner to a high-level orchestrator managing multiple, simultaneous streams of work. For years, the industry focused on “copilots”—single-threaded assistants that lived within the IDE and responded to the immediate line of code being written. Anthropic’s latest update acknowledges that the shape of “agentic work” has fundamentally changed. Developers are no longer just typing prompts and waiting for answers; they are initiating refactors in one repository, fixing bugs in another, and writing tests in a third, all while monitoring the progress of these disparate tasks. The redesigned desktop application reflects this change through its central “Mission Control” …

SUPER73 launches redesigned e-bike lineup with new frames

SUPER73 launches redesigned e-bike lineup with new frames

SUPER73 is back with a major shake-up to its lineup. The Southern California-based electric bike brand has just unveiled its all-new A-Series, a collection of redesigned models that signal a shift toward more practical, commuter-friendly machines while still leaning into the company’s signature moto-inspired styling. The A-Series marks the brand’s first major overhaul in years, with new frame designs, updated tech, and perhaps most interestingly, a modular battery system that could open the door to more flexible range options. According to the company, every bike in the A-Series has been redesigned from the ground up, moving beyond the familiar SUPER73 formula while still maintaining the lifestyle-focused identity that helped the brand build its cult following over the last decade. A new direction for SUPER73 SUPER73 has always lived somewhere between e-bike and electric mini-moto, prioritizing style and fun over traditional cycling norms. What it gave up in proper leg extension, the brand more than made up for in swagger. Advertisement – scroll for more content But now the A-Series suggests a subtle shift toward practicality. …

Ultrahuman bets on redesigned smart ring to win back U.S. market after Oura dispute

Ultrahuman bets on redesigned smart ring to win back U.S. market after Oura dispute

Ultrahuman on Friday unveiled a new smart ring with longer battery life and a redesigned form factor, as the Bengaluru-based wearable maker seeks to revive its U.S. business that was disrupted last year by a patent dispute with rival Oura. The Ring Pro, Ultrahuman’s third-generation smart ring, offers up to 15 days of battery life — compared with four to six days on the Ring Air — and is priced at $479. It will be available for pre-orders globally, excluding the U.S., with shipments beginning in March. Ultrahuman’s U.S. business was disrupted in October 2025 after the U.S. International Trade Commission — a federal agency that handles trade disputes — ruled in Oura’s favor in a patent dispute. The ruling prevented the startup from importing new ring inventory into the country, although existing retail stock continued to be sold. The blow was significant. The U.S. accounted for about 45% of Ultrahuman’s roughly 700,000 daily active users worldwide, according to co-founder and CEO Mohit Kumar. In August 2025, Ultrahuman also filed a separate patent infringement case …

Touchscreen OLED MacBook Pro Coming in 2026 With Dynamic Island and Redesigned macOS Controls

Touchscreen OLED MacBook Pro Coming in 2026 With Dynamic Island and Redesigned macOS Controls

The rumored touchscreen OLED MacBook Pro that Apple has in development will adopt the iPhone’s Dynamic Island and a hole-punch camera, reports Bloomberg. The ‌Dynamic Island‌ will replace the notch, leaving more available screen space for content. As with the ‌iPhone‌’s ‌Dynamic Island‌, the Mac ‌Dynamic Island‌ will be interactive and it will contextually expand based on the app or Mac feature in use. Apple is updating macOS to make it more touch friendly. Users will be able to tap or click on-screen elements, and controls will change based on input method. If a user taps on a menu bar item, for example, it will display a larger set of controls optimized for touch. Touch-based options will be integrated throughout macOS, and it will support iPad features like pinch gestures for zooming in or out and fast scrolling. The new ‌MacBook Pro‌ will be the first Mac that supports touch gestures on the display, despite Apple’s insistence over the years that it would not bring touch-based technology to the Mac. Apple did experiment with an …

Inside the labs where glasses are redesigned for a hyper-visual world

Inside the labs where glasses are redesigned for a hyper-visual world

Sign Up For Goods 🛍️ Product news, reviews, and must-have deals. Restaurants are surprisingly good age tests. When the menu lands, do you squint at the tiny fonts, tilt the page toward some inadequate candle, or blast it with your phone flashlight just to read it? Do you ask a friend to tell you the options because you refuse to wear the readers you know, in your heart, you probably need? And when did restaurants get so loud? Can you still follow the jokes from the far end of the table, or do you quietly converse with the person next to you because that’s all you can hear? These aren’t quirks. They’re brutal little reminders of your own mortality before the appetizers arrive—and I’m noticing them more when I go out with friends, some of whom have their phone fonts so big a single word takes up a line. Middle age doesn’t announce itself all at once—it’s sneakier than that. And that oh-so-helpful smartphone? It’s part of the reason eye strain is showing up earlier …