Omar Berrada on project 150:
“One of the goals that we've set out is to win the Premier League, the 21st league [title] before 2028. So, ideally, we do it next season and if not, then the following season.
I think we're in a good place. We’ve seen some really good progress on the pitch this season. We're going to continue building on that. We're going to continue investing in different areas of the club.”
#MUFC
✅ Arsenal
✅ Arteta
✅ Win the Dog
✅ Gunnersaurus
✅ Martin Keown
✅ Arsenal's set piece coach
Jason Cundy launches into an all-timer of a 'Has Anyone Seen?' as #AFC lose to PSG in the UCL final! 🤣
"For the first-time in history, an eighth place team could go to the Premier League."
Here's @MikeGrella10 to break down what to expect from the new EFL Championship playoff format next season 🏆
Forza Horizon 6 | 77" LG G5 Oled
🎮 Xbox Cloud
Yes you read that right. This isn't a high end PC version, it's Xbox Cloud running on LG TV on quality mode.
It kinda blew me away NGL. Sharp, no input lag, looks amazing, felt and looked native. Performance mode while smooth and ran amazing, took too much of a hit visually. Quality mode at 30fps was really good and a good alternative if you don't have an Xbox console...like me. Xbox cloud running as high as 1440p is kind of a game changer for the service. Don't sleep on it.
🚨BREAKING: Huawei just launched an 18-inch laptop that folds down to 13 inches.
It’s called the MateBook Fold. And it has no built-in keyboard.
Not a gimmick. A signal.
For decades, computers were designed around typing. Huawei just asked what happens when the keyboard is no longer the center of the device.
What you get instead:
A full 18.3” OLED display that folds like a book. Virtual keyboard built in. Bluetooth keyboard optional. Touch, AI, and voice doing the rest.
The specs back it up:
→ 3.3K dual-layer OLED, 1600 nits
→ Kirin X90 chip, 32GB RAM
→ 1TB/2TB SSD, 74.7Wh battery
→ 1.16kg at 7.3mm thin when unfolded
→ HarmonyOS 5, Wi-Fi 7, 6 speakers, 8MP camera
Huawei still calls it a laptop.
But this is clearly something else. Part tablet, part screen, part laptop, and possibly the clearest sign yet that the keyboard era is ending.
Once the keyboard stops being the default, the entire definition of what a computer is starts to shift.
This is not just a new product. It is a test of what comes after the laptop.
The companies that get this transition right will redefine personal computing faster than most people expect.
Are we moving toward screens that adapt to us, instead of us adapting to the device?
There's now a launcher where you can download your favorite delisted games from the internet archive!
Easy to use with one click!
Some of my favorites from here!