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Instantly upgrade your streaming: At home and when traveling

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Instantly upgrade your streaming: At home and when traveling

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It happens to a lot of us when we travel abroad. You land, open your streaming app and realize the shows you watch are gone. The library has changed, and some of what you expect to see is suddenly unavailable. It is one of those inconveniences that may rarely cross your mind before a trip. Still, it happens to millions of travelers every year. But the streaming problem is just one part of a bigger issue.

Whether you are at home or on the other side of the world, the way you stream says a lot about how exposed your data is, how fast your connection runs and how much control you actually have over what you watch. Most of us have never thought about any of that. Although we probably should.

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WHY YOUR HOME WI-FI NEEDS MORE THAN JUST A STRONG PASSWORD

A VPN can help travelers access their usual streaming subscriptions while adding a layer of privacy on public networks. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

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What actually happens to your data when you stream

Every time you fire up a streaming app, your device sends and receives a large amount of data. That data passes through your internet provider, through various servers and sometimes through networks like hotel Wi-Fi that are far from secure.

Your internet provider can see what you stream and when. On public or shared networks, that visibility can extend further. In the background, your IP address gets logged by every service you connect to, quietly building a record of your habits.

Most people assume streaming is passive. From a data standpoint, it is anything but.

How a VPN protects your streaming and privacy

A VPN encrypts your connection before it leaves your device. That means your internet provider cannot see what you are watching, networks you connect to cannot monitor your activity, and the IP address shared with streaming platforms isn’t your real one.

For everyday home streaming, that is a meaningful privacy upgrade that most people have never applied to their TV habits. The benefits become even more noticeable the moment you travel.

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Not all VPNs are built for streaming. Performance matters here. A VPN that protects your connection but slows your speed misses the point. Buffering isn’t an acceptable trade-off.

The best options use high-speed networks and optimized servers designed for streaming. That helps HD and 4K content stay smooth, even when your connection routes through servers far from your location.

IS YOUR VPN ENOUGH WITHOUT ANTIVIRUS PROTECTION?

Simple steps like avoiding public Wi-Fi, updating devices and turning off auto-connect can help protect your data while traveling. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

How to stream your content when traveling abroad

When you are abroad and want to watch the content you subscribe to at home, like local news, sports or your usual streaming lineup, a VPN lets you connect through a server back home and stream as if you never left.

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With servers located around the world, including across the United States, your subscriptions stay within reach wherever you are.

It also means you avoid relying on hotel or airport networks for security. Your connection stays encrypted end to end, which matters more when you are away from your home network than almost any other time. For the best VPN software, see my expert review of the best VPNs for browsing the web privately on your Windows, Mac, Android and iOS devices at CyberGuy.com.

Ways to protect your streaming and data when traveling

Traveling puts your devices on networks you do not control, which makes a few simple habits go a long way. If you want to keep your streaming private and your accounts secure, start here:

1) Avoid public Wi-Fi when possible

Airport and hotel networks are convenient, but they are also the easiest places for your data to be exposed or intercepted.

2) Use a VPN before you connect

Turn on your VPN before joining any network, so your connection stays encrypted from the moment you go online.

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3) Stick to your own devices and accounts

Logging into streaming services on shared or hotel devices can expose your login details long after you leave.

4) Keep your apps and devices updated

Updates often include security fixes that protect against known vulnerabilities and exploits.

BEWARE OF FAKE WI-FI NETWORKS THAT STEAL YOUR DATA WHEN TRAVELING

A VPN can help protect your streaming data by encrypting your connection before it leaves your device. (Paul Chinn/The San Francisco Chronicle/Getty Images)

5) Turn off auto-connect to Wi-Fi

Your device can automatically reconnect to saved networks without you realizing it, which can increase your exposure if those networks are unsecured or impersonated. Turn off auto-connect in your settings to stay in control of when and where you connect. 

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6) Log out when you are done

If you do sign in on a shared device, make sure you fully log out and clear the browser if possible.

Kurt’s key takeaways

Streaming has quietly become one of the biggest data pipelines in your daily life. Most people focus on content, not on what happens behind the scenes. Once you understand how much data moves every time you press play, the case for adding a layer of protection becomes much clearer. A VPN does more than unlock content while traveling. It gives you more control over your privacy, your connection, and your overall experience. That applies just as much on your couch as it does in a hotel room halfway around the world.

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If you pay for streaming every month, should you also have more control over who can see what you watch and where you can watch it? Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.com.

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Technology

Google Home’s Gemini AI can handle more complicated requests

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Google Home’s Gemini AI can handle more complicated requests

Google Home users can now ask Gemini to complete more complex, multi-step tasks and combine multiple tasks in a single command. Google has updated Gemini for Home to Gemini 3.1, which it says will improve the smart home assistant’s ability to interpret and act on requests. The upgrade will also make Gemini for Home better at handling recurring and all-day events and allow users to “move around” upcoming events.

In addition to the Gemini upgrade, Google also announced improvements to the camera experience, new automation capabilities, and two public previews: Ask Home on Web and a new notification feature. Ask Home on Web will allow Google Home users to manage their smart home from a computer, including searching camera history with natural language, checking on devices, and creating automations. Google is also releasing a public preview for “improved and expanded notifications” that include “quick action” buttons that can be used for device control directly in the notification.

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From Alan Shepard to Artemis, celebrating 65 years of Americans in space

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From Alan Shepard to Artemis, celebrating 65 years of Americans in space

On the morning of May 5th, 1961, 37-year-old Alan Shepard woke up, ate a breakfast (consisting of a filet mignon wrapped in bacon, scrambled eggs, and orange juice), strapped into the Freedom 7 rocket, and blasted off into space, becoming the first American astronaut to do so.

Shepard’s historic flight — and the first crewed flight of Project Mercury — did two things. It demonstrated that after getting beat to space by Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, America was still in the race. And it proved the United States could safely send a human into space and back, helping to restore national confidence during the Cold War. Shepard’s flight only lasted 15 minutes, but it provided enough critical information to serve as a foundation for America’s human spaceflight program in the years to come.

Shepard’s flight only lasted 15 minutes, but it provided enough critical information to serve as a foundation for America’s human spaceflight program in the years to come

Sixty-five years later, the Artemis program is attempting to build off that foundation by proving that humans can not only survive in space, but also build permanent infrastructure and thrive there. The Artemis II mission, which just concluded last month, was a particular high-water mark for human spaceflight, with the crew traveling farther than anyone in the history of the space program.

There have been ups and downs, of course. We’ve lived through enough mission delays, aborted launches, and funding cuts to know that anything we do in space is still constrained by the political and financial realities of what takes place here on the ground. Commercial space companies are not riding to the rescue; their priorities are tourism, satellites, and perhaps orbital data centers. Americans are looking around at rising prices and wondering why so much money is being spent on rocket launches. It’s no longer enough to prove we can go to space. The question now is: Why do we keep going back?

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We know that human spaceflight is a remarkable tool for inspiring people to pursue a STEM education. It drives students and engineers and future astronauts to try to solve some of the biggest mysteries in the universe. Ultimately, it’s a desire to explore. These photos from America’s first foray into the human spaceflight program are a good reminder of that instinct.

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Technology

Humanless big rig completes first US freight run

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Humanless big rig completes first US freight run

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A big rig left Houston, Texas, in the middle of the night with nobody inside. By morning, it had completed a 230-mile delivery near Dallas right on schedule. There was no driver, no backup operator and no one stepping in remotely.

According to Bot Auto, this marks the first fully humanless, over-the-road commercial truckload in the U.S.

More importantly, the run followed a real customer timeline and moved through the same freight network that companies rely on every day, rather than a controlled test or staged demonstration.

Here’s a breakdown of exactly what happened and why it matters.

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BIG RIGS DELIVER CARGO WITH NO HUMANS AT THE WHEEL

A Bot Auto autonomous big rig completed a 230-mile commercial freight run from Houston to near Dallas with no driver, observer or remote operator. (Bot Auto)

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How the Houston-to-Dallas autonomous big rig run happened

CEO and founder of Bot Auto, Xiaodi Hou, explained exactly how it played out. “Our autonomous truck departed Riggy’s Truck Parking in northeast Houston, headed to Hutchins, Texas, just south of Dallas. Departure was late at night as the shipper requested overnight service for this route. The truck ran 230 miles northbound on I-45,one of the busiest freight corridors in the country, navigated stop lights, side streets and frontage roads. There was no safety driver or observer, nor a remote operator. It was booked through our customer Ryan Transportation, true to our operating model, which is compatible with how freight actually moves in America today.”

That’s the part that stands out. This ran like a normal overnight load, just without a driver.

The load moved through Ryan Transportation, not a special test system. Hou makes that very clear, “Real freight, real customer, real timeline, delivered safe and on time. We are not disclosing the shipper or commodity, but this was not a load we manufactured to check a box. It moved through Ryan Transportation, a top-20 freight brokerage. Booked, priced, and executed the same way as any truckload moves in America. We made money on it. This is a commercial business, not a research project.” In other words, nothing about this run was staged behind the scenes.

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What ‘fully humanless’ means in autonomous trucking

Many companies still rely on hidden human support. Bot Auto takes a different approach.

“The industry often blurs the line between driverless and human-supervised,” Hou explained. “For Bot Auto, fully humanless means no safety driver, no back-seat monitor, and no low-latency remote human fallback. More specifically, our safety design does not require any human to notice, decide, or react within one minute to keep the truck safe. We may have operational visibility, just like an airport tower can monitor the plane, but it does not fly the plane. That is our standard: humans can support the mission, but the truck must own the driving safety case.”

That’s a big difference from systems that still lean on human backup.

What happens if the truck encounters a problem

One of the biggest concerns, and understandably so, is how the autonomous driving system reacts under pressure. Hou said the truck is designed to handle that on its own.

“The truck would not wait for a human to save it,” he said. “If it reached a condition outside its approved operating boundary, it would enter a mitigated risk condition: slow down, create space, and bring itself to a controlled safe state. The principle is simple: when the truck encounters extreme or unexpected situations, it does not gamble. It acts conservatively. Sometimes that means stopping; sometimes it means continuing briefly to reach a safer place to stop. Human support can help after the vehicle is already safe, but the vehicle has to own the first minute.”

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So the system is designed to play it safe first, then deal with the situation after it is under control.

The safety testing behind removing the driver

Bot Auto says removing the driver came after extensive validation and careful testing.

“We operated on our own internal validation framework, rigorous and data-driven,” the company said. “Millions of miles of simulation, extensive real-world testing with safety drivers, scenario-specific disengagement analysis, and a documented operational design domain defining precisely the conditions under which the system is authorized to run. We did not remove the driver until the system demonstrated, across a comprehensive set of tests, that it performs at or above the level of a professional human driver on this route. Safety isn’t one number; it is a system-level property.” 

That is the level of testing the company says it absolutely needed before taking the driver out completely.

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Bot Auto says the truck is designed to slow down, create space and reach a safe state if it encounters a problem on the road. (Bot Auto)

Why the cost per mile could change the trucking industry

Technology alone does not transform an industry. Economics do. Hou says the numbers already work.

“With that complete accounting, the economics still work decisively in our favor,” he said. “This run came in below $2 per mile.”

That puts the cost of this trip below what a human-driven truck would typically run.

Hou also pushed back on simplified comparisons. “I want to be precise here, because the industry has a habit of cherry-picking the easy savings and hiding the real costs… autonomous trucking’s cost impact isn’t a simple trade-off between driver wages and vehicle cost, it runs deep into operations.”  The point here is that the savings go beyond just removing the driver.

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And those economics could improve as the network grows. “It improves at scale. The fixed costs of building and validating the system are largely sunk. As we add trucks and lanes, the per-mile cost of the technology keeps declining.” That means the more trucks and routes they add, the lower the cost per mile can go.

What regulations allowed this run in Texas

Texas has been one of the most active states in enabling autonomous vehicle deployment.

“Texas passed Senate Bill 2807 in 2025, creating a formal authorization program for commercial autonomous vehicle operations, administered by the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles,” Hou said. “Bot Auto applied and was approved under that program… We met every requirement.”

That includes safety compliance, system reliability and the ability to safely stop if something fails. 

Is this a one-time milestone or something repeatable

The bigger question now is whether this type of run can happen consistently across real freight lanes.

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“The Houston-to-Dallas lane is repeatable now, and it isn’t a one-time event,” the company said. “We selected it deliberately: high freight volume, strong hub infrastructure at both ends, a supportive regulatory environment. Expansion is already underway.” 

The company is focusing first on high-volume freight lanes in the Texas triangle, which includes Houston, Dallas and San Antonio. 

What skeptics are saying and how Bot Auto responds

Skepticism has followed autonomous trucking for years. Hou addressed that directly, “A truck left Houston with no one in it, ran 230 miles on public roads, and delivered freight to a customer on time. That happened. The skeptics had a reasonable argument for a decade because this industry has been long on promises and short on execution. I understand and respect that. The question is no longer whether it can be done. It is who can do it at scale, safely, and economically. That is the competition we intend to win.”

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Bot Auto says its driverless truck navigated I-45, side streets, frontage roads and stoplights during the Houston-to-Dallas run. (Bot Auto)

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What this means to you

This shift could change more than the trucking industry. If autonomous freight scales, deliveries could become more predictable. Overnight shipping windows may tighten. Costs could come down over time. 

There are also workforce implications. Long-haul trucking is a major employer, and any transition will raise real concerns about jobs. However, supporters point to reduced fatigue and fewer human errors. 

Critics want to see long-term real-world data before drawing conclusions. For consumers, the biggest impact may be subtle at first. Some analysts point out that it could even reduce inflationary pressures, since rising transportation costs are often directly passed on to consumers.

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Kurt’s key takeaways

This Texas run does not mean highways will suddenly fill with empty big rigs. It does show that autonomous freight has moved beyond the prototype stage. Now the focus turns to what happens next. Can companies repeat this across more routes, in different conditions, over time and still keep things safe? The empty cab is what grabs your attention. The bigger question is whether this holds up across everyday freight operations.

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As humanless semi trucks become common on our major highways, are you comfortable sharing the road with them? Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.com.

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  • Get my best tech tips, urgent security alerts and exclusive deals delivered straight to your inbox.
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Copyright 2026 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.

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