Shortly after federal agents killed Alex Pretti Saturday morning, the Department of Homeland Security began to run with the story that the dead man had been armed and dangerous. He had a gun, DHS said. (A Bellingcat analysis of the video concludes that Pretti was unarmed when he was shot.) He had approached the agents holding the gun, DHS said. (He was holding a phone, The New York Times reports.) Pretti died on his knees, surrounded by armed Border Patrol agents, with shot after shot unloaded in his direction.
Technology
This tool is made for the laziest parent ever
Ever wished your trusty stroller could magically power itself up those steep hills or through sandy beaches? Well, get ready to have your mind blown. The is a game-changer for parents seeking to ease their daily stroller routines. This innovative device transforms any standard stroller into an electric one, making walks with little ones easier and more enjoyable.
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Electric stroller kit (Easy-Way) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
What is the Easy-Way kit?
The Easy-Way kit is designed to retrofit existing strollers, providing electric assistance without the need for a brand-new stroller purchase. This Polish startup’s creation is currently featured on Kickstarter, aiming to make life easier for parents everywhere.
Electric stroller kit (Easy-Way) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
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Key features of the Easy-Way electric kit
The Easy-Way kit is designed to be compatible with most strollers that have a rear axle width ranging from 21.7 to 29.5 inches. It features two powerful 150-watt motors that automatically adjust their output based on the terrain, ensuring a smooth experience whether you’re going uphill or downhill.
With a single charge, parents can expect over 19 miles of use, making it ideal for long city strolls or trips out of town. Additionally, the kit includes a user-friendly remote that is mounted on the stroller handle, allowing parents to select from five different levels of electric assistance to suit their needs.
Electric stroller kit remote (Easy-Way) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
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How the Easy-Way kit works
The Easy-Way kit clamps onto the stroller’s frame above the rear axle, featuring rubber rollers that engage with the stroller’s wheels. Integrated sensors track wheel speed and incline, adjusting motor output automatically for uphill climbs and downhill descents.
Electric stroller kit (Easy-Way) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
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Safety features of the Easy-Way kit
The Easy-Way kit is equipped with essential safety features designed to enhance the security of both the child and the parent. If a parent lets go of the stroller, the system automatically locks the wheels in place, effectively acting as a parking brake to prevent any unintended movement.
Additionally, the kit includes an emergency braking function that helps to avoid dangerous situations when navigating slopes, ensuring that the stroller remains under control at all times.
Electric stroller kit (Easy-Way) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
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Conquering any terrain with the Easy-Way kit
The Easy-Way kit provides exceptional uphill assistance, making climbing hills effortless for parents. It also features downhill control, which prevents the stroller from rolling away on slopes, ensuring safety during descents. Additionally, the kit is beach-ready, designed to handle loose sand and uneven surfaces, allowing for smooth strolls in challenging environments.
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Electric stroller kit (Easy-Way) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
The soothing rocking feature of the Easy-Way kit
One of the standout features of the Easy-Way is its ability to rock the stroller gently, helping soothe infants during outings. With three rocking modes, parents can choose the intensity that best suits their child’s preferences.
Electric stroller kit (Easy-Way) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
Installation and maintenance
The Easy-Way kit features a quick installation process that requires no tools, taking less than a minute to set up. Its durable design is weather-resistant and built to withstand various conditions, ensuring reliability during daily use.
Electric stroller kit (Easy-Way) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
How to get one
The Easy-Way is currently available through a Kickstarter campaign. By pledging approximately $496, backers can secure one of these kits before they hit retail shelves. Once production is complete, the planned retail price will be around $648. This preorder opportunity allows early adopters to take advantage of a lower price while supporting this exciting new product.
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Electric stroller kit (Easy-Way) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
Kurt’s key takeaways
For parents looking to reduce physical strain while enjoying outdoor activities with their children, the Easy-Way electric stroller kit offers an innovative solution. By blending technology with practicality, this tool promises to make parenting just a little bit easier, one stroll at a time.
Are devices like the Easy-Way electric stroller making parenting too easy and contributing to a culture of laziness? Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact.
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Technology
OpenAI’s president is a Trump mega-donor
OpenAI’s co-founder and longtime president, Greg Brockman, didn’t just make a run-of-the-mill donation to the main pro-Trump super PAC — together, he and his wife Anna’s September 2025 donations equaled the largest of them all, totaling $25 million to “MAGA Inc.,” per a recent filing. The Brockmans’ donations made up nearly one-fourth of the six-month fundraising cycle.
It’s the latest in a string of examples of tech executives cozying up to President Trump’s administration, happening as the administration pushes to aggressively back the AI industry and defang state-level regulations that companies like OpenAI have largely opposed. OpenAI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Brockman’s multimillion-dollar donation isn’t the only example of him spending big, under his own name, on lobbying efforts that have their sights set on dismantling potential AI industry regulation. The pro-AI super PAC “Leading the Future,” of which Brockman is a significant backer, has bought ads targeting New York State Assemblymember Alex Bores — a cosponsor of New York’s RAISE Act, which was watered down at the last minute after coordinated lobbying efforts.
Though news of the Brockmans’ donations first broke earlier this month, it’s seen a resurgence in online discussion after the recent death of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, where federal officers have fatally shot two people during an anti-immigrant crackdown. Tech workers from across the industry, including multiple employees at OpenAI, have signed a letter calling for their CEOs to cancel all contracts with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and publicly condemn the department’s actions. “When Trump threatened to send the national guard to San Francisco in October, tech industry leaders called the White House,” the petition’s website states. “It worked: Trump backed down. Today we’re calling on our CEOs to pick up the phone again.”
However, since Trump’s inauguration, tech leader after tech leader has donated to his inauguration fund, flocked to Mar-a-Lago to meet with him, or attended White House dinners by his side. In return, they’ve gotten an administration eager to roll back consumer protections and tech regulation. Trump’s AI Action Plan resurrected a failed Republican attempt to bar states from passing AI regulations, to tech leaders’ delight. The new provision states that “AI is far too important to smother in bureaucracy at this early stage” and that the government “should not allow AI-related Federal funding to be directed toward states with burdensome AI regulations that waste these funds,” though it should also “not interfere with states’ rights to pass prudent laws that are not unduly restrictive to innovation.” Targets of the moratorium include SB 53, the landmark AI transparency bill California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed in September despite many tech companies lobbying against it, including OpenAI.
In 2019, Brockman co-wrote a blog post about how hard it is to “change powerful systems … once they’ve been deployed,” and that it’s “important to address AGI’s safety and policy risks before it is created.” Six years later, his posts have shifted in tone, highlighting the importance of “approach[ing] emerging technology with a growth-focused mindset.” In a New Year’s Eve post on X, Brockman wrote that “this year, my wife Anna and I started getting involved politically, including through political contributions, reflecting support for policies that advance American innovation and constructive dialogue between government and the technology sector.” He added that “it’s been great to see the president’s and his administration’s willingness to engage directly with the AI community.”
Technology
AI robot brings emotional care to pets
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Tuya Smart just introduced Aura, its first AI-powered companion robot made for pets.
Aura is designed specifically for household cats and dogs, with AI trained to recognize their behaviors, movements and vocal cues. The idea behind Aura is simple. Pets need more than food bowls and cameras. They need attention, interaction and reassurance.
Aura stays active in the home, watches for behavior changes and responds in real time so owners can better understand how their pets are doing. Many pets struggle when left alone for long hours. Small changes often show up first. A dog may stop playing. A cat may hide or groom excessively. These signs can point to stress or anxiety. Aura steps in during those quiet stretches, offering engagement instead of an empty room.
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Tuya Smart unveils Aura, an AI-powered companion robot designed to interact with household cats and dogs and monitor behavior changes in real time. (Karen Warren/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images)
Why emotional intelligence matters for pets
Smart feeders and pet cameras handle the basics. Emotional care is a different story. Pets are social. When routines change, their mood can shift quickly. Aura tracks behavior and listens for changes in sound patterns. It can tell whether a pet feels excited, anxious, lonely, or relaxed. Aura then sends real-time emotional updates to an owner’s phone. That makes it easier to spot issues early rather than guessing after the fact.
How Aura interacts with pets at home
Aura acts more like a companion than a device that sits still. Several systems work together throughout the day to keep pets engaged. Key features include:
- Laser play and treat dispensing for active interaction
- Simulated pet sounds with expressive animated eyes
- Voice interaction, which is designed to feel natural and responsive
Instead of waiting for a button press, Aura looks for opportunities to engage. It turns long, quiet hours into moments of play and stimulation.
Capturing moments that matter
Aura also keeps an eye out for moments worth saving. Using AI pet recognition and intelligent tracking, it captures everyday highlights like playful bursts, calm naps and funny interactions. Aura can automatically turn these clips into short videos. That helps owners stay connected and feel closer to their pets even when they are away. It also makes it easier to capture moments you might never catch on your own and share them with family or post on social media.
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Aura uses artificial intelligence to recognize pet movements, sounds and emotional cues, offering engagement and reassurance when pets are home alone. (OLEKSII FILIPPOV / AFP via Getty Images)
How Aura moves and recharges on its own
Movement is a big part of Aura’s role in the home. With V-SLAM navigation, binocular vision and AIVI object recognition, Aura moves freely while avoiding obstacles. When the battery runs low, it returns to its feeding and charging dock on its own. That keeps it ready without constant attention from owners.
A bigger ecosystem around pet care
Aura connects to Tuya’s broader ecosystem, which opens access to services beyond the home. These include smart pet boarding, health and medical care, behavior training, grooming, customization and community tools. Instead of handling one task, Aura becomes a central hub for pet care that can evolve over time.
More than a pet robot
Aura focuses on pets today, but the technology behind it reaches further. Emotional awareness, proactive assistance and ecosystem integration could also support elder care, home monitoring and family connectivity. Starting with pets gives Tuya a clear emotional use case while setting the stage for future home robotics.
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The Aura robot moves through the home autonomously, playing with pets, dispensing treats and capturing video highlights for owners. (Gabe Souza/Portland Portland Press Herald via Getty Images)
Kurt’s key takeaways
Tuya has not shared a release date or pricing for Aura yet. The company unveiled the robot earlier this month at CES 2026, but details on availability and cost remain unclear. Those specifics are likely to come closer to a wider consumer launch. Even so, Aura signals a shift in how smart home technology shows up for pets. It moves beyond simple monitoring and leans into interaction and emotional awareness. If Aura delivers on its promise, it could help pet owners feel more comfortable leaving their pets home alone while staying connected throughout the day.
If technology can read your pet’s emotions and respond in real time, would you trust it to become part of your home routine, or would that feel like too much? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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Technology
It doesn’t matter if Alex Pretti had a gun
America’s Second Amendment is beloved by conservatives. Minnesota allows open carry with a permit. Pretti lived in a city where people are regularly being assaulted and even killed by the masked and armed men he was busy observing. So why has so much ink been spilled over the minutiae of his behavior? Why is it so normal for law enforcement — those who are supposed to be keepers of law and order — to kill Americans? And why is the only question at the end of the day how much their victims deserved to die?
In July 2020, DHS sent in over a hundred federal officers from various agencies to my city of Portland, Oregon. They flooded downtown with a thick fog of brownish tear gas. This didn’t neutralize the crowds — it merely hurt and enraged them. The city understood it was being intentionally tormented by sadists and chose to walk into the tear gas out of spite.
Throughout the protests, politicians and media figures fixated on whether Portland and other cities were the site of “protests” or “riots.” The distinction was drawn solely based on the behavior of the protesters, whose actions were treated as if they occurred in a vacuum. But on the ground in Portland, that felt as if it was missing the point.
The protesters’ actions blurred the definition of nonviolence. They came wearing gas masks and carrying shields. People brought leaf blowers and intentionally blew the tear gas straight back at the agents who threw the canisters. They chucked plastic water bottles at the feds because they hated them and thought it might be funny to bonk them on their militarized helmets. No one was trying to murder the feds, but nevertheless, it was not the same as linking arms and walking down the streets of Selma while singing.
But if a riot was occurring in Portland, the feds had instigated it — preemptively escalating the situation with rubber bullets and pepper balls and gas canisters, weapons that don’t simply blur the definition of “nonlethal” but literally contradict it.
These unequal expectations were unfair to civilians. And they are being applied again, with greater weight and brutality, to the people of Minneapolis.
It is obvious that ICE’s presence in Minnesota is a source of conflict and anxiety. As feds leave disorder and fear in their wake, Minnesotans without training or state-issued protective gear are being asked to behave with greater restraint than the armed agents who are supposed to be upholding the law.
Early reporting would suggest that Pretti was violently killed while engaging nonviolently with federal law enforcement. Videos show that he was holding a phone and moving to help a protester when agents grabbed him by the legs and wrestled him to the ground. The agents shout that he has a gun only after they’ve pinned him to the ground.
Why must the victims of state violence be entrusted with the task of not escalating a situation?
But whatever happened, the physical coordinates of Pretti’s purported gun in the few seconds leading up to his killing are far less relevant than the ongoing siege of the Twin Cities. What, in the face of this aggression, is so relevant about his demeanor or his attitude or how he approached the agents right before his death? Why must the victims of state violence be entrusted with the task of not escalating a situation, when they’re not drawing a salary or health insurance or pension on the taxpayer’s dime?
The people are being charged with keeping the peace, asked to stand firm against the federal agents who are disrupting it. This is a sick form of double taxation — your paycheck gets docked so that a guy in a mask can beat you up while you try to calm him down. “That’s fine, dude, I’m not mad at you,” Renee Good told ICE agents moments before they shot her through the side window of her car. Did she deserve to die because she did an inadequate job of tempering their feelings?
What is the point of pinning someone to the ground before pouring pepper spray in his face? What is the point of all of this, except to anger the public, and then to respond to that anger with even more force? ICE, CBP, and Border Patrol have proven themselves incapable of obeying the law, let alone enforcing it for others; unable to self-soothe, let alone keep the peace. ICE and its ilk are not an answer to a problem, but a problem with only one solution. They are malignant, they are worthless, and they should not exist.
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