Weeknote: AI killing gadgets, retro handhelds, MacBook Neo, the BBC, WalkStar, Prune, the ZX81 and more

AI killing gadgets

AI is killing my favourite gadgets. And possibly yours. Over at Stuff, I look into how AI’s insatiable appetite for components is squeezing out the rest of the industry, and how that might impact the wider world of tech – especially the fun bits.

The Retroid Pocket 6 is fab. I reviewed this for Stuff, and it’s my favourite retro handheld to date. Although, as per the above story, Retroid got hit by RAM and storage costs and nuked the configuration I was sent – something that’s never happened to me before in more than 25 years of writing about tech. On the plus side, the remaining config is still great.

GamerCard is delayed. And still weird. Retro Dodo reported that Grant Sinclair’s handheld has also been hit by these issues and won’t ship for a while. However, while Retroid was solid with its comms, GamerCard was announced last summer with a shipping time of six weeks. The website since then has barely changed, and there’s been little attempt to make realistic timings widely available. I imagine those who bought one must feel… frustrated.

It’s a shame in some ways. Sinclair was clearly trying to do something unique, in the spirit of the family name. But when I reported on the device last summer, I questioned the controls and value. Now the latter looks even worse, due to a price rise making it more expensive than a Retroid Pocket Classic, or 3x the price of an RG Cube XX, both of which are significantly more powerful and have proper physical controls.

(The RG Cube XX features in my updated guide to the best budget retro gaming handhelds in 2026 to emulate classic consoles and video games.)

MacBook Neo has one big problem. Quite a few small ones too. But, as per my MacBook Neo column for Stuff, one in particular means this device is the budget Apple laptop we all wanted, with a major flaw we really didn’t.

Apple has new Studio Displays. Finally. And they’re… fine? Good, even? But while Apple fixed their biggest flaws, these displays cost a small fortune. Here’s a column.

The BBC is under review. Or, rather, the Charter is. But that kind of amounts to the same thing. If you want the Beeb to survive long-term, take part in the public consultation by Tuesday. If you’d like hints regarding what to say, British Broadcasting Challenge has published a PDF with thoughtful suggestions.

Exercise apps mostly suck. Or I suck at exercise. Definitely one of those. But one exercise app that doesn’t suck is WalkStar, which I wrote about for TapSmart/Swipe. In short, the music stops when you do. It’s a really clever motivational aid.

Prune is a classic iPhone game. Or at least it’s been added to my iPhone app and game classics series.

Help us keep the lights on at TapSmart/Swipe by supporting our indie journalism! You can download our app for free. After the trial, access costs $2/£2/€2 per month, for which you’ll get a new issue every two weeks.

Eins, Zwei, Drei! I can take or leave Eurovision at the best of times, and 2026 is… not the best of times. So I won’t be watching this year. Still, I can’t help smiling at the UK entry by Look Mum No Computer, which feels like a bonkers mix of Kraftwerk and Vitalic, with a singer who’s about 90% shouty Damon Albarn. I never thought I’d see the day when I really liked a UK Eurovision entry, but here we are. There’s a video here.

The ZX81 turned 45. Which makes me feel very old. Here is a piece about it, along with a lightning-fast round-up that covers six of the best ZX81 games.

March 7, 2026. Read more in: Weeknotes

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Weeknote: 1 March 2026 – new Apple TV, StopTheMotion Pro, Gravity notes, camera apps for kids, and UK politics

A new Apple TV is coming. I write for Stuff that it’ll probably be the old one with a new chip – and that’s not enough.

Make Safari less annoying. I dig into StopTheMotion Pro.

A new notes app! Yes, I know. You’ve already tried 2,347 of the things. But make Gravity number 2,348 because it’s really good, with a clever approach that’s ideal for capturing and managing fleeting thoughts.

Camera apps for kids? M’colleague Tom Rolfe has designed a new camera app for kids. It looks tasty.

Politics is boring! But hopefully my blog post on the UK’s dismal electoral system and media coverage isn’t. At leat not too much.

March 1, 2026. Read more in: Weeknotes

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UK politics is broken, due to its abysmal electoral system and media outlets addicted to spectacle

Gorton and Denton is a constituency in Greater Manchester. This past week, there was a by-election there after the incumbent Labour MP was suspended and then resigned. Labour – the party currently in government in the UK, and ostensibly a centre-left party – had held the seat and predecessor seats from which it was formed for decades. Nonetheless, the by-election quickly became news, with the suggestion it could be snatched away from Labour by Reform (far-right/authoritarian) or the (English and Welsh) Green Party (economically left/liberal).

A key problem is that the UK media doesn’t approach politics in a boring, sensible manner. It’s more like coverage of reality TV, with the outlets and readers seemingly addicted to spectacle. Because of this, we were subjected to countless breathless takes about the by-election going to the wire, and gleeful excitement about identity politics and the unknowns of what could come next. Some publications were giddy at the prospect of a Reform win.

This is bad, but the media isn’t alone when it comes to blame. Under a modern, representative democratic system, this by-election would have been far more boring. At most, it would have been a coin-flip between two parties with a reasonable degree of policy overlap. Instead, it was a three-way winner-take-all fight between political extremes. Why? Because the UK’s electoral system is archaic.

First past the post (FPTP) is a winner-take-all system. It works in a single seat if there’s an incumbent and a challenger. But beyond that, it quickly becomes problematic. Run 650 single-constituency elections (as happens in the UK during general elections) and the idea is the winner-take-all element will cancel out any imbalance. But when you realise that every battle can be won by someone getting one vote more than their opponent, you quickly spot the flaw. In a battle between two parties, one could win every single seat on a fraction more than 50% of the vote, while the other party gets nothing at all with a fraction under 50%, leaving everyone who voted for them unrepresented.

That, of course, is vanishingly unlikely. But the lack of representation and the random element in the system both increase sharply when more parties enter the mix. And, right now, England is at least a five-party system (Green, Labour, Liberal Democrat, Conservative, Reform all over 10%); things are further complicated in Scotland and Wales by way of nationalist parties. (Northern Ireland is very different, with a large number of parties that often ally with those in Great Britain or Ireland, but that aren’t part of the previously mentioned ones.)

When you have three, four or five parties battling in a rigid majoritarian system, things get weird. Just like at last week’s by-election. Many people were predicting that the Reform candidate might come through the middle, due to the split in the progressive vote. But all polling suggested that while perhaps 30% of voters might back Reform, almost double that would vote either Labour or Green – and most of those would not want Reform. Even under other majoritarian voting systems – SV or AV, say – much of the randomness would be gone. These systems allow you to rank candidates in order of preference. Under those, Gorton and Denton would have been all about where second preferences would go and whether the Greens or Labour would win. The story about Reform would have been a footnote, perhaps about a rise in vote share, but not about a potential win, because relatively few voters would put Reform as their second choice.

Note that this is not a partisan point. I am not in favour of electoral reform to keep out the right. In fact, I’d argue many of the problems in the UK over the past decade stem from a voting system that aims to keep the far right out. We’ve been trying to keep a lid on the boiling pot of extremism. But our system is such that there is a tipping point where the lid flies up and hits everyone in the face. And, unless things change in the future, elections could become little more than a dice roll regarding that coming to pass. Reform is currently polling around 30%. Seat calculators suggest that could net the party anything from about 140 seats (21%) to over 400 (62%). The latter becomes even more egregious when you examine research that suggests Reform is the party most voters really don’t want in.

Play nicely

That all said, because we have an electoral system that is winner-take-all and us-vs-them, natural partners often cannot conceive of a future where they could work together. The Liberal Democrat leader, Ed Davey, talked of “constructive opposition” after last year’s Labour landslide, given that this iteration of the Lib Dems appeared to overlap quite heavily with Labour across key policy areas. But this offer was largely rebuffed. Similarly, although the Greens and Labour have plenty of overlap, Labour has been actively hostile towards the Greens, branding them extremists.

On that basis, before the by-election, I glumly predicted the following likely responses to different scenarios:

  • Labour wins on ~30%: Labour ignores the number and claims the win as validation for basically everything it’s doing.
  • Reform wins on ~30%: Labour attacks Green (and probably Lib Dem) voters for not voting Labour. Press goes ballistic and argues Reform will now definitely win the next general election.
  • Green wins: Press runs with a ‘Labour is doomed’ narrative and Labour attacks the Greens.

In the event, the Greens did win and I was pretty much on the money. The one thing I got wrong was that the progressive vote was higher than expected, which resulted in the Greens having a greater majority than predicted. The party secured 40.6% of the vote – well clear of Reform (28.7%) in second and Labour (25.4%) in third. Naturally, Reform has since, in Trumpist fashion, claimed the election was rigged. But any basic analysis of voting patterns in the area shows that Reform would have struggled to take the seat with the voters who showed up.

But it could have. And that’s the problem. Not because of Reform’s politics, but because that would have been deeply unrepresentative of the seat. Take that line of thinking nationwide and you have, well, the 2024 general election, in which Labour won 33.7% of the vote, which gave it 63.2% of the seats and, effectively, 100% of the power. Hence why the Labour leadership is perfectly happy with FPTP. Now and again, it gets to rule alone with a smallish vote share, but under a more modern voting system, it would have to share that power. And if a party ideologically opposed to Labour wins? Labour will just blame the electorate for the damage caused, despite Labour itself being in a position to make the voting system more representative and a British politics based around consensus, cooperation, collaboration and compromise. Its calculation: if Reform smashes up the country in 2029, following the Trump playbook, of course everyone will flock back to Labour in 2034. And that’s much more preferable than Labour sharing power with the Greens and Lib Dems from 2029.

There will be people who point out that Labour has in the past instigated electoral reform and brought in more progressive voting systems. For example, it was Labour that changed the UK voting system for MEPs to a form of proportional representation (PR) while the country was a member of the European Union. But those changes tend to align with Labour’s best interests. In short, if it can’t win outright, it brings in voting systems that allow it to improve the chances of it winning multi-round battles or at least retaining a reasonable level of power.

We saw this in Labour reverting mayoral elections to SV after the Conservatives had moved them to FPTP. No one should be under any illusion whatsoever that this wasn’t done to Labour’s benefit. It just so happens that the system also happens to be objectively better and more representative than what it replaced, since more voters will have directly stated that they are in favour of – or at least able to put up with as a second preference – whoever wins. Historically, Labour and the Conservatives had been quite evenly matched under FPTP in the London mayoral election, say. But London is a progressive city and so under SV, second preferences from Green and Lib Dem voters skew Labour.

Notably, there’s an electoral reform bill in progress right now, and yet it ignores the wishes of Labour voters, members, CLPs and affiliated unions, most of which now favour general and local elections switching to PR. But Labour, as always, fixates on the Lords (the upper house/revisioning chamber), despite the Lords mostly working quite well (despite its many problems). Why? Presumably because Labour’s long-term goal in the Lords is also to secure more power, along with eroding opposition by removing crossbenchers. (The latter of which would, in my opinion, be a grave error.) Reform for the Commons? Effectively ignored.

Time for change

Unsurprisingly, the by-election reignited the argument about PR vs majoritarian voting – and especially FPTP. People saw the volatility. They increasingly look at battles where a minority wins and the majority is pushed aside. (And this happens in UK conservative constituencies too, with the vote split between Reform and the Conservatives.)

For all its faults, AV (roundly dismissed in the 2011 referendum, largely because of the Conservatives and media being so hostile towards it) would somewhat fix this issue, in redistributing votes. In short, if a candidate gets over 50%, they win. If not, ranked choices are assigned accordingly until someone hits that target. You end up with a winner over half the electorate at least finds tolerable. It’s a good option for single-seat elections (such as mayoral elections and, yes, by-elections).

Beyond those, though (general and local elections), I’m in favour of shifting towards a system that makes the Commons look closer to the popular vote. Pushback here usually involves people griping about how PR removes the constituency link and involves top-up ‘list’ MPs you can’t ever get rid of. But various PR systems do retain a constituency link (albeit, typically, with larger constituencies) and list MPs can be dealt with through legislation and nuance. (For example, if a list MP dies, it would be reasonable to replace them with the next party candidate on the list, if one exists. Otherwise – or if the MP had to, say, resign in disgrace – you run a by-election under AV.)

That might not sound terribly British to people wedded to FPTP. But the UK already uses PR. The Scottish Parliament uses AMS. The Northern Irish Assembly and Scottish local elections use STV. The Senedd (Welsh Parliament) used AMS but is now switching to D’Hondt (a form of party list system). Historically, even England had multi-member constituencies. And guess what? Those places that use PR tend to end up with governments that require consensus and cooperation, rather than an opposition and government always at odds with every other party, pushing back against any idea or amendment that comes from outside, because that would be considered a defeat.

If you’re on the fence about/against PR, no one who’s in favour is necessarily going to convert you. But if you’ve managed to read this far (thanks to all three of you), do perhaps head over to the Electoral Reform Society and explore its list of voting systems. You’ll learn how they all work and gain an understanding of the balance of proportionality, voter choice and local representation we could have in the UK but that’s so far been denied to so many millions. And, who knows? What you read there might just surprise you.

This post was based on two threads from Bluesky.

March 1, 2026. Read more in: Politics

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Weeknote: 22 February 2026 – Appageddon, iWork, iOS tips, music streaming, accessibility, AI ruining everything, social media and more

Appageddon

The next appageddon is imminent. Over at Stuff, I cover this in my latest column, ‘As Apple prepares to kill Intel Mac apps and games, I wish Macs were a bit more PC’.

The iWork revamp sucks. Not because the apps are bad, but because Apple has welded them to Apple Creator Studio. I’ve been using the trial for a while and have written up my thoughts in ‘Everything I hate about Apple’s Pages, Numbers and Keynote revamp’. (OK, maybe not quite everything I hate about it, but still…)

Operating systems don’t stand still. So I rounded up the 10 best new tips for iOS 26.3, iPadOS 26.3 and macOS 26.3. Which also includes new 26.2 features. But, hey, SEO headlines, etc.

Want to ditch Spotify? If you’re on an iPhone, check out my guide to the best streaming apps and services for Apple gear.

Accessibility is for all. This is something I’m never going to shut up about when it comes to software. But that extends to specialist features too. Over at TapSmart, I update my guide to the best iPhone accessibility settings for everyone.

Please support our indie journalism. Swipe has a free trial and is then just $2/£2/€2 per month for two issues. And we get to keep the lights on.

AI is ruining everything. Jonn Elledge sums up why he feels angry about AI, while Catharina Doria’s superb Insta reel tackles the subject from a creator standpoint. But one angle of this is being under-reported: how much AI is strangling the entire tech industry. It’s rapidly making products more expensive or even entirely unviable. And for what? Lots of AI slop. That’s not to say there’s no good coming from GenAI, but it shouldn’t be eating resources the way it is. Mallory Moore’s thread is very much worth a read if you’re keen to learn more: “I hate to inform you how many MRI machines, X-Rays, all sorts of other vital machinery are just a Windows IoT Edition PC in a beige plastic box with a big magnet/accelerator/whatever attached…”

Pocket Super Knob 5000. Yes, this is the name of an actual console. I don’t even. Perhaps AI should have knackered this one’s chances…

What’s inside Lego’s Smart Brick? M’ colleague Jeremy White digs deep into the subject over at Wired, in a piece I’m NOT REMOTELY JEALOUS that I didn’t get to write myself. 

Social media is ruining everything. Including, it appears, basic rationality. Right now, we’re seeing countries rush to implement bans for teens, without considering the consequences or the holes in their plans. But as FT journo Stephen Bush and novelist Naomi Alderman point out, there is limited evidence to back up many of the claims and the things that would improve social media for kids would be good for adults too. My take is there’s a lot of projection going on. The irony of perennially online adults – and especially pensioners – suggesting kids shouldn’t have access to even basic messaging (bar, for some reason, SMS) floors me.

Cadence: Musical Playgrounds is wonderful. It’s a kind of mashup of logic-puzzle pathfinding and synth, but far more zen and approachable than that sounds. If you own an iPhone, iPad or PC, buy it. Natch, it’s made its way into my best iPhone/iPad games list.

February 22, 2026. Read more in: Weeknotes

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Weeknote: 14 February 2026 – new iPhones, Bear app, Setapp Mobile, Spotify and AI, lazy children and Squid Bits

iPhone 16e with a MagSafe coil taped to its rear

A new iPhone is imminent! Exciting! Only no, because it’s the iPhone 17e. I write for Stuff about why Apple may as well rename it the iPhone 17ehh.

Bear joins my classic iPhone/iPad app series. In the piece, I have a great chat with Shiny Frog co-founder Danilo Bonardi about how Bear made note-taking fast and beautiful.

The death of Setapp Mobile matters. In fact, more than you might think, as I outline for TapSmart.

Want to support our indie journalism? Please consider downloading Swipe for iPhone and iPad. Free trial! Two issues per month for just $2/£2/€2!

Spotify goes all-in on AI. According to Sarah Perez at TechCrunch, the company says its best developers haven’t written a line of code since December. I can’t imagine what horrors are now lurking in the codebase. The company is depressingly light-touch regarding AI music too.

Apropos of nothing, Bandcamp and Deezer have both come out against AI ruining the music industry.

Children are lazy! Apparently. Or at least, that appears to be what Ofsted chief inspector Sir Martyn Oliver is inferring in his utterances over at LBC, in a piece by Katy Dartford. He argues it’s bizarre the school year was “determined around harvesting” and then, inevitably, argues children are in school for a “ridiculously low percentage of the year” and calls the six-week summer holiday to be scrapped. What’s actually bizarre: adults constantly slamming school children for not being in school enough, rather than recognising that they need lives beyond the classroom. Enough.

Squid Bits is awesome. Ending on a brighter note, I’ve long hoped Jess Bradley’s very silly comic strip for The Phoenix would get a collection. And that’s now happening. Hurrah!

February 14, 2026. Read more in: Weeknotes

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