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Upgrade your PC with $43 off the ASUS Tuf Gaming 1000W Gold power supply

SAVE $43: As of July 14, get the ASUS Tuf Gaming 1000W Gold power supply for $151.99 at Amazon, down from its usual price of $194.99. That’s a discount of 22%.


$151.99
at Amazon

$194.99
Save $43

 

Thinking about building your own gaming PC? You’re going to need a power supply to bring it all together. It can be pricey right now to gather all the components needed for your own custom build, but that’s all the more reason to go ahead and buy when you find some of them on sale. We’ve found one right now that you can pick up for a planned build or use as an upgrade for one you’ve already got.

As of July 14, get the ASUS Tuf Gaming 1000W Gold power supply for $151.99 at Amazon, down from its usual price of $194.99. That’s $43 off and a discount of 22%.

This 1000W power supply is a great pick for your build, with a protective PCB coating to help guard against moisture, dust, and high temperatures when you’ve got it installed. It also uses dual ball fan bearings for a long-lasting build that you can count on twice as long as alternative sleeve-bearing options. For the uninitiated, it converts electricity from the wall into the type of low-voltage power your motherboard, GPU, CPU, drives, and fans use.

This one in particular has high enough wattage and voltage to power your high-end GPU and CPU, replace one that just isn’t making the grade, or to install and leave extra capacity for any future upgrades you may be planning. It’s also a great pick if you want more than enough power for an everyday work or casual PC.

It’s a good time to go ahead and buy at this price, even if you aren’t planning to enter the PC-building race with the high component and RAM prices happening right now.

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Samsung users report bizarre Galaxy S26 Ultra defect

Samsung’s innovative new display technology might be causing problems on its latest flagship phone.

As originally reported by Korean news outlet Newsway (via Phone Arena), some Samsung Galaxy S26 users online have reported a reddish tint taking over their phone’s displays. The S26 Ultra launched earlier this year to very positive reviews (including our own). If the reports are true, that means the defect started popping up within a few months.

Mashable reached out to Samsung’s mobile representatives for comment, and we will update this story if we receive more information. In a statement to Newsway, the company said it is “currently examining the matter internally to confirm the cause.”

While nobody knows the true cause or scale of this phenomenon, many online sleuths are pointing to the new Privacy Display hardware feature as a possible culprit.

Our big Guessing Game is back! Enter now for a chance to win.

This new feature, which only exists on the Galaxy S26 Ultra, darkens the screen for people who are standing nearby and viewing the screen from an angle, protecting users’ privacy. Given the nature of Privacy Display and the fact that this issue only seems to plague S26 Ultra devices at the moment, it makes sense that the feature is currently the betting favorite for the cause of this alleged problem.

The Galaxy S26 Ultra review unit tested by Mashable hasn’t developed this issue.

Fun sidenote: As a person with partially color-deficient eyes, I literally can’t see the problem. I guess it’s a good thing I don’t own an S26 Ultra.


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Olive Gardens legendary Never-Ending Pasta Pass is here: How to secure yours

GET UNLIMITED PASTA: Starting Thursday, July 16 at 2 p.m. ET, Olive Garden’s Never-Ending Pasta Pass goes on sale for $100. Passes unlock unlimited pasta at Olive Garden for 13 weeks. The sale window closes once all passes are claimed.


We hope you’re hungry. After six long years of waiting, the Never-Ending Pasta Pass has returned alongside the Never-Ending Pasta Bowl.

Olive Garden is once again offering customers 13 weeks of unlimited pasta for a $100 flat fee. Only 10,000 passes will be available, and they’re expected to sell out quickly, as they did in previous years. So, here’s how you can ensure you’re one of the customers who gets to enjoy towers of pasta in the coming weeks.

The Never-Ending Pasta Pass goes on sale precisely at 2 p.m. ET on Thursday, July 16 at PastaPass.com. It costs $100, plus tax, and unlocks unlimited dine-in pasta meals, with a choice of homemade sauces and protein topping, as well as unlimited soup, salad, and glorious signature breadsticks. The Pasta Pass lasts from Aug. 24, 2026 through Nov. 22, 2026 and cannot be shared. The never-ending pasta is yours and yours alone to enjoy.

The Never-Ending Pasta Bowl is available starting Aug. 31, so Pasta Pass holders get a week of unlimited pasta before the general population. If you don’t secure the Pasta Pass before it sells out, you can still enjoy the Never-Ending Pasta Bowl promotion starting at $14.99 per person.

Set your calendar alerts now for 2 p.m. ET on Thursday if you want to be among the lucky pass holders this season. My stomach is growling already.

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An OLED version of the Switch 2 could start production in 2027

Nintendo may be exploring an OLED version of the Switch 2, according to a new report from Eurogamer, which cited South Korean outlet ZDNET Korea as claiming serious internal discussions are underway at the company. (Disclosure: ZDNet and Mashable are both owned by the same parent company, Ziff Davis.)

While many industry watchers had long assumed Nintendo would eventually give the Switch 2 an OLED screen, following the same path as the original Switch, Eurogamer noted this timing came earlier than expected. Per the report, ZDNET Korea indicated that production would not begin before the end of 2027 at the earliest, meaning a release could land around 2028.

Our big Guessing Game is back! Enter now for a chance to win.

Eurogamer, citing the ZDNET Korea report, noted that Samsung Display could once again supply the panel, as it did for the first Switch OLED, though “the extent of the price increase resulting from the adoption of OLED is a variable.” The outlet pointed out that cost was reportedly the primary reason the Switch 2 launched with an LCD screen rather than OLED in the first place, despite OLED being better suited to the console’s HDR capabilities.

One insider cited in the ZDNET Korea report claimed Nintendo is considering bumping the display resolution to 1920×1080 for a Switch 2 OLED model, up from the 1280×720 resolution used in the original Switch’s OLED version — a change Eurogamer noted would align with the Switch 2’s existing native 1080p handheld resolution. The same source indicated that formal product development could begin by the end of this year if the plans move forward, though Eurogamer emphasized that the development stage would still precede actual production.

An OLED upgrade could also help address ongoing criticism of the Switch 2’s current LCD panel, which has drawn complaints about ghosting and input lag, along with imprecise HDR performance — issues Eurogamer said have been documented by outlets like Digital Foundry and user complaints on platforms like YouTube and Reddit.

Of course, the OLED version would almost certainly be more expensive. When the original Nintendo Switch OLED model launched, it cost $50 more than the regular version. And don’t forget, Nintendo is already raising prices on the Nintendo Switch 2 later this year. Rumor has it that Sony is delaying the PlayStation 6 timeline to wait out price increases caused by the global memory shortage.

Separately, Eurogamer noted that Nintendo has already confirmed that smaller hardware revisions to Switch 2 products will roll out in Europe this summer to comply with right-to-repair rules and updated battery regulations.

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