🛬 iPad turbulence: When a Spirit Airlines flight flew too close to Air Force One over Long Island the other day, air traffic control urgently warned the pilots to turn and finally snapped, “Get off the iPad!” The FAA says the planes maintained a safe distance. Read the entire exchange here. It’s interesting.
Hold off buying any Google Home products: Reminder that on Oct. 1, at least one new Nest Cam and doorbell with Gemini built in will drop. I’ll keep you posted.
🍿 Wicked early: Be the family hero. Amazon Prime members can now snag tickets to see Wicked: For Good on Nov. 17. That’s a full four days before the official release. Just click here, so you don’t miss out. You can shop for Oz-themed merch and stream the first movie on Prime Video to get ready in style.
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America loves spyware: Guess who’s the biggest investor in spyware? Home of screaming bald eagles and football fields. A lot of this money isn’t just coming from hedge funds, it’s pouring in from teachers’ and firefighters’ retirement plans buying things like NSO Group and SIO. Congrats, your 401(k) is riding on being Big Brother.
📙 Don’t fall behind: AI is changing business fast, and you need to keep up. Grab NetSuite’s free guide, “The CFO’s Guide to AI and Machine Learning.” It’s a quick way to get smarter about AI, because it’s here to stay.
🔥 Drone and out: A 57-year-old SoCal man took his drone to watch the fire, crashed it into a plane fighting the fire, grounded said plane, then claimed he didn’t know. He’s now doing 14 days in federal prison, 30 at home, and owes $156K. The fire burned 23,000 acres. Dummy.
💔 Swindler swiped: Shimon Hayut, infamous as the “Tinder Swindler,” is back in jail. The con man from Netflix’s 2022 doc, was arrested in Georgia after allegedly scamming a Berlin woman out of $52K. Netflix might want to go ahead and greenlight Season 2.
🔮 Law of clicks and cracks: YouTubers are racking up millions of views claiming mainstream physics is hiding the “real truth” about the universe. It’s entertaining, dramatic and wrapped in just enough jargon to sound credible. Be careful what you buy into online. Just because someone talks fast, adds big graphics and throws in Einstein’s name, it doesn’t mean they know what they’re talking about.