Microsoft 365 Prices Rising For Businesses and Governments in July 2026
Dec. 9th, 2025 08:41 pmRead more of this story at Slashdot.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

It's a little weird it's taken this long, given that several video games based on The Boys' crop of murderous superheroes already exist within the show's universe.
Homelander might be kicking ass in Mortal Kombat, but the newly announced The Boys: Trigger Warning (sigh) is the first full-on The Boys video game. — Read the rest
The post "The Boys" is getting its first video game adaptation appeared first on Boing Boing.

According to Trump's Secretary of War Cosplayer Pete Hegseth, the future of U.S. warfare is not boots on the ground, it is bots in the cloud. In a proudly dystopian declaration, Hegseth announced that the military is handing Google's Gemini AI models to "every American warrior," proving once again that if there's a button labeled "create Skynet," someone in Washington will mash it with both fists. — Read the rest
The post Whiskey Pete says the future of "American warfare" is Google autocomplete appeared first on Boing Boing.
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A Croydon facelift isn't surgery. It's a ponytail pulled so tight that it stretches the skin of your forehead back, mimicking the effects of cosmetic work. The name comes from Croydon, a working-class London neighborhood, and the term isn't meant as a compliment. — Read the rest
The post The "Croydon Facelift" is a hairstyle with a class war built in appeared first on Boing Boing.
Meow. Yes, just meow. It's not that we don't want to say anything else - we always have a lot to say, about many interesting subjects, about various topics - but we just want to meow meow. Just like cats. Head empty, no thoughts, just meow meow. Want to join us in this meowing endeavour? But be careful, there's only one place for a single brain cell where we're going. Choose it carefully. We recommend choosing the meowing brain cell, so we can all meow aimlessly together.
Meow. Did you meow as well? Good. It's just meow meow from here on out. No thoughts, head empty. The headspace is limited. There's a place to pack the following, and the following only: One (1) brain cell, two throughs (not consecutive), the sock lost in the dryer (color not important), meow (as many as you can), cat memes (snacks for brain). You got that? No? That's okay, we'll meow it to you later. Just don't forget the cat memes.
Now that we've got that out of the way, are you ready for some true feline funnies? They're best enjoyed when the head is empty, no thoughts included. Just meow meow. Just memes memes. And nothing more. Laughs will come either way, we pawmise. Did you remember to pack? Wait, what were we meowing about?
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Ramón Méndez Galain was a Urguayan theoretical physics professor studying the Big Bang when the president of Uruguay shocked him with a phone call in 2008 asking him to be the country's energy secretary. Uruguay's economy was being crippled by climbing oil and gas prices. — Read the rest
The post This physics professor transformed his country to 98% renewable energy in five years appeared first on Boing Boing.

If there's anything EA seems to like more than making money, it's not making money. The Dead Space remake elevated one of the godfathers of modern survival horror to a prettier, more gruesome form than ever, delivering on every single one of the original's scares in newfound high fidelity and selling millions of copies for their trouble. — Read the rest
The post Dead Space is, well, dead appeared first on Boing Boing.
Jasmine Crockett has never been one to ease into a fight, and she isn’t starting now.
Hours before Texas’ filing deadline on Monday, the Dallas-area congresswoman—progressive firebrand, Trump antagonist, and one of the House’s most visible new Democrats—jumped into the state’s 2026 Senate race, shaking up what had been a relatively quiet Democratic contest.
For most of the year, the Democratic field looked somewhat settled, with former U.S. Rep. Colin Allred and current state Rep. James Talarico vying for the nomination. But by Monday evening, Allred had bowed out, Talarico had issued Crockett a polite welcome, and the shape of the contest shifted almost instantly.
“What we need is for me to have a bigger voice,” Crockett told supporters in a fiery 40-minute speech. “We need to make sure that we are going to stop all the hell that is raining down on all of our people.”
Crockett is right about one thing: Few races this cycle carry as much potential upside—or peril—for Democrats. Texas remains the party’s great white whale, a state that looks just competitive enough to tempt national strategists every cycle, only to break their hearts by November. That’s the political superstition, at least.
But states don’t stay unwinnable forever, and Texas will be safely red … until, suddenly, it isn’t.
Democratic insiders have been trying to game out which candidate is best positioned for that moment. Many of them gravitated toward Allred, whose moderate appeal they believed might better reach white suburban voters.
Crockett’s critics were blunter: They argued she’s too “conceited” and too unapologetically herself to win a statewide race—arguments that tend to collapse into coded assumptions about race and who counts as being “electable.”
As Vox’s Astead Herndon noted, there’s “no ‘moderate’ lane” in the Democratic Party, particularly in a national primary, “without Black southerners.” After all, in 2020, former President Joe Biden won the Democratic nomination largely because Black South Carolinians turned out for him and changed that contest’s narrative.
In practice, the idea of being a “moderate” has less to do with measuring appeal and more to do with keeping candidates who don’t fit a certain mold on a short leash.
Allred leaned into that logic as he exited the race. With three Democrats in the race, he warned, the party risked a bruising primary that would drain resources and leave the nominee limping into the general election.
“I’ve come to believe that a bruising Senate Democratic primary and runoff would prevent the Democratic Party from going into this critical election unified,” he said in a statement, arguing that the stakes of a Trump-aligned Senate were too high to risk internal chaos.
And on the Republican side, chaos is exactly what’s on offer. The GOP is barreling toward a brutally expensive three-way brawl between incumbent Sen. John Cornyn, MAGA-pilled state Attorney General Ken Paxton, and Houston-area Rep. Wesley Hunt. Cornyn is fighting for political survival, Paxton is fighting off years of legal trouble, and Hunt is hoping to outflank them both. Polling suggests a runoff is inevitable, extending the bloodletting into late May.
Democrats, by contrast, have managed to whittle their field down to two leading candidates with starkly different styles but overlapping constituencies. Talarico is a seminarian and former schoolteacher who’s carved out a niche as a religiously grounded critic of Christian nationalism, with a following that somehow spans MSNBC progressives and Joe Rogan listeners. Meanwhile, Crockett is the opposite in almost every aesthetic category: Black, sharp-tongued, and unfiltered, with a gift for generating viral moments and a temperament built for political combat.
In a sense, their contest isn’t ideological at all. It’s a choice between modes of persuasion.
Crockett’s national profile, already high thanks to her relentless sparring with House Republicans, is likely to rocket even further in a Senate campaign. For instance, Trump regularly singles her out, which, in today’s politics, is essentially free advertising. Her supporters see her as the kind of fighter Democrats have chronically lacked: someone who can generate enthusiasm and drive turnout in bluer parts of the state.
Republicans, though, already have their attack lines ready. Cornyn labeled her “radical, theatrical, and ineffective.” Paxton’s allies are practically salivating at the chance to define her early. A Crockett nomination may drive up GOP turnout—but so would a Paxton nomination, and Democrats believe facing him would give them one of their best pickup opportunities nationally.
Polls of the Democratic primary have been limited and inconsistent. Crockett is well known and liked among Democrats, but she also reliably triggers Republicans. A December survey from Change Research found that 49% of Texas voters said they would definitely not vote for Crockett, a higher share than for any other candidate in the contest. And while the poll found Talarico to be less polarizing, Democrats still don’t know whether either candidate could flip the seat, even if they’re no longer treating the question as laughable.
Behind the scenes, Texas Democrats have been trying to avoid the circular firing squad that doomed previous statewide attempts. Former Rep. Beto O’Rourke and other party leaders spent months coaxing candidates toward a coordinated slate that could maximize talent across next year’s races, which include the open attorney general’s seat and Gov. Greg Abbott’s reelection contest.
And when Crockett started weighing a Senate bid, those conversations accelerated. She privately told both Allred and Talarico that her internal polls showed her strongest in the general election. Her campaign has not made those numbers public.
“The data says that I can win,” she said on MS NOW. “I am very formidable.”
Whether that’s true will become clearer soon enough. Texas requires a majority to avoid a primary runoff, and the most plausible scenario is still a Crockett-Talarico matchup heading into March. That gives Democrats something Republicans won’t have: time. While the GOP slogs through months of intraparty warfare, Democrats could emerge unified.
Crockett acknowledges the skepticism; she said she’s heard variations of it her entire political life.
“Turning Texas blue is what I want to talk to y’all about today,” she said in her announcement speech. “Y’all ain’t never tried it the J.C. way.”
Texas Democrats haven’t won statewide office since 1994. Maybe 2026 will finally break the curse, or maybe Texas will remain Texas for another cycle. But with Crockett in the race, and regardless of whether she or Talarico wins, the party will have a nominee who doesn’t shrink from a fight.
At minimum, Democrats won’t be accused of playing it safe. At maximum, they might catch the GOP on the rare night it stumbles.
President Donald Trump kept up his crusade against countries with large Black populations, attacking migration from Congo and Somalia in an interview with Politico published on Tuesday.
Trump was asked by interviewer Dasha Burns to respond to criticism of his recently released National Security Strategy, particularly to his expressed opposition to nonwhite migration to European countries.
“Europe, they’re coming in from all parts of the world. Not just the Middle East, they’re coming in from the Congo, tremendous numbers of people coming from the Congo,” Trump said. He added, “Even worse, they’re coming from prisons of the Congo and many other countries.”
Later on in the interview Trump attacked Somalian migration to the United States.
“I want to see people that contribute. I don’t want to see Somalia.”
In recent days Trump has repeatedly smeared Somali immigrants as part of his most recent racist obsession. Speaking in the Oval Office on Wednesday he said, “It’s not even a nation. It's just a—people walking around killing each other.”
Days before he also referenced Somalia and said, “Their country stinks, and I don't want them in our country.”
Related | ‘I don’t want them in our country,’ Trump says in racist rant
Trump’s remarks and his decision to target Minneapolis with his latest federal immigration operation has created a state of fear among the Somali immigrant community.
Somali migrants have been a vital addition to Minnesota and other states following the decision to leave their home nation in the fallout from Somalia’s brutal civil war.
“They’re afraid to go out to the grocery store, they’re afraid to send their kids to school,” Minnesota State Rep. Samakab Hussein, a Somali American, told Newsweek.
Trump has integrated racism throughout his presidency, from domestic policy initiatives to foreign policy priorities. His latest comments show he has no intention of retreating and stands by his open bigotry.
How far will you go for your love of cats? Most of us would happily do anything for our fluffy felines, but we're also not allergic to them. But imagine that you are, for a second. The thing in life that you want the most makes you sneeze nonstop, making life purractically unbearable. Most people would give up there, but not this cat lover below. He spent three years getting allergy shots to build his immunity to cat dander, all so he could have a cute kitty of his own. Recently, he went and adopted his first rescue kitten, 'Legolas', and we literally couldn't be happier for him.
Cat allergies are no joke - they are ranked on a scale of 1 to 4. One is a minimal to mild allergy, which means that you may get a runny nose and your eyes feel a bit watery. Four, on the other hand, is an extreme allergy, making your time in their presence worse than sticking your head in a smelly litter box. What was his allergy level? A four. That's just how dedicated he was.
Now, the two snuggle daily, as you can see below with Legolas purrfectly perched on his shoulder. So next time you meet someone who is allergic to cats, just tell them his tail, and in a short three years, they'll be cured as well!
Read A Very Tight Response Time
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I was out cycling on my day off. I'd left just before 7 AM, aiming to do about 60km. When I reached what was around my halfway point at 8 AM, I took a short break to enjoy the peace of the ocean, which was promptly interrupted by a call from my boss.
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After years of cheerleading the frothing chaos of Trumpism and fanning the flames of right-wing outrage, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene is now astonished that the mob has turned on her. The Georgia congressperson, who once proudly branded herself an unflinching warrior for MAGA, now says she "had a very hard time" forgiving Donald Trump after his attacks led to threats against her and her family. — Read the rest
The post Marjorie Taylor Greene shocked to find face eating leopards demanding her face appeared first on Boing Boing.

TL;DR: Get 79% off a like-new laptop with this refurbished Apple MacBook Air (2017) 13″ for just $199.97 (Reg. $999).
Laptops are almost essential in the digital age. So why are they so expensive? They don't have to be. By choosing refurbished, you can buy a like-new MacBook Air for just $199.97 instead of spending over a thousand dollars. — Read the rest
The post Would you rather pay $1000 or $200 for a MacBook Air? appeared first on Boing Boing.
Read No Box, No Basil
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I’m in an aisle, restocking a shelf with one of those deep cardboard boxes full of individually wrapped items. I’m halfway through when a woman walks up behind me. Before I can even turn back around, she grabs the other end of the box, lifts it up, and dumps the entire contents onto the floor. Hundreds of little items scatter everywhere.
Read No Box, No Basil

The United States has officially traded its democracy credentials for the banana republic starter pack, and there do not appear to be any safeguards left to get us back on the rails. Dean Blundell shares a disturbing report and itemized list of where the United States has gone, and is going, wrong. — Read the rest
The post US downgraded from democracy to banana republic appeared first on Boing Boing.

In a move that would make George Orwell proud, the Trump Department of Justice has announced it is "restoring equal protection" by rewriting civil rights enforcement rules to declare that discrimination is a problem only if it is done out loud and on purpose. — Read the rest
The post Trump's DOJ weaponizes "Neutrality" as a wrecking ball for civil rights appeared first on Boing Boing.
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Customer: "You should say you’re welcome! Saying ‘no problem’ implies I’m a problem!"
Me: "But it wasn’t a problem. I’m telling you it was no problem."
Customer: "Why would you tell me what something isn’t?"