BBC staff at Glastonbury had power to cut Vylan feed Tim Davie says employees who had the authority to end the broadcast were among 550 members of staff at the festival. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 7:25am NRL: Why Tanah Boyd looks primed to succeed as new Warriors halfback It was only one match – but there was a definite sense that Tanah Boyd fits well. 
© 2025 NZ Herald 7:25am Illegal boarding house tenants told to hide from housing inspectors "We're too scared to lose houses because the scarcity of the housing here in Queenstown is really hard to get. So that time we don't have any choice [but] to follow his orders because we don't have [a] house to live when he kick us out," he said. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 7:15am Tauranga netball set for Baypark move, plans for new courts under way The new facility will include a new building plus 14 asphalt and nine cushioned courts. 
© 2025 NZ Herald 7:15am Auckland's public hospitals at the 'upper limit' of capacity - Health NZ Ambulances were delayed off-loading patients at two hospitals on Monday, with all four of the city's public hospitals under pressure. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 6:55am Herald Hat-trick am sports quiz – Tuesday July 15 Can you get a hat-trick? 
© 2025 NZ Herald 6:45am Our Changing World: A New Zealand approach to nuclear fusion The race to produce clean energy from nuclear fusion is on, and one New Zealand company is in the running. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 6:35am Slip hits Porirua houses like 'freight train through lounge' Two townhouses in a block of eight have been deemed unsafe to live in for now after a section of the hillside came down in heavy rain. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 6:35am  
| Microsoft tests new Windows tech to lengthen laptop battery life At some point, you’ve felt the twinge of anxiety as your laptop’s battery slowly winds down, out of range of a power outlet. Microsoft is testing a new technology to give you a bit more juice — both when you need it and when you think you don’t.
Last week, Microsoft debuted a new “self-healing” PC technology as part of its Windows 11 Release Preview Channel. That technology also is available to test within the far more experimental Canary Channel, which includes another new piece of tech: an adaptive energy saver, noticed by The Verge.
Think of the adaptive energy saver this way: Normally, when your laptop is almost out of power, you’ll notice the screen dim. That’s the emergency warning, so to speak, to find a power outlet pronto. But there are other power-saving methods that Windows is also implementing, such as halting synchronized files, and so on.
The adaptive energy saver can turn on these features whenever Windows thinks that your laptop is sitting idle, or working in a mode that doesn’t require a lot of CPU power. AndroidInfoTech found a small summary of what’s going on, including turning off transparency effects, pausing non-critical updates, and limiting some background applications. What it doesn’t do is dim your screen, so you’ll be able to work longer without the need to squint.
Adaptive energy saver is still far away from debuting in your PC. But even then, you might not be aware of it: It’s opt-in by default, which means that you’ll have to be aware of it and manually toggle it on. One of the features that adaptive energy saver turns off is background syncing to OneDrive, so Microsoft probably believes that saving data in the cloud takes priority over saving a few minutes of laptop power.
Somewhat ironically, today’s latest laptop CPUs from Qualcomm’s Snapdragon processors to Intel’s Core Ultra Series 2 chips (Lunar Lake) all provide power for the better part of a day, so this technology might not be as critical as it once was. But who’s going to turn down extra battery life? 
© 2025 PC World 6:05am  
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