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Andrew Liszewski

Andrew Liszewski

Senior Reporter, News

Andrew Liszewski is a Senior Reporter for The Verge covering consumer technology with a focus on gadgets and electronics. He's been covering tech since 2011 including previous roles at Gizmodo and The Messenger. When he's not staying on top of the latest and greatest tech, Andrew's hobbies include photography but most of his rare moments of free time are spent re-playing the classic retro games of his youth and adding to an ever-growing collection of handheld gaming systems.

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Nothing is teasing its next smartwatch’s customizability.

Following teases that revealed the first smartphone from Nothing’s affordable subbrand will have swappable rear panels, the company has shared another image on X revealing its upcoming CMF Watch Pro 2 will allow users to change the wearable’s appearance with interchangeable bezels.

The Watch Pro 2, the Phone 1, and the Buds Pro 2 will be announced on July 8th at 5AM ET.


A user attaches a swappable bezel to the CMF by Nothing Watch Pro 2.
Like the CMF Phone 1, the Watch Pro 2 will allow users to easily customize the smartwatch’s appearance.
Image: Nothing
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Nintendo Japan will no longer repair the Wii U.

A year after Nintendo Japan announced it would stop repairing the Wii U when its supply of parts ran out, the company confirmed this week its Japanese support teams are no longer able to fix the 12-year-old console, as spotted by Nintendo Life.

After Nintendo shuttered the console’s online play in April, this week’s announcement feels like the Wii U’s final death blow.


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NES Golf is now easily playable on the Switch.

Nintendo’s July collection of classic games coming to NES Online includes Golf, programmed by the company’s former CEO, Satoru Iwata, who passed in 2015.

Shortly after the Switch’s debut a copy of Golf was discovered as an Easter Egg on the console, which some assumed to be a tribute to the late CEO, but finding and playing the game is now much easier.


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Fireworks on drones is exactly what America needs this Fourth of July.

Texas-based Sky Elements has come up with something the entire country can get behind. It says it’s the first company to receive FAA approval “to attach fireworks to drones,” merging a longtime Fourth of July tradition with the aerial light shows that are growing in popularity.

It’s calling the innovation Pyro drones, which should now be mandatory for every national holiday.