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于我心有戚戚然焉 (评论: 庙堂之外)

onewriting评论: 庙堂之外

评价: 力荐

via 豆瓣最受欢迎的乐评 (author: onewriting)
《黑马》简评 (评论: 黑马)

墨色雨露评论: 黑马

评价: 力荐

via 豆瓣最受欢迎的乐评 (author: 墨色雨露)
郭敬明带着你的MV滚粗影视圈! (评论: 月鳞绮纪)

穿堂风评论: 月鳞绮纪

评价: 很差

via 豆瓣最受欢迎的影评 (author: 穿堂风)
诗词是很好很好的,任何年龄的人想要爱情也没有错 (评论: 家事法庭)

长安旧梦评论: 家事法庭

评价: 力荐

via 豆瓣最受欢迎的影评 (author: 长安旧梦)
不安的时间倒流:一种刻板印象下的观察 (评论: Merry Christmas)

OurEyes评论: Merry Christmas

评价: 力荐

via 豆瓣最受欢迎的乐评 (author: OurEyes)
有些东西明明没那么好吃,吃过的人也洗脑自己说它好,没吃过的也在那哔哔赖赖,别人的嘴,真得听听算了! (评论: 虎毒不)

Oz评论: 虎毒不

评价: 力荐

via 豆瓣最受欢迎的影评 (author: Oz)
THIS MUSIC MAY CONTAIN HOPE. TOO (评论: Bully)

sorareunusual评论: Bully

评价:

via 豆瓣最受欢迎的乐评 (author: sorareunusual)
今夜はから騒ぎ(今夜虚惊一场?) 中文填词备份(不敢称歌词翻译) (评论: color bars)

唐云鹤评论: color bars

评价:

via 豆瓣最受欢迎的乐评 (author: 唐云鹤)
别被现在偏低的评分给骗了 (评论: 如果我不曾见过太阳)

机器の猫评论: 如果我不曾见过太阳

评价: 力荐

via 豆瓣最受欢迎的影评 (author: 机器の猫)
乐评丨我们需要更多标志音乐! (评论: WOR$T GIRL IN AMERICA)

Prismify评论: WOR$T GIRL IN AMERICA

评价: 力荐

via 豆瓣最受欢迎的乐评 (author: Prismify)
关于体育精神,不仅是比赛结果 (评论: 赛车总动员)

灰灰木评论: 赛车总动员

评价: 力荐

via 豆瓣最受欢迎的影评 (author: 灰灰木)
These Are the Best Apps to Track TSA Wait Times

Few things are more stressful when flying than a security screening line that is far longer than expected. In recent weeks, due to the partial federal government shutdown that left Transportation Security Administration (TSA) workers without pay, travelers at major airports encountered wait times of up to four hours to clear security. (As of April 2, these bottlenecks have largely eased.)

During "normal" times, it's easier to determine how early you actually need to arrive, but if you want to find the sweet spot between spending pointless hours at the airport and missing your flight, you should keep an eye on current security wait times, which are available across multiple apps and websites. A reminder, of course, that times are subject to change quickly.

The MyTSA app uses real-time information on wait times

TSA has its own app for iOS and Android that provides estimated wait times for airport security lines. MyTSA uses real-time information (when available) along with historical data, so you can see current estimates as well as standard wait times by day of the week and hour of the day. The app also shows open PreCheck lanes and FAA delays. You can add your most-traveled airports to the main dashboard. Note that during shutdowns, MyTSA may not be updated as frequently, so you should consider a backup and note current recommendations for airport arrival times.

United's app now has wait times for its U.S. hubs

United Airlines recently added security wait times to its iOS and Android app, but only for its U.S. hubs:

Chicago O'Hare International Airport (ORD)
Denver International Airport (DEN)
Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport (IAH)
Los Angeles International Airport (LAX)
Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR)
San Francisco International Airport (SFO)
Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD)

The app shows wait times for both standard security lanes and PreCheck. United says that these estimates are updated throughout the day based on data collected by the airline. Anyone can use the app, as United's hubs see plenty of traffic from other airlines, but it won't be helpful for those traveling through other airports.

Delta allows you to see some TSA wait times on its website

Delta's app doesn't have a security wait time feature built in, but Delta customers can see current wait times at Delta hubs on the airline's website. The following airports are supported:

Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL)
Detroit Metro Airport (DTW)
John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK)
LaGuardia Airport (LGA)
Los Angeles International Airport (LAX)
Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport (MSP)
Salt Lake City International Airport (SLC)
Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA)

Current wait times are provided for specific checkpoints at each airport, including standard and PreCheck lanes—data appear to be pulled from individual airport websites. For SLC, Delta also has estimated hourly wait times, which show the highest traffic typically occurring between 8 a.m. and 9 a.m. as well as 3 p.m. to 4 p.m.

Some airport websites will list wait times on their sites

Some larger airports list current or estimated wait times on their own websites, so you can search the name of your airport plus "security wait times" to get information about specific checkpoints and lanes. Smaller airports typically don't have this real-time data, so you're better off using the MyTSA app.

These third-party TSA trackers can help determine wait times

There are numerous websites that combine historical data, information published by airports and federal agencies, and crowdsourced estimates to show approximate TSA wait times. Community submissions may be especially helpful during government shutdowns, when TSA isn't reporting live wait times. A few options include Qsensor (which shows smaller local and international airports), TSA Wait Times, AirlineAirport, and USA Today's TSA tracker.

via Lifehacker (author: Emily Long)
Samsung Messages Is Shutting Down, but There Are Ways to Keep Using It

It's officially the end of an era for the Samsung Galaxy community: Samsung is discontinuing its messaging app. If you're a Samsung Messages user, the company says you should plan to migrate to Google Messages to "upgrade your messaging experience."

This deprecation isn't taking effect immediately, however. According to Samsung's official end of service announcement, the company will discontinue Samsung Messages in July 2026. That means you still have roughly three months to keep using the app, if it happens to be your messaging client of choice. That said, the company is encouraging users to set Google Messages as their default messaging app today to "maintain a consistent messaging experience on Android." Samsung says the app will tell users when service will be discontinued.

Samsung is really pushing Google Messages in this end-of-service announcement. The company touts the app's features, like Scam Detection, RCS messaging, AI features, and cross-platform connectivity, so you can pick up another Android device and keep chatting. To their credit, some of these features do make Google Messages the stronger messaging app compared to Samsung Messages—in particular, RCS support. Samsung Messages users are stuck with SMS chats, which limits conversations in terms of both security and functionality. SMS chats don't support high-resolution photo and video sharing, nor do they manage modern group chats well. Crucially, they aren't encrypted, which puts your conversations at risk. While not all RCS chats are encrypted, the ones that are protect your conversations from would-be attackers.

It's not like this decision came totally out of the blue. If you've bought a new Samsung Galaxy device in recent years, you'll notice that Samsung Messages didn't come preinstalled. Instead, you had to seek it out and install it yourself from Samsung's Galaxy Store. Samsung says Galaxy S26 devices can't even download the app, and that following its deadline, no devices will be able to download the app.

Also important to note for some users: Tizen OS watches (watches that were launched before Galaxy Watch4) can't run Google Messages. These watches will not be able to display full message conversations after July 2026. However, you'll still be able to read and send messages.

You can keep using Samsung Messages after the deadline

Not everyone will need to move to Google Messages, however. If you're using an Android device running Android 11 or older, Samsung says you are not affected by this end of service. This will likely impact a small fraction of the Galaxy community, seeing as we're currently on Android 16 (or One UI 8, in Galaxy world). But if you do have an older Android device, you can keep using the app.

In addition, Samsung outlines some specific situations where the app will continue to send messages—even on phones running Android 12 or newer. If you try to send a typical text, it won't go through. However, you will be able to send messages to emergency service numbers. If you text 911 on a Galaxy phone with Samsung Messages, it will work, according to Samsung.

That makes sense—Samsung likely doesn't want to deal with a situation where someone tries to contact emergency services on its unsupported app and cannot get help. But what I find even more interesting is that Samsung Messages will also still work when texting emergency contacts. If you've defined someone as an emergency contact on your Galaxy, you'll be able to text them still.

via Lifehacker (author: Jake Peterson)
Anthropic Is Forcing Users to Pay Extra to Run OpenClaw With Claude

Bad news, OpenClaw fans: Anthropic wants you to pay more to use its AI models. This wasn't something Anthropic necessarily announced, either; rather, the company started sending emails to affected users, letting them know they could no longer use their Claude Code subscription limits with third-party "harnesses," including—and most notabl—OpenClaw. Anthropic confirmed users could still connect to OpenClaw with their Claude account, but they'd have to pay more money in order to do so—including a "pay-as-you-go" option tacked onto the cost of the subscription.

According to Anthropic, this policy change isn't without logic or reason. As highlighted by TechCrunch, Boris Cherny, head of Claude Code, explained on X that the company's subscriptions "weren't built for the usage patterns of these third-party tools," and that Anthropic is prioritizing customers who are using the company's first-party products and API.

OpenClaw has had quite a ride. The tool, which was previously called Moltbot, and first called Clawdbot, is designed to be an agentic AI assistant you run locally on your devices. For many, that means running OpenClaw on a Mac mini designed for this one purpose. Unlike ChatGPT or Gemini, which has their own proprietary interfaces, you communicate with OpenClaw through any chat app of your choice. You can text OpenClaw in WhatsApp, Apple Messages, Microsoft Teams, whatever you want, to organize your email inbox, write code for a project, plan out your goals for the month, whatever it is you want your agent to do.

But OpenClaw doesn't just...run. You need to power it with an AI model. In this case, users are relying on Anthropic's Claude—and, if they had a Claude Code subscription, they were simply tapping into that plan they already paid for. As you might expect, running agentic tasks through OpenClaw is extremely intensive, which pushed Anthropic to rethink how it was charging users.

Interestingly, OpenClaw's founder, Peter Steinberger, joined OpenAI back in February—one of Anthropic's chief rivals. Steinberger said on X that he and OpenClaw board member Dave Morin "tried to talk sense into Anthropic, [but] best we managed was delaying this for a week."

via Lifehacker (author: Jake Peterson)