logo
This case is for people who miss buttons but love their iPhone

This case is for people who miss buttons but love their iPhone

New York Post8 hours ago
Discover startups, services, products and more from our partner StackCommerce. New York Post edits this content, and may be compensated and/or receive an affiliate commission if you buy through our links.
TL;DR: Clicks adds a full keyboard to your iPhone 16, freeing up to 50% more screen space and bringing back the joy of real buttons — all for $99.
Touchscreens are fine — until you've fired off one too many autocorrect disasters. Clicks is here for anyone who misses the days when your thumbs knew exactly where each letter was. This $99 (MSRP $139) premium case adds a full keyboard to your iPhone 16, giving you a proper typing experience and freeing up to 50% more screen space. No on‑screen keyboard eating into your TikTok scroll or your Slack workspace.
The keyboard isn't just there for nostalgia. The sculpted keys are ergonomically designed for speed and accuracy, with a backlight for late‑night texting. Shortcuts are built right in, so you can trigger Siri, voice‑to‑text, or custom actions without endless swiping. There's even 'Clicks Mode' for personalizing commands to launch apps, call your go‑to contacts, or control smart home devices right from your keys.
Advertisement
Brushed metal side keys, a microfiber lining, and a snug new enclosure keep your iPhone safe while still looking sharp. Built‑in MagSafe support means you can still use your favorite chargers and accessories, and Data Transfer Mode lets you connect to wired CarPlay or a computer without removing the case.
It's lightweight, easy to snap on or off, and — let's be honest — a conversation starter. From the subway to your coffee shop corner, people will notice.
If you've been longing for a way to combine the precision of physical keys with the tech of an iPhone 16, this is it.
Grab a Clicks Keyboard Phone Case on sale for $99 for a limited time.
StackSocial prices subject to change.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

This Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 Portable Power Station is 44% off today on Amazon
This Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 Portable Power Station is 44% off today on Amazon

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

This Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 Portable Power Station is 44% off today on Amazon

New York Post may be compensated and/or receive an affiliate commission if you click or buy through our links. Featured pricing is subject to change. Before you head into the wilderness this weekend, readers, we advise that you double-check your gear list. Tent? Check. Sleeping bag? Check. But have you made sure to pack your portable power station? If you haven't, you'd do well to head over to Amazon. This week, the e-tail giant is offering 44% off the Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 Portable Power Station, an ideal power solution for the good times (like camping) and the bad (like power outages). This power station from Jackery features multiple ports, including USB-C, USB-A, and DC car ports. The system supports rapid charging via solar input or AC, with an optional 1-hour supercharging mode accessible through the free Jackery app. Pick yours up today, and charge up for cheap! Amazon Power your adventures with the Jackery Explorer 1000 v2 Portable Power Station. With a massive 1002Wh capacity, dual PD100W ports, and ultra-fast solar charging, it's perfect for camping, emergencies, or off-grid life. Compact, quiet, and eco-friendly—keep your devices charged anytime, anywhere. Stay powered, stay connected with the reliable, next-generation Jackery Explorer 1000 v2, available for 44% off today on Amazon. This article was written by P.J. McCormick, New York Post Commerce Deals Writer/Reporter. P.J. is an expert deal-finder, sifting through endless brands and retailers to deliver only the best savings opportunities on truly worthwhile products. P.J. finds Prime Day-worthy deals all year long on some of our favorite products we've tested and our readers' beloved best-sellers, from Wayfair furniture sales to the lowest prices on Apple AirPods. P.J. has been scouring sales for Post Wanted shoppers since 2022 and previously held positions at Rolling Stone, Pitchfork and Hyperallergic. Please note that deals can expire, and all prices are subject to change. Looking for a headline-worthy haul? Keep shopping Post Wanted.

Poco Carnival Is Back So You Don't Have to Drop a Bag on the iPhone 17
Poco Carnival Is Back So You Don't Have to Drop a Bag on the iPhone 17

CNET

timean hour ago

  • CNET

Poco Carnival Is Back So You Don't Have to Drop a Bag on the iPhone 17

Poco Carnival is back, making this a great time to upgrade to a new smartphone. If you're not holding out for the upcoming iPhone 17, grab a top-notch Poco phone from Xiaomi. Right now you can save up to $150 off select phones until Aug. 27 as part of the 3rd annual Poco Carnival event. Readers in the UK, Mexico and other select markets can take advantage of these deals right now. To score full discounts, be sure to use code POCO7TH. Unfortunately, US buyers can't shop the sale, but we've included the full list of countries where you can find these deals below. Keep in mind that we'll also post prices in USD, but these will be converted to your local currency, as will any discounts. The Poco F7 Ultra starts at $549 for the 512GB configuration once you redeem the promo code POCO7TH at checkout, saving you a massive $150. This phone includes a 50MP camera, Snapdragon 8 Elite processor and a 5,300-mAh battery that powers your phone for up to 13 hours for reliable all-day performance. Plus, it's IP68 water- and dust-proof. For a more budget-friendly buy, the Poco F7 Pro is just $399 for the 512GB configuration, which will save you a total of $150 after you redeem code POCO7TH at checkout. The Poco F7 Pro features a 6,000-mAh battery, 50MP camera and an AMOLED screen with 2K resolution. It also has a powerful 120Hz refresh rate and is IP68 water- and dust-proof as well. Hey, did you know? CNET Deals texts are free, easy and save you money. This sale also includes phones under $300 for those on a budget. This includes the Poco X7, which is now $249 for the 512GB configuration, which saves you $50. Though it's budget-friendly, the Poco X7 offers 1.5K resolution, a 120Hz refresh rate and a powerful battery that lasts throughout the day. Along with these deals, and a few other models, Poco is also offering contests, social media challenges and special rewards. These deals are available in the following markets: Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, Mexico, Colombia, Spain, Germany, UK, France, Turkey and Poland. All Poco phones run on Xiaomi HyperOS, which offers the latest security features and support for 5G, and Wi-Fi use on all devices. Looking for a new phone but aren't sure if this deal is for you? Check out our list of the best phone deals for more bargains. Why this deal matters Xiaomi's Poco phone line offers speedy phones with powerful internal hardware, long-lasting battery life and fast refresh rates. They're sturdy, water- and dust-proof and come in several configurations to fit all budgets. With Poco Carnival, shoppers in select markets can save up to $150 until Aug. 27 when you use coupon code POCO7TH at checkout.

What's behind the TikTok accounts using AI-generated versions of real Latino journalists?
What's behind the TikTok accounts using AI-generated versions of real Latino journalists?

NBC News

timean hour ago

  • NBC News

What's behind the TikTok accounts using AI-generated versions of real Latino journalists?

A network of nearly 90 TikTok accounts has been using artificial intelligence to create fake versions of high-profile Spanish-language journalists and spread falsehoods online for potential financial gain. Over a third of the accounts used AI-generated versions of Jorge Ramos, one of the best-known Latino journalists in the United States, to front fabricated news stories. One of them featured an AI avatar of Ramos falsely claiming that President Donald Trump's son Barron Trump stormed into the United Nations to denounce the deportation of his mother, first lady Melania Trump. "I never said that," Ramos himself said in Spanish last month when he debunked the false narrative in a TikTok video posted on the account of this new independent news program. Ramos launched the show, 'Así Veo las Cosas,' on social media this year following his exit from Univision in December after nearly 40 years at the network. "There are things that are impossible to stop, and we can't stop artificial intelligence right now," Ramos said in his video. "There are tons of videos of me where I'm supposedly saying things I have never said." The accounts point to the challenge of stopping or controlling the surge in fake images and misinformation as AI technology advances and is increasingly used by those who want to spread false information online. Alexios Mantzarlis, director of the Security, Trust, and Safety Initiative at Cornell Tech, Cornell University's graduate campus in New York City, found 88 TikTok accounts that routinely used AI-generated versions of Ramos and other Latino news anchors from the Spanish-language networks Telemundo and Televisa to spread misinformation online targeting Spanish-speaking audiences in the United States. NBC News reviewed the contents of the 88 accounts before TikTok shut them down after it learned of Mantzarlis' findings. Most of the 88 accounts were created this year and used AI avatars of Ramos, Noticias Telemundo and NBC News anchor José Díaz-Balart and Televisa anchor Enrique Acevedo. (Telemundo and NBC News are owned by NBCUniversal, a subsidiary of Comcast Corp.) Their AI avatars, some of which were more realistic than others, were used to front false stories about divisive topics such as immigration, as well as conspiracy theories about Trump, Jeffrey Epstein and Sean "Diddy" Combs. The most recent videos posted by the now-deleted accounts had the AI avatars talk about a fabricated story of an orca attack that went viral and a nonexistent curfew for children based on a false law authorizing the abduction of children in the United States. The comments on a video about the false storyline fronted by Acevedo's AI avatar showed that while some users seem to have identified the content as false, other expressed distress over it, suggesting they believed the misinformation being spread. "These deepfakes hijack my voice, my image, and — more importantly — the trust I've built with audiences over the years. I'm leaning on transparency, calling them out publicly, but the scale of this threat is bigger than any one journalist," Acevedo told Mantzarlis, who wrote about his findings on his . A TikTok spokesperson told NBC News in a statement that the company 'banned these accounts for violating our Community Guidelines and continue[s] to vigilantly protect our platform from harmful misinformation and deceptive AI-generated content." Mantzarlis said there are probably hundreds more such accounts on the platform. He first began researching the trend more than six months ago. In March, Mantzarlis discovered a network of nearly 40 TikTok accounts posing as Telemundo and Univision that used AI-generated content and the voices of well-known professional journalists to spread misinformation about topics that tend to go viral on social media. The accounts went undetected for about a month before TikTok shut them down. But the trends Mantzarlis found on TikTok have evolved as more social media platforms integrate AI tools into their apps, making it easier to generate credible AI avatars, he told NBC News. Based on his research, Mantzarlis said the creators behind such TikTok accounts are constantly trying different ways to generate content that creates large viewership numbers to accumulate at least 10,000 followers — which is the minimum required to monetize videos under TikTok's Creator Rewards Program. The creators have 'determined that sensationalist news in Spanish, targeting a U.S. audience, does numbers, so they'll try to feed that niche,' he said. That's why some of them have even used AI-generated versions of non-native Spanish speakers — including a Brazilian journalist and comedians from 'The Daily Show,' an American satirical TV program — to spread Spanish-language misinformation. Mantzarlis said he found "very strong evidence" suggesting that such TikTok accounts are being built up to garner enough followers to monetize their videos. The monetized TikTok accounts are then sold to other people "who can change the topic and theme and find another niche' they can profit from. Mantzarlis found an encrypted chat group managed by Brazilian TikTok creators who claimed to sell monetized social media accounts that came pre-loaded with AI-generated clickbait content. In it, he saw someone claim to be selling a monetized TikTok account named "Tv Telemundo" for 300 Brazilian reals, or about $55. The account had posted AI-generated news and religious content to gain 11,000 followers under the previous name. The account now shares AI-generated wellness content. Marta Planells, Telemundo's vice president of digital news and streaming, told NBC News that the network has been reporting TikTok accounts impersonating Telemundo and their anchors for over a year. Once the accounts are reported, Planells said, TikTok has been proactive in shutting them down. But when that happens, more accounts come up, she added. Even after Mantzarlis published his research last week based on the initial sample of 88 TikTok accounts, he found six other accounts publishing misinformation fronted by AI avatars of real Latino journalists. TikTok also shut down those accounts. TikTok did not tell NBC News whether any of the accounts Mantzarlis identified were part of the Creator Rewards Program. TikTok claimed in a company report published this year to have proactively removed more than 94% of the content that it identified as violating its policies about AI-generated content and misinformation. Despite the efforts to remove false content, Ramos still encouraged his followers on TikTok to remain "vigilant, because misinformation is everywhere." "There are tons and tons of fake videos that appear to be real," he said. "This, of course, creates a lot of confusion."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store