This Compact Kodak Instant Camera That Prints Photos in Seconds Is 30% Off
Whether you're heading to an outdoor music festival or hosting a party this summer, documenting those moments is all part of the fun. Beyond snapping some photos on your phone, having an instant camera like Kodak's Mini Shot 2 Retro gives you a physical print that you can collect or hand to a friend — and it's now 30% off (with a coupon) on Amazon.
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Buy Now on Amazon
Normally $129.99, the Kodak Mini Shot 2 Retro is 30% off when you apply the coupon online. That brings the price down to right under $100, amounting to around $39 in savings. A great graduation gift idea, the two-in-one Kodak Mini Shot 2 Retro isn't just a digital camera that you can take with you on the go this season — it literally prints your photos out in just a few seconds.
$39 OFF
$90.99 $129.99 30% off
Buy Now On Amazon
Amazon's Kodak bundle also comes with eight sheets of prints. (Another great deal: You can get the Kodak instant camera along with a 60-sheet gift bundle for $169.99, which also comes with a 20% off coupon.)
Wish you could print out other images to share with your friends or put up on your fridge? You don't have to rely only on the Mini Shot 2 Retro's camera to print out your photos either — you can simply print your pics that you've shot on your iPhone directly from Kodak's Instant Printer app on your phone.
Score the Kodak Mini Shot 2 Retro deal and clip that 30% off coupon before it disappears, now on Amazon.
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USA Today
26 minutes ago
- USA Today
From 'Superman' to 'Mission: Impossible,' new digital movies to watch right now
There are those who have to see a new movie in theaters. Then there are those who are fine with waiting till it hits a subscription streaming service. But then there's a third group of people who embrace digital video-on-demand platforms, who are all about seeing the latest movies but are cool with viewing them from home (or wherever!) and who need their own viewing guides. That's what we're doing here, shouting out the best stuff now on VOD. And this week's a doozy, because Tom Cruise is hanging off airplanes on all your digital devices and TVs with 'Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning.' Here are seven new VOD releases available to buy or rent right now: 'Eddington' Director Ari Aster mixes the Western genre with noir and satire in this honest, cinematic look at how COVID-19 further splintered a divided America. In summer 2020, the fictional New Mexico town of Eddington turns into a hotbed of bad feelings and controversy when local sheriff Joe Cross (Joaquin Phoenix) – who's not big on masking, by the way – runs for mayor against popular progressive incumbent Ted Garcia (Pedro Pascal). Their feud turns personal while the situation for the town's residents grows explosive, bloody and downright bonkers. Where to watch: Apple TV, Fandango at Home, Amazon 'Elio' Pixar throws back to the days of "Explorers" and "The Last Starfighter" with this familiar sci-fi project, in which an orphan named Elio (voiced by Yonas Kibreab) doesn't get along with his guardian, Aunt Olga (Zoe Saldaña), and would rather be abducted by aliens than live on Earth. His wish comes true when an intergalactic spaceship picks him up and Elio makes a blobby new bestie, though the youngster quickly figures out that home isn't so bad. Best for a kid who has never seen "E.T." Where to watch: Apple TV, Fandango at Home, Amazon 'Jurassic Park Rebirth' Here's how a "Jurassic World" film usually goes: See dinosaurs, run from dinosaurs, maybe get eaten by dinosaurs. Director Gareth Edwards' latest installment in the long-running sci-fi action franchise at least tries something different by throwing a heist movie into the usual perilous adventure. But homages to Steven Spielberg's 1993 original, a starry cast (including Scarlett Johansson, Jonathan Bailey and Oscar winner Mahershala Ali) and dinos aplenty can only do so much when saddled with generic characters and a rickety plot. Where to watch: Apple TV, Fandango at Home, Amazon 'Lilo & Stitch' The wholly unnecessary remake seems like an excessively earnest Disney Channel movie compared with the delightfully unhinged 2002 cartoon. Young Lilo (newcomer Maia Kealoha) is a rebellious 6-year-old Hawaiian girl who gives her big sister/guardian Nani (Sydney Agudong) fits, and Nani is desperately trying to keep social services from taking Lilo away. Both their lives take a turn for the chaotic when Lilo adopts an alien "puppy" she names Stitch, a intergalactic experiment/furry menace that creates mayhem wherever he goes. Where to watch: Apple TV, Fandango at Home, Amazon 'Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning' From crawling all over a biplane to spelunking a sunken submarine, Tom Cruise goes above and beyond to save the world again in the eighth (and perhaps last) installment in the action-packed franchise. This latest "Mission" finds Cruise's daredevil secret agent Ethan Hunt needing to stop a rogue AI from enslaving mankind. The surprisingly dramatic narrative raises the emotional stakes from previous outings and skillfully explains why Ethan and his heroic pals make the choices they do – and it's not just to accept a mission with a message that will self-destruct. Where to watch: Apple TV, Fandango at Home, Amazon 'Smurfs' Give your children the gift of the best "Smurfs" movie so far. (The previous ones range from terrible to abhorrent, so that bar is quite low.) The animated musical adventure is definitely for kids, with bouncy dance numbers and a plot involving the search for a Smurfnapped Papa Smurf (voiced by John Goodman) and Smurfette (Rihanna) trying to help No Name (James Corden) find his special "thing." While most adults will find it aggressively fine, they'll get a kick out of Kurt Russell as Papa Smurf's manly bro Ken – stunt casting so odd it kind of works. Where to watch: Apple TV, Fandango at Home, Amazon 'Superman' James Gunn's electric adventure introduces a new Man of Steel in David Corenswet and launches a rebooted DC movie universe. The movie features pervasive positivity, one really cool canine, a bright comic book aesthetic and a fresh superhero landscape filled with colorful personalities. Corenswet – the best screen Superman since the iconic Christopher Reeve – imbues his hero with joy and optimism, and Nicholas Hoult is an inspired choice for nervy and smarmy supervillain tech bro Lex Luthor. Where to watch: Apple TV, Fandango at Home, Amazon


CNBC
27 minutes ago
- CNBC
Best Buy launches third-party marketplace as it looks for sales drivers
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Newsweek
27 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Apple Users Get Update on How Their Private Data is Being Used
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Apple will no longer be required to provide international law enforcement access to private data after the U.K. agreed to rescind an investigatory power mandate. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said that the U.K. would drop its mandate for Apple to provide an encrypted data "back door," after the policy came under criticism from the tech industry. Newsweek contacted Apple for more information on the agreement via email. Why It Matters The reported withdrawal touches on core questions about cross-border law enforcement powers, the security of encrypted personal data stored in cloud backups, and the potential for government access to private communications and photos of U.S. citizens. Apple has publicly framed its approach to user privacy around on-device processing and end-to-end encryption for many services, which the company said limited its ability to access the contents of messages and certain stored data. What To Know In a statement on Tuesday, Gabbard said that the White House had negotiated an agreement with the U.K. that means the "back door" would no longer be necessary. "Over the past few months, I've been working closely with our partners in the U.K, alongside @POTUS and @VP, to ensure Americans' private data remains private and our Constitutional rights and civil liberties are protected," Gabbard wrote on X. "As a result, the U.K. has agreed to drop its mandate for Apple to provide a 'back door' that would have enabled access to the protected encrypted data of American citizens and encroached on our civil liberties." Stock Image: The Apple logo. Stock Image: The Apple logo. Getty Images The U.K. government's order sought a technical capability that would have allowed access to encrypted iPhone backups, potentially including photos and messages that users stored in cloud services. Apple said it built privacy controls into its devices, including on-device processing, App Tracking Transparency, App Privacy Report, and end-to-end encryption for Messages, and described Advanced Data Protection as a user-enabled setting that expanded encryption for iCloud data. Apple also provided guidance about App Store privacy details and the Privacy Nutrition Labels that developers must disclose on app product pages to show what data apps may collect and whether it is linked to users. What People Are Saying Apple said in a February statement: "ADP protects iCloud data with end-to-end encryption, which means the data can only be decrypted by the user who owns it, and only on their trusted devices. We are gravely disappointed that the protections provided by ADP will not be available to our customers in the U.K. given the continuing rise of data breaches and other threats to customer privacy. Enhancing the security of cloud storage with end-to-end encryption is more urgent than ever before. "Apple remains committed to offering our users the highest level of security for their personal data and are hopeful that we will be able to do so in the future in the United Kingdom. As we have said many times before, we have never built a backdoor or master key to any of our products or services and we never will." What Happens Next The White House will continue to work with international partners and tech companies to resolve disputes of this nature.