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Why Are Bitcoin, Ethereum and XRP Prices Crashing Despite the CLARITY Act Breakthrough?

Bitcoin and Ethereum coins side-by-side with a red downward arrow and "SELL PRESSURE" text over a bearish trading chart.

The post Why Are Bitcoin, Ethereum and XRP Prices Crashing Despite the CLARITY Act Breakthrough? appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

The CLARITY Act just cleared the Senate Banking Committee in the most significant regulatory breakthrough for crypto in US history. Bitcoin should be rallying, but instead it is down $6,000 since the vote advanced the bill to the full Senate, wiping $126 billion from its market cap. Ethereum fell more than 10%, erasing $30 billion. The total crypto market cap has dropped $190 billion in just five days.

Reason One: Sell the News

The CLARITY Act rally was priced in during the weeks of anticipation leading up to the markup vote. The moment the bill actually advanced, traders who bought in anticipation of the event sold into the confirmation. This pattern has played out across crypto at every major regulatory milestone and Thursday was no different.

The bill still needs 60 Senate votes, House reconciliation, and a presidential signature. 

Reason Two: Iran Tensions Are Back

Trump’s warning to Iran that “the clock is ticking” earlier this week sent oil above $107 a barrel and triggered a broad risk-off move across global markets. Crypto sold off alongside equities as geopolitical fear returned.

Trump has since said serious negotiations with Iran are now taking place and confirmed he called off a planned military strike scheduled for tomorrow after the leaders of Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE personally asked him to pause, telling him a deal is within reach. The military has been ordered to remain ready to launch a full-scale attack if an acceptable deal is not reached. The condition is clear: no nuclear weapons for Iran.

Reason Three: Technical Rejection at Key Levels

Bitcoin was rejected at the 200-day moving average, a major technical ceiling that has capped previous recovery attempts. It is currently sitting at the 50-day moving average support and testing the previous range high simultaneously.

The technical picture from here splits into two scenarios. If bulls hold current levels, Bitcoin could attempt another push toward $83,000. If the $74,000 level breaks, analysts expect a deeper swing lower with limited support until the mid-$60,000 range.

Ethereum’s Vitalik Buterin Explains How AI Could Make Smart Contracts Truly Secure

Vitalik Buterin Wants Ethereum Staking to Be as Easy as “One Click”

The post Ethereum’s Vitalik Buterin Explains How AI Could Make Smart Contracts Truly Secure appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has published a detailed argument that AI-assisted formal verification could fundamentally change how secure software is built, pushing back against growing pessimism in the cybersecurity community about whether trustless systems can survive increasingly powerful AI-driven attacks.

“Many people have claimed that with AI-assisted bug finding, secure code will be impossible,” Buterin wrote. “I have a much more optimistic take, and AI-assisted formal verification is a major part of the reason why.”

What Formal Verification Actually Is

Formal verification is the practice of writing mathematical proofs about code that can be checked automatically by a computer. Rather than testing software and hoping bugs do not appear, developers write proofs that mathematically guarantee a piece of code behaves exactly as intended under all conditions.

Many people have claimed that with AI-assisted bug finding, secure code (and hence trustless anything) will be impossible.

I have a much more optimistic take, and AI-assisted formal verification is a major part of the reason why:https://t.co/0ceMBZ6uqj

— vitalik.eth (@VitalikButerin) May 18, 2026

The technology has existed for decades but remained niche because writing these proofs by hand is extremely difficult and time-consuming. Buterin’s argument is that AI changes this equation dramatically. AI can write both the code and the proofs, while humans simply verify that the statements being proved match what they actually want the software to do.

He described this combination as what researcher Yoichi Hirai calls “the final form of software development.”

Why It Matters for Ethereum

Buterin pointed to several areas where formal verification is already being applied within Ethereum’s development ecosystem. These include quantum-resistant signatures, STARK proof systems, consensus algorithms, and ZK-EVMs, all areas where the security properties are simple to define even though the underlying code is extraordinarily complex.

Projects like Arklib are working toward a fully formally verified STARK implementation. The evm-asm project is building an entire EVM written directly in RISC-V assembly, verified mathematically against a human-readable reference implementation. Byzantine fault-tolerant consensus protocols are also being formally specified and verified in Lean.

The main insight is that for these systems the gap between what the code does and what it is supposed to do can be closed with mathematical certainty rather than probabilistic testing.

The Limits He Acknowledges

Buterin was careful not to overstate the case. Formal verification has real failure modes. Proofs can be written about only part of a system while critical bugs hide in unverified sections. Developers can forget to specify properties that matter. The formal specification itself can be wrong. Hardware vulnerabilities like side-channel attacks can bypass even mathematically correct software.

“Provable correctness does not prove that software is correct in the way most human beings understand correctness,” he wrote. What formal verification actually does is allow developers to express their intentions in multiple different redundant ways and automatically check that all those expressions are compatible with each other.

The Broader Vision

Buterin described an optimistic future where software splits into two layers. An insecure edge layer handles lower-stakes functions, runs in sandboxes, and operates with minimal permissions. A secure core handles everything critical, including Ethereum itself, operating system kernels, and sensitive IoT infrastructure.

The secure core is kept deliberately small and subjected to aggressive formal verification. AI brings the computational power to make verification practical at scale. The result is not software with zero bugs but software where the most critical components can be trusted with mathematical confidence rather than hope.

“Defenders finally have a chance to win, decisively,” he concluded, citing Mozilla’s own experience hardening its codebase against AI-assisted attack tools.

Michigan football lands 4-star defensive back Darius Johnson

It's another day that ends in "Y," which recently has meant Michigan football has landed an elite recruit.

The Wolverines got a commitment from four-star class of 2027 cornerback Darius Johnson out of Riverside, Calif. (Notre Dame), on Monday, May 18. Johnson, who stands 6 feet 1 and 160 pounds, is the No. 28 player in California, the No. 35 cornerback in the country and the No. 310 overall player in the rising senior class per 247Sports composite rankings.

Michigan Wolverines cheerleader run flags down the field before the game against the Wisconsin Badgers Oct 4, 2025 at Michigan Stadium.

Johnson chose U-M over other finalists Oregon, UCLA and Cal.

Michigan has been on a heater on the recruiting trail in recent weeks, landing four-star wide receiver Quentin Burrell, four-star defensive lineman Xavier Muhammad, three-star cornerback Charles Woodson Jr. and four-star running back Tyson Robinson all in the past week.

The first full class under new coach Kyle Whittingham now has 12 commits and is ranked No. 15 in the country by 247Sports.

Tony Garcia is the Michigan beat writer for the Detroit Free Press. Email him at apgarcia@freepress.com and follow him on X at @RealTonyGarcia.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Michigan football lands 4-star defensive back Darius Johnson

NVIDIA Blackwell Costs Twice As Much As Google And Amazon’s Custom AI Chips, Yet Morgan Stanley Says It’s Worth It

Investment bank Morgan Stanley believes that even though building a data center with NVIDIA's Blackwell GPUs costs twice as much as building one with AI application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs), the computing power efficiency of the NVIDIA chips is significantly greater than the custom chips as well. The high costs of NVIDIA's latest AI GPUs are a hot-button market topic, with CEO Jensen Huang having asserted on multiple occasions that even though his chips are pricey, they offer greater returns over the long term. NVIDIA's Compute Performance Per Watt Is Up to 8x Ahead Of Custom AI Chips, Says Morgan Stanley […]

Read full article at https://wccftech.com/nvidia-blackwell-costs-twice-as-much-as-google-and-amazons-custom-ai-chips-yet-morgan-stanley-says-its-worth-it/

Vitalik says AI‑assisted formal verification could be ‘final form’ of software development

Vitalik Buterin says AI‑assisted formal verification could be the “final form” of software, letting Ethereum ship ultra‑optimized code with machine‑checked proofs of correctness. Ethereum (ETH) co‑founder Vitalik Buterin has said that combining artificial intelligence with formal verification could become the…

Crypto Market News Today—Bitcoin Slashes While Ethereum & XRP Display Strength

Bitcoin, ETH, & XRP Price Prediction For This Week What’s Next As BTC Price Hits $106k

The post Crypto Market News Today—Bitcoin Slashes While Ethereum & XRP Display Strength appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

The crypto market is facing renewed bearish pressure today as the total market capitalization slips to $2.56 trillion, while trading volume climbs to $65 billion amid rising sell-side activity. Market sentiment has sharply weakened, with the Fear & Greed Index falling below 40, as Bitcoin dominance reclaims levels above 60%. Meanwhile, crypto ETF flows have turned negative, recording over $350 million in outflows across Bitcoin and Ethereum products.

At the same time, average funding rates remain slightly positive, indicating longs are still paying shorts despite mounting downside pressure. Liquidations over the past 24 hours have also crossed $660 million, highlighting rising volatility across the market.

Bitcoin Heading Toward a Pivotal Support

After breaking below a key market structure, the BTC price has come under intense selling pressure, continuing to lose local support levels along the way. The price is now approaching a crucial support zone that must hold to preserve the broader bullish trend; otherwise, a drop below $76,000 could quickly come into play.

btc price

The BTC price broke down from a rising wedge pattern, triggering a 4.8% correction that could extend by another 2% to 3%, dragging the price toward the $74,000 lows. The RSI continues to trend lower, signaling sustained bearish momentum, while the price is now eyeing the lower Bollinger Band support near $75,800, which also aligns with a key demand zone. Bulls must defend this level and initiate a rebound; otherwise, a breakdown below $75,000 could become imminent.

Ethereum Bulls Fail to Defend $2,170 

Rising selling pressure across the market continues to weigh heavily on the ETH price. After failing to hold above $2,300, Ethereum dropped toward $2,120, while trading volume climbed by nearly 4.5%. Although buyers stepped in to defend the $2,100 support zone, the rebound lacks conviction, raising the possibility of another near-term retest of the $2,000 level.

eth price

As seen in the chart above, the price has broken below the crucial support zone between $2,168 and $2,178, signaling growing bearish control. Selling pressure continues to intensify around the current range, while buying demand remains weak and largely absent. In addition, the RSI is hovering near the lower threshold, suggesting the price may continue to decline toward the next key support at $2,000. However, whether Ethereum rebounds or extends its drop will largely depend on the incoming trading volume.

XRP Loses a Pivotal Support at $1.40, But Bullish Momentum Persists

Following the broader market trend, the XRP price is also facing strong bearish pressure, although the ascending trend line continues to provide crucial support. The price has triggered a rebound after testing this level, but bullish confirmation will only emerge if XRP reclaims and closes the daily trade above $1.40. Until then, the risk of a pullback toward $1.34 is likely to persist.

xrp price

The recent rebound has attracted fresh buying pressure, with the CMF flipping bullish and signaling renewed liquidity inflows into the market. Therefore, even if the price slips below the trend line, the lower Bollinger Band support could help stabilize the rally and drive a rebound toward the overhead resistance. As a result, the XRP price is expected to maintain its bullish structure and reclaim $1.44 in the coming days.

Wrapping it Up

The crypto market continues to remain under bearish pressure as the prices of Bitcoin, Ethereum, and XRP trade near crucial support zones amid rising liquidations, weak sentiment, and negative ETF flows. While selective rebounds and improving liquidity indicators hint at a possible short-term recovery, the overall market structure still favors caution until key resistance levels are reclaimed with strong volume confirmation.

Why are Bitcoin, Ethereum and XRP Prices Falling Today?

Silver Bitcoin, XRP, and Ethereum coins lined up in front of a glowing red bearish candlestick chart showing a sharp market decline.

The post Why are Bitcoin, Ethereum and XRP Prices Falling Today? appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

Bitcoin dropped below $77,000 for the first time since May 1, falling $1,600 in just four hours and wiping $33 billion from its market cap. $551 million in long positions were liquidated over the same period. Ethereum fell to $2,116. XRP slipped to $1.39. The total crypto market cap declined 1.24% to $2.56 trillion.

The Fear and Greed Index dropped to 39, firmly in fear territory. The average crypto RSI sat at 36.92, deep in oversold conditions.

The puzzling part is the timing. The CLARITY Act, arguably the most bullish piece of crypto legislation in US history, just advanced through the Senate Banking Committee. Markets should have rallied. They sold off instead.

Three Reasons Markets Are Falling

Trump’s Iran Warning Triggered Risk-Off Selling

The primary catalyst was geopolitical. President Trump warned Iran that “the clock is ticking,” sending US oil prices surging above $107 a barrel and triggering an immediate risk-off response across both crypto and traditional markets. Crypto reacted as a pure risk asset, selling off in sync with equities rather than holding up on its own regulatory tailwinds.

Leveraged Positions Got Wiped Out

Once selling started, market structure amplified it. Bitcoin recorded $19 million in liquidations over 24 hours. Long liquidations actually fell 95.62%, but short liquidations spiked 123.84%, suggesting a violent squeeze on traders positioned for further upside. Spot trading volume plunged 41% to $116.46 billion, creating thin order books that made every move sharper.

China Summit Disappointed

The Trump-Xi summit ended without any meaningful tariff deal, removing another potential catalyst that markets had been hoping would provide upside. The combination of escalating Iran tensions and no breakthrough with China gave traders two reasons to reduce exposure heading into the weekend.

What to Watch Now

The critical level is $76,000 to $77,000 on Bitcoin. A daily close above keeps the structure intact. A break below opens the door to a deeper correction toward $2.49 trillion in total market cap.

The full Senate vote on the CLARITY Act remains the next major regulatory catalyst. A clean passage could shift sentiment quickly. The question is whether geopolitical pressure eases before that vote arrives, or whether the dump accelerates further into early next week.

Jaylen Brown calls for Stephen A. Smith to retire: ‘He’s the face of clickbait media’

Boston Celtics star Jaylen Brown rants about Stephen A. Smith. Credit: Jaylen Brown on Twitch; ESPN
Credit: Jaylen Brown on Twitch; ESPN

It’s been an eventful month of May for Boston Celtics superstar Jaylen Brown.

After leading their first-round series 3-1, the Celtics lost in seven games to the Philadelphia 76ers. Brown then went off on a Twitch stream about NBA officiating, claiming that NBA referees admit that there’s an agenda against him. The NBA fined Brown $50,000 for his comments, and he proceeded to double down on his criticism of NBA officiating.

Brown’s comments led to ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith saying on First Take, “He needs to be quiet. Unless you’re trying to get traded.”

Additionally, Smith suggested that Celtics star Jayson Tatum was on First Take instead of Brown’s Twitch stream due to being frustrated by Brown’s comments.

Brown fired back on May 7 with a post on X: “I’ll ‘be quiet’ [or] stop streaming if you ‘be quiet’ and retire. Let’s give the people what they want.”

Fast-forward to Sunday night, and Brown had a whole lot more to say on his latest Twitch stream about Smith.

Brown played clips of Smith criticizing him in the May 7 edition of First Take and went off in his commentary, calling for Smith — “this motherf*cker” — to retire and referring to the ESPN personality as “the face of clickbait media.”

Jaylen Brown calls out Stephen A. Smith to retire from his job because he has no integrity

“Tell this mf to retire because hes the face of clickbait media maybe with his retirement we can spark a movement to have some type of integrity in order to hold themselves accountable” pic.twitter.com/LzKIhCnFLT

— Ahmed/The Ears/IG: BigBizTheGod (@big_business_) May 18, 2026

“Tell this motherf*cker to retire, because he’s the face of clickbait media,” Brown said. “And maybe with his retirement, we could spark a movement to get the rest of these motherf*ckers out of here. Or to also have some type of, forget journalistic integrity, actual integrity in order to hold themselves accountable to the bullsh*t takes they put out with no basis, no bias, no information. Just narrative. Just for the sake of just pushing a weak narrative. Just purely out of that.”

Brown also sounded off about Smith questioning why Tatum wasn’t on his Twitch stream.

Celtics star Jaylen Brown goes OFF on Stephen A Smith for questioning why Jayson Tatum wasn’t on his stream and making his own narratives about why the 2025-2026 Celtics season was JB’s favorite

“What type of journalism is this?… F*CK Stephen A… My offer still wants. You… pic.twitter.com/XAqaJ6YJYZ

— Slime (@ItsKingSlime) May 18, 2026

“What type of journalism is this?” Brown asked. “Jayson Tatum hasn’t been on my stream, and this is what we’re talking about on First Take? What if [Tatum] just don’t like being somewhere in an uncontrolled environment? Why are you doing journalism on me having guests on my stream? And this is a part of the reason why I started streaming. This is a part of the reason why people use the term ‘clown,’ and it synchronizes with someone like Stephen A. Smith. Because this is what you’re using your platform for. What are you talking about?”

“This is a narrative that he’s creating. This isn’t journalism.” Brown said after showing another clip of Smith. “This is him making his own opinion and formulizing it about what I have to say, on his platform. And this is why, respectfully, a lot of people say, ‘F*ck Stephen A.’ Because this is the type of stuff he does, and then he doesn’t recognize it.”

“F*ck Stephen A!” Brown added.

“My offer still stands,” Brown continued. “You want me to be quiet and stop streaming? Well, I want you to be quiet and get off these networks. Because you’re not using your platform to do real journalism. You’re using your platform to use clickbait.”

This is the kind of attention that doesn’t drive Smith away, but rather that he thrives on. He signed a new five-year, $100 million contract with ESPN last March, and with his ESPN role, his SiriusXM podcast, and his various hits on political programming these days, his media presence has only been increasing, for better or worse. And he’ll surely have a response to Brown’s latest rant.

The post Jaylen Brown calls for Stephen A. Smith to retire: ‘He’s the face of clickbait media’ appeared first on Awful Announcing.

Coventry City target move for midfielder who won Premier League with Liverpool

Coventry City are reportedly considering a surprise move for Georginio Wijnaldum as they prepare for life back in the Premier League.

According to Football Insider, the newly promoted side are weighing up a one-year deal for the 35-year-old midfielder, whose contract with Saudi club Al-Ettifaq expires this summer.

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Wijnaldum is expected to become available on a free transfer, and reports suggest he is interested in returning to the Premier League.

That alone makes this link interesting, because Coventry are not just looking for names, they are looking for experience that could help them survive.

Premier League survival is not easy and Coventry know that well. They have seen what happened to Burnley in the Premier League this season.

Coventry City are looking to add experience

That is why they are preparing to move for an experienced midfielder who also knows what it takes to win at the top level.

Wijnaldum may be 35 now, but this is not a player who has completely faded away.

He has scored 17 goals and added six assists for Al-Ettifaq in all competitions this season.

That sort of output is impressive for a midfielder at this stage of his career. Of course, the Saudi Pro League is very different from the Premier League, and nobody should pretend otherwise.

The speed, intensity and physical demands in England are on another level. But Wijnaldum knows that better than most. He has already played for Newcastle United and Liverpool, and he was a huge part of Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool side that won the Champions League and Premier League.

Wijnaldum is a proven leader at the top level

For Coventry, that background matters. Newly promoted teams often need more than energy and enthusiasm.

They need players who understand difficult away games, pressure moments and how to control parts of matches when the team is under attack.

Wijnaldum would bring calm, professionalism and leadership to a dressing room that is stepping into a much tougher environment.

There is also the Frank Lampard angle. Football Insider says Coventry’s interest fits with Lampard’s desire to add Premier League experience to the squad.

That makes sense. Lampard knows midfielders better than most, and he would probably understand exactly what a player like Wijnaldum could still offer, even if he is no longer at his physical peak.

“I would love to…”: Liverpool and Arsenal target delivers major transfer update

The post Coventry City target move for midfielder who won Premier League with Liverpool appeared first on CaughtOffside.

Michigan State football: Eyeing the Spartans' post-spring depth chart

EAST LANSING – Pat Fitzgerald gave his players a plan as they left for the spring semester.

It was essentially halftime of Michigan State football’s coaching change and a program reset.

"It'll be in earnest when those guys get back,” Fitzgerald said after the April 18 spring game. “They're walking out of here with a workout plan for the next three weeks, four weeks, and we will be checking in to make sure we're going where we need to go and how we need to do it. Because when we come back, we're gonna hit the ground running.

“We're not gonna ease into it when the guys get back in June.”

Michigan State's head coach Pat Fitzgerald looks on during the football Spring Showcase on Saturday, April 18, 2026, at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing.

Fitzgerald was hired in December to replace Jonathan Smith, who went 9-15 in two seasons following the disastrous Mel Tucker tenure that landed MSU on NCAA probation for three years and stripped away five of Smith’s victories. The Spartans haven’t been to a bowl game since 2021, their only appearance since Mark Dantonio’s abrupt departure following the 2019 season.

To say that Fitzgerald has to incrementally rebuild the foundation is an understatement. But that was what the offseason and spring practices were meant to do.

“We always want everybody to be on the same page. It starts with spring ball,” said senior linebacker Jordan Hall, who is on his third different coaching staff in four seasons. “But we have things broken down on the schedule of what we’re working on. So the next step is summer workouts and continuing to grow and learn through that going into fall camp.

“So it’s always a process. But I think after spring ball, I think we’re at a good spot right now. But we’re always looking to continue to grow.”

Fitzgerald called the coming months “the third quarter” of preparing for his Sept. 4 debut against Toledo at Spartan Stadium. And it is a critical time period, he believes, because “that road of improvement is always under construction and we will be grinding all the way through.”

“I want every guy walking out of here feeling like they can be a starter. Where they're at maybe right now – what's more important is where their confidence is,” said the former Northwestern coach and All-American linebacker. “We've got to get this group, just as a team, we've got to harden our edge, we've got to get tougher, we've got to get mentally tougher, but we've got to get more confidence and a little bit more swagger. That's going to happen through preparation.”

Here’s a look at Fitzgerald’s projected offensive and defensive starters with less than 16 weeks until the season opener and a little more than two months until preseason camp begins:

Offense

Michigan State's Alessio Milivojevic, center, throws a pass to Brennan Parachek during the football Spring Showcase on Saturday, April 18, 2026, at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing.

QB: Alessio Milivojevic

RB: Cam Edwards or Kenneth Williams

WR: Chrishon McCray, Braylon Collier, Bryson Williams or Charles Taplin

TE: Brennan Parachek or Jayden Savoury

Offensive line: LT Ben Murawski, LG Nick Sharpe or Luka Vincic, C Trent Fraley, RG Conner Moore, RT Rakeem Johnson.

Analysis: Across the board, finding depth will be critical for Fitzgerald and his staff, particularly so new coordinator Nick Sheridan can optimize an offense that has struggled for closing in on a decade to run the ball consistently.

That started with adding transfers Murawski, Sharpe and Fraley to an offensive line room that included last year’s portal additions in Vincic and Moore. It also included bringing in Edwards, Williams and Jaziun Patterson to compete with returnees Brandon Tullis and Jace Clarizio. That will be a position to watch when August camp begins, and one or two need to emerge before the opener to create a pecking order.

Milivojevic won’t have to worry about a similar competition after finishing the 2025 season as the starting quarterback. Experienced transfer Cam Fancher will back him up, but keep an eye on true freshman Kayd Coffman as the season progresses – particularly if the offense continues to sputter. McCray returns as Milivojevic’s top passing target, but the loss of Nick Marsh creates a chasmic dropoff in talent and experience in testing opposing secondaries.

Three receivers to keep an eye on are transfers KK Smith and Jameel Gardner Jr. and incoming freshman Samson Gash, neither of whom were with the team during the spring and both of whom can bring some much-needed playmaking ability to an offense in desperate need of difference makers. Collier, Taplin and Williams all could emerge as breakout candidates during fall camp.

Defense

Michigan State's Jordan Hall, center, runs a drill during the football Spring Showcase on Saturday, April 18, 2026, at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing.

DE: Keahnist Thompson, Kenny Soares Jr.

DT: Ben Roberts, Eli Coenen

LB: Jordan Hall, Brady Pretzlaff

NB: Michael Richard

CB: Charles Brantley, Tre Bell

S: Nikai Martinez, Devin Vaught

Analysis: The retention of Joe Rossi will give the Spartans continuity and cohesion in structure and scheme, but the turnover in personnel will be a challenge for both the returning defensive coordinator and defensive-minded Fitzgerald.

Fitzgerald’s experience will be beneficial to Hall and Pretzlaff, who missed the spring game after a season-ending injury in 2025 but got rave reviews from his senior captain Hall. MSU also brought in transfers Caleb Wheatland and Dion Crawford to add depth, and freshman legacy Adam Shaw turned heads in the spring.

The Spartans again should be stout in the middle of the defensive line, with Roberts a massive veteran leader and Coenen arriving from Illinois. The depth also is there with Derrick Simmons and Mikeshun Beeler.

The same can’t be said on the edges of the trenches, where portal additions Soares, Keahnist Thompson and Carlos Hazelton have to improve the scant pass-rush production of outbound transfers Jalen Thompson and David Santiago and the graduated Quindarius Dunnigan. Keep an eye on Anelu Lafaele, who looked promising last fall before a season-ending injury, and fellow retainee Kekai Burnett.

In the back end, Martinez will be counted on to anchor and quarterback the defense, with transfers Vaught and Richard and impressive redshirt freshman Deuce Edwards in the mix at safety and nickel. Brantley’s return after a one-year hiatus at Miami (Florida) will help at cornerback, and fellow inbound transfers Bell and Tyran Chappell also arriving with hopes of solidifying coverage that has fallen off since Dantonio’s heyday of the “No-Fly Zone” secondary.

Contact Chris Solari: csolari@freepress.com. Follow him @chrissolari.

Subscribe to the "Spartan Speak" podcast for new episodes on Apple PodcastsSpotify or anywhere you listen to podcasts.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Michigan State football: Eyeing the Spartans' post-spring depth chart

IQUNIX Magi75 Review: A Fast & Silent Low-Profile Keyboard For All

A compact, RGB-backlit mechanical keyboard with visible keys labeled including 'ESCAPE,' 'CAPSLOCK,' and 'CTRL,' connected via a cable.

Unlike conventional mechanical keyboards, low-profile mechanical keyboards don't get the same love, as there are some crucial differences, particularly in the feel. For me, getting the right low-profile keyboard has always been difficult, as transitioning from a regular to a low-profile keyboard has been challenging. The compact design, smaller switches, and shallow keycaps usually make it difficult to type faster, and you don't get that same tactile feedback. Then comes the IQUNIX Magi75, which appears promising, but treating it like just another conventional mechanical keyboard will be a mistake. It's a low-profile mechanical keyboard that has a couple of variants, […]

Read full article at https://wccftech.com/review/iquinix-magi75-review/

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