The Daily Brief is Techiadd’s free email newsletter. It is the quickest way to keep up with consumer technology without drowning in it — the news, reviews and practical guides that actually matter, distilled and explained, delivered straight to your inbox.
What you get
Every weekday we send a short, readable round-up of what happened in the tech that people use: the launches worth knowing about, the reviews that tell you whether to buy, the AI developments that are real rather than hype, and the how-to tips that make your gadgets and software work better. We do the filtering so you do not have to.
- Curated, not firehosed. We leave out the noise and keep the signal — a few things worth your attention, not fifty headlines.
- Explained in plain English. The same hype-free, hands-on voice as the rest of Techiadd, with context that tells you why something matters.
- Useful, not clickbait. No outrage, no padding, no sponsored “stories” dressed up as news.
How to subscribe
Enter your email address in the newsletter sign-up on our pages and confirm your subscription. It is completely free — there is no paywall on our journalism and no charge for the Daily Brief.
Our promise on your inbox
We respect your inbox and your privacy. We will only use your email address to send you the newsletter and the occasional important update about it. We will not sell your address or hand it to advertisers, and every email includes a one-click unsubscribe link, so you can leave the moment it stops being useful. How we handle your data is set out in our Privacy Policy.
A note on advertising
To keep Techiadd and the Daily Brief free, the newsletter may carry clearly-labelled sponsorship. As with everything we publish, sponsors never influence our editorial selection or our verdicts — the wall between our journalism and our commercial work, described in our Ethics Policy, applies to the newsletter too.
Why it is worth your time
There is no shortage of tech news; there is a shortage of tech news you can trust to be honest and to value your time. The Daily Brief is written by the same named editors who run Techiadd, with the same commitment to testing before scoring and explaining rather than hyping. If that is the kind of coverage you want, this is the easiest way to get it.