Tech
TopResume Packages and Free Resume Review: Everything You Need to Get Hired in 2026
AI is making it harder to find a job. AI-driven Application Tracking Systems (ATS) can dump your resume before a recruiter has ever seen it, even if you have all of your qualifications clearly spelled out. TopResume takes the guesswork out of the process by giving you a fresh, professionally-written resume, as well as a free resume review that focuses on these tracking systems—essential in a time where AI is making the decisions on who moves forward in the interview process.
TopResume doesn’t offer a ton of discount codes, coupons, or promos. However, you can get four weeks of free access to TopResume’s Career Services Platform that includes interview training, resume critiques, and recruiter access when you pick up a package through WIRED.
TopResume Free Resume Review: Start With the No-Cost Option
TopResume’s free resume review will get an extra set of eyes on your CV. It’s a free resume critique, not a rewrite or a fresh resume made from scratch like TopResume’s paid offerings.
The free CV review is good to dip your toe in the water, particularly when it comes to highlighting keywords that could get your resume buried in an Application Tracking System (ATS). After you drop your resume on TopResume’s website, you’ll need to wait up to 48 hours before your review. I threw mine in on a Friday, expecting to find a critique in my inbox on Monday morning. It showed up about six hours later.
I was shocked how detailed even the free resume review was. Some of the points were generic, but there was a ton of useful information even in the free review. For instance, apparently, the file size for my resume is massive compared to others because I saved it as a PDF. I would’ve never even considered that.
TopResume also feeds your CV into an ATS with its free review, showcasing how these systems will categorize you. That was enlightening. I hadn’t realized that my resume focused on responsibilities over outcomes, so it was difficult for the ATS to nail down my demonstrable skills.
How Much Is TopResume at the Moment?
TopResume offers free DIY Career Tools to explore their Resume Builder to get personalized job matches. There are also programs to help you save time on your job search, and you can try Premium at $3 for a 7-day trial, and after it becomes $25 per month. With this program, you’ll get 18 career tools like unlimited resumes and cover letters, AI resume tailoring, resume distribution, and access to more than 400 expert-led courses. Resume Writing services start at $179 for a resume crafted by an expert, with prices varying depending on whichever package you choose. With this service, you can do things like add a LinkedIn makeover or a cover letter to help you stand out. For full, one-on-one support until you’re hired, try Get Hired Now which starts at $1,995 and includes a dedicated career coach to help with your resume, job search strategy, interview preparation, and more to ensure you get the job you deserve.
Enjoy the TopResume Guarantee With a 60-Day Interview Promise
If you need more hands-on time, TopResume has several paid services available, all of which are backed by the TopResume guarantee. All paid plans come with a 60-day interview guarantee. If your new resume doesn’t land you an interview within two months, you’ll get another fresh resume, free of charge. It’s basically TopResume’s refund policy to give you extra peace of mind.
TopResume Has a Package for Every Career Path
There are several TopResume packages available if you want to go beyond the free review. TopResume charges varying amounts depending on your package, starting at $180. Regardless of the package you choose, you’ll get access to TopResume’s Career Services Platform for four weeks, free of charge. It’s a service that can go beyond just your resume, helping with interview prep, resume circulation, and more.
TopResume’s standard service is called Professional Growth, and it provides a fresh resume with one of TopResume’s ATS-optimized templates, the Career Services Platform, three applications sent for you, and TopResume’s interview guarantee. Above that is Career Evolution, which includes everything that Professional Growth includes, plus a professionally-written cover letter.
If you need the best of the best, TopResume has two options available. The Career Confidence package matches you to a writer in the top 20% of TopResume’s network, and it even includes an interview coaching session and a LinkedIn makeover. The Executive Priority package further restricts the writer pool to the top 10% in TopResume’s network, and it comes with all previous perks, along with an extra interview coaching session.
TopResume’s core packages cover most industries, but there are some specialized fields where a typical resume won’t cut it. It can prep an Academic CV for you, which is something I sorely wish I had when I was college shopping years ago. TopResume also offers a military discount through its Military Resume Writing Service, which is a tad cheaper than a typical CV.
Finally, it offers resume writing for federal jobs, which apparently are different (and much longer) than a typical resume.
Tech
Signal’s Creator Is Helping Encrypt Meta AI
Moxie Marlinspike, the privacy advocate who created the secure communication app Signal and its widely used open source encryption protocol, said this week that his privacy-focused AI platform, Confer, will start incorporating its technology into Meta’s AI systems.
Every day, billions of chat messages sent through Signal, Meta’s WhatsApp, and Apple’s Messages are protected by end-to-end encryption. The feature, which makes it impossible for tech companies and anyone other than the sender and recipient to snoop on your messages, has become mainstream over the past decade. As generative AI platforms explode in popularity, though, people are now also exchanging billions of messages a day with AI chatbots that don’t offer the protection of end-to-end encryption—making it easy for AI firms to access what you talk about.
This is by design, given that platforms often want to train their AI models on as much user data as possible and have made it hard to opt out of having your information used as training data. But as chatbots and AI agents have become more capable, some technologists and companies are pushing to create more constrained and privacy-focused systems.
“As LLMs continue to be able to do more, we should expect even more data to flow into them,” Marlinspike wrote in a short blog post about his collaboration with Meta published on Tuesday. “Right now, none of that data is private. It is shared with AI companies, their employees, hackers, subpoenas, and governments. As is always the case with unencrypted data, it will inevitably end up in the wrong hands.”
Marlinspike wrote that he will “work to integrate Confer’s privacy technology so that it underpins Meta AI.” He also emphasized that Confer, which debuted at the beginning of this year, will continue to operate independent of Meta. The project’s goal, Marlinspike added, is to offer a technology that “allows everyone to get the full power of AI along with the full privacy of an encrypted conversation.”
In 2016, Marlinspike worked with WhatsApp, which is owned by Meta, to roll out end-to-end encryption to more than a billion accounts simultaneously. Over the last year, WhatsApp has introduced a Meta AI chatbot into its app, which isn’t shielded from the company in the same way individual chats are.
“People use AI in ways that are deeply personal and require access to confidential information,” WhatsApp head Will Cathcart wrote on Wednesday on the social media platform X about the collaboration with Confer. “It’s important that we build that technology in a way that gives people the power to do that privately.”
The adoption of encrypted AI is still emerging. The cryptographic schemes used in end-to-end encryption for traditional digital communication aren’t easily or directly translatable into data protections for generative AI. For its part, Confer is still a new project, and Marlinspike’s blog post did not provide specific details about how exactly the collaboration with Meta will work or what the specific goals are for integration.
Neither Marlinspike nor Meta provided WIRED with additional comment ahead of publication.
Mallory Knodel, a cryptography researcher at New York University, says it would be “great for people using chatbots that use Meta AI to have confidentiality and privacy within that exchange.” Crucially, that means Meta would not be able to access AI chat data for training, says Knodel, who along with colleagues recently published a study on end-to-end encryption and AI. “I really hope more AI chatbots adopt this approach.”
Knodel’s preliminary, initial assessments of Confer indicate that the platform isn’t perfect, but is an important example of how to build a private AI chatbot.
Tech
Boots or Trail Runners? Depends if You Want Speed, Durability, or Ankle Support
When I started hiking, big leather boots were the only real option. They were burly, stiff, and difficult to break in, but one pair would last you decades. Technology has mercifully caught up, however. If you head to the trails today, most hikers and backpackers are opting for more lightweight, low-cut options. While an influx of new shoes from brands like Hoka, Merrell, Danner, and Salomon has transformed the footwear industry, that doesn’t mean the hiking boot has had its day. It just depends on what you’re looking to do and when you’re doing it.
Which shoes should you pick to go out for the day? I tested countless pairs of great hiking boots, trail runners, and hiking shoes across a variety of terrain, from forest trails and coastal paths to high alpine terrain. To get a better understanding of the differences between the many options available—and which is right for you—I grilled Ingrid Johnson, a leading footwear product specialist at REI. (For what it’s worth, Johnson’s personal recommendation is the Salomon XA Pro).
When you’ve chosen your next pair of trail running shoes (or hiking boots), be sure to check out more of WIRED’s outdoor guides, like the Best Gravel Running Shoes, the Best Merino Wool T-Shirts, and the Best Electric Bikes.
Update March 2026: We added links to recent coverage, added the On Running Cloudrock Low, and updated links and prices.
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Here’s When You Need Boots
If you’re carrying a heavy pack over rough terrain, or if it’s wet or snowy, you need hiking boots. They tend to be higher at the ankle, with stiff midsoles and protective toe caps, and they are generally made from very durable materials like leather and tough synthetic fabrics like Cordura. Hiking boots prioritize stability, protection, and durability.
Boots generally have thick, deep lugs, tougher soles, stronger toe guards, and sturdier ankle support. They protect you from rock impact, uneven ground, moisture, and often colder conditions. The high-cut designs also offer more ankle support, something I found reassuring when coming back from a recent injury.
But don’t think that hiking boot brands are stuck in the dark ages. Borrowing lightweight features and materials from trail running, brands are able to offer technical boots with cushioning, grip, and stability. They’re still heavy, but featherweight compared to a traditional leather boot. Hoka’s Kaha 3 GTX ($240) is one of the best boots available, blending soft nubuck leather, Vibram Megagrip sole, and bags of cushioning. Here are a few other picks:
Perennially popular for good reason, these Salomons boast superb levels of comfort and support without the bulk typically associated with traditional walking boots. They feel like ski boots, but that’s not a criticism; the height and support is most welcome when walking all day carrying a full pack.
Tech
Get Ready for a Year of Chaotic Weather in the US
Despite being declared the third-hottest year on record, 2025 was a relatively quiet year for climate disasters in the US. No major hurricanes made landfall, while the total number of acres burned in wildfires last year—a way of measuring the intensity of wildfire season—fell below the 10-year average.
But starting this week, the West is experiencing what looks to be a record-breaking heat wave, while forecasting models predict that a strong El Niño event is likely to emerge later this year. These two unrelated phenomena could set the stage for a long stretch of unpredictable and extreme weather reaching into next year, compounding the effects of a climate that’s getting hotter and hotter thanks to human activity.
First, there’s the heat. Beginning this week and heading into next, a massive ridge of high-pressure air will bring record-breaking temperatures to the American West. The National Weather Service predicts that temperature records across multiple states are set to be broken in dozens of locations, stretching as far east as Missouri and Tennessee. The NWS has issued heat warnings for parts of California, Arizona, and Nevada, as well as fire warnings for parts of Wyoming, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Colorado.
“This will be the single strongest ridge we’ve observed outside of summer in any month,” says Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources.
The other remarkable thing about this heat wave, Swain says, is just how long it’s going to last. “This is not a day or two of extreme heat,” he says. “We’ve already in some of these places been seeing record highs every day for a week, and we expect to see them every day for another at least seven to 10 days.” The later end of March will be much more intense, with temperatures in some places breaking April and May records. “There aren’t that many weather patterns that can result in an 85- or 90-degree temperature in San Francisco, Salt Lake City, and Denver in the same week.”
This late winter heat wave is adding on to an already warm winter in the West—with big implications for the summer. A month ago, snowpack levels across multiple states were at record lows thanks to warmer-than-average temperatures. According to data provided by the Department of Agriculture, snowpack levels were still sitting below 50 percent of average across many Western states. Snowpack is a critical natural reservoir for rivers in the West; between 60 to 70 percent of the region’s water supply in many areas comes from melting snow. Low snowpack is a bad sign for already-stressed rivers like the Colorado, which supplies water for 40 million people in seven states.
The ongoing heat wave, Swain says, will more than likely make conditions even worse. “April 1st is typically the point at which snowpack would be, at least historically, at its peak,” he says. Even if temperatures cool off until summer, these low snowpack levels are also a worrisome sign for the upcoming fire season. Snow droughts like the one the West is experiencing can dry out soil, kill trees, and lessen stream flow: ideal conditions for a wildfire to grow. Meanwhile, the water supply in the Colorado River could drop even lower. States that rely on the river are already facing a political crisis as they attempt to renegotiate water rights; a drought would only up the ante.
Then there’s El Niño. Last week, the National Weather Service announced that there was more than a 60 percent chance of an El Niño event emerging in August or September. Various weather models suggest that this El Niño could be particularly strong. While we likely won’t know for sure until summer, “the fact that [all the models] are moving upwards is worth watching,” says Zeke Hausfather, a research scientist at Berkeley Earth.
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