conejito malo Una vez más se convirtió en el centro de la polémica en las redes sociales. En esta ocasión, el cantante se convirtió en la comidilla de los usuarios cuando se viralizó un impactante video en el que se puede ver al puertorriqueño disfrutando de la música. La compañía de otro hombre en un lugar amigable.. En el vídeo se ve a Bad Bunny bailando e intercambiando abrazos y besos con otra persona del mismo género en un bar de Nashville, Tennessee (EE.UU.).
Por ser una figura de talla internacional, Bad Bunny no pasa desapercibido allá donde va. De su vida amorosa destaca un fugaz romance con una modelo Kendall JennerTiene 28 años, pero con este video se puso en boca de todos debido a las especulaciones, las cuales no se hicieron esperar, pues muchos inmediatamente se preguntaron quién era el desconocido.
Bad Bunny y el video viral donde se muestra muy cariñoso con otro hombre: ¿quién era?
Sin embargo, en las redes sociales fueron los fanáticos de Bad Bunny quienes salieron a aclarar que el hombre misterioso es el hermano del cantante, Bysael. Algo que se puede comprobar En la foto que Bissell publicó en su cuenta de Instagram. Donde se le vio vistiendo una camiseta de Nashville.
People who had access to the Internet scored higher on measures of life satisfaction in a global survey.Credit: Ute Grabowsky/Photothek via Getty
A global, 16-year study1 of 2.4 million people has found that Internet use might boost measures of well-being, such as life satisfaction and sense of purpose — challenging the commonly held idea that Internet use has negative effects on people’s welfare.
US TikTok ban: how the looming restriction is affecting scientists on the app
“It’s an important piece of the puzzle on digital-media use and mental health,” says psychologist Markus Appel at the University of Würzburg in Germany. “If social media and Internet and mobile-phone use is really such a devastating force in our society, we should see it on this bird’s-eye view [study] — but we don’t.” Such concerns are typically related to behaviours linked to social-media use, such as cyberbullying, social-media addiction and body-image issues. But the best studies have so far shown small negative effects, if any2,3, of Internet use on well-being, says Appel.
The authors of the latest study, published on 13 May in Technology, Mind and Behaviour, sought to capture a more global picture of the Internet’s effects than did previous research. “While the Internet is global, the study of it is not,” said Andrew Przybylski, a researcher at the University of Oxford, UK, who studies how technology affects well-being, in a press briefing on 9 May. “More than 90% of data sets come from a handful of English-speaking countries” that are mostly in the global north, he said. Previous studies have also focused on young people, he added.
To address this research gap, Pryzbylski and his colleagues analysed data on how Internet access was related to eight measures of well-being from the Gallup World Poll, conducted by analytics company Gallup, based in Washington DC. The data were collected annually from 2006 to 2021 from 1,000 people, aged 15 and above, in 168 countries, through phone or in-person interviews. The researchers controlled for factors that might affect Internet use and welfare, including income level, employment status, education level and health problems.
Like a walk in nature
The team found that, on average, people who had access to the Internet scored 8% higher on measures of life satisfaction, positive experiences and contentment with their social life, compared with people who lacked web access. Online activities can help people to learn new things and make friends, and this could contribute to the beneficial effects, suggests Appel.
The positive effect is similar to the well-being benefit associated with taking a walk in nature, says Przybylski.
However, women aged 15–24 who reported having used the Internet in the past week were, on average, less happy with the place they live, compared with people who didn’t use the web. This could be because people who do not feel welcome in their community spend more time online, said Przybylski. Further studies are needed to determine whether links between Internet use and well-being are causal or merely associations, he added.
The study comes at a time of discussion around the regulation of Internet and social-media use, especially among young people. “The study cannot contribute to the recent debate on whether or not social-media use is harmful, or whether or not smartphones should be banned at schools,” because the study was not designed to answer these questions, says Tobias Dienlin, who studies how social media affects well-being at the University of Vienna. “Different channels and uses of the Internet have vastly different effects on well-being outcomes,” he says.
Mafia Mamma was in so much danger of not working. Its story is borderline nonsense, its acting is as grounded as the International Space Station, and its tone veers from full-on farce to alarming violence to surprisingly erotically charged. And in the end, all of that is why it works so well. This Prime Video comedy movie knows exactly what it’s doing, and what it’s doing is having a big party in Italy with fun jokes, and everyone’s invited – but only if you promise not to take it seriously.
Toni Collette plays Kristin, a classic downtrodden movie wife, who returns from the job where her contributions are ignored to find that her husband is cheating on her, and all just as her son is leaving home. Fortunately(ish), her Italian grandfather has died, and she needs to go to Italy to settle the estate, and that estate turns out to be A Full-on Mob Family.
Do hijinks ensue? You betcha. Do her two bodyguard heavies turn out to be sensitive souls for comedic purposes? Of course. Does she accidentally become good at Mafia-ing? Inevitably. Does that cause her to fall in danger? Naturally. Does she have conversations with Monica Bellucci that are extremely sexually charged for no particular reason? Totally. Is there a part where a man’s eyeball is graphically removed in a scene that is as comical as it is alarming? Unbelievably.
Mafia Mamma is funny because it genuinely means to be, not in the ‘so bad it’s funny’ way – it’s just willing to go the silliest lengths to get there. This is a big broad farce set in beautiful Italian towns and countryside. Go in with the right attitude and it’s a blast, even if it’s not going to become a modern classic on the list of the best Prime Video movies.
You might also like…
Get the hottest deals available in your inbox plus news, reviews, opinion, analysis and more from the TechRadar team.
Last night, Golden State Warriors guard Klay Thompson had a rough outing shooting 0 for 10 in a loss against the Sacramento Kings, ending the team’s chances of making the NBA playoffs. But then, almost as if to add insult to injury, X’s AI bot Grok claiming Thompson was vandalizing homes in the area with bricks.
Now at this point, even casual basketball fans may be able to see what went wrong. But Grok isn’t very smart, because it seems that after seeing user posts about a player simply (aka shooting bricks), the bot took things literally resulting in a completely fictitious AI-generated report.
After misinterpreting user posts about Klay Thompson’s poor shooting during an NBA game, X’s AI bot Grok created a fictitious story on the social media platform’s trending section. (Screenshot by Sam Rutherford (via X))
In the event this fabrication — which was the #5 trending story at the time of writing — gets corrected or deleted by Elon Musk, Grok originally wrote “In a bizarre turn of events, NBA star Klay Thompson has been accused of vandalizing multiple houses with bricks in Sacramento. Authorities are investigating the claims after several individuals reported their houses being damaged, with windows shattered by bricks. Klay Thompson has not yet issued a statement regarding the accusations. The incidents have left the community shaken, but no injuries were reported. The motive behind the alleged vandalism remains unclear.” Amusingly, despite pointing out the unusual nature of the story Grok went ahead of put out some nonsense anyway.
Granted, in fine print beneath the story, X says “Grok is an early feature and can make mistakes. Verify its outputs.” But even that warning seems to have backfired, as basketball fans began memeing on the AI with posts sarcastically verifying the AI’s erroneous statement.
After Grok created an erroneous story about Golden State Warriors guard Klay Thompson, users began memeing on the situation. (Screenshot by Sam Rutherford (via X))
For most people, Grok’s latest gaff may merely be another example in an ongoing series of early . But for others like Musk who believes that AI will be smarter than humans , this should serve as a reminder that AI is still in desperate need of regular fact-checking.
This article contains affiliate links; if you click such a link and make a purchase, we may earn a commission.
In 2010, Theresa Chaklos was diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia — the first in a series of ailments that she has had to deal with since. She’d always been an independent person, living alone and supporting herself as a family-law facilitator in the Washington DC court system. But after illness hit, her independence turned into loneliness.
Loneliness, in turn, exacerbated Chaklos’s physical condition. “I dropped 15 pounds in less than a week because I wasn’t eating,” she says. “I was so miserable, I just would not get up.” Fortunately a co-worker convinced her to ask her friends to help out, and her mood began to lift. “It’s a great feeling” to know that other people are willing to show up, she says.
Many people can’t break out of a bout of loneliness so easily. And when acute loneliness becomes chronic, the health effects can be far-reaching. Chronic loneliness can be as detrimental as obesity, physical inactivity and smoking according to a report by Vivek Murthy, the US surgeon general. Depression, dementia, cardiovascular disease1 and even early death2 have all been linked to the condition. Worldwide, around one-quarter of adults feel very or fairly lonely, according to a 2023 poll conducted by the social-media firm Meta, the polling company Gallup and a group of academic advisers (see go.nature.com/48xhu3p). That same year, the World Health Organization launched a campaign to address loneliness, which it called a “pressing health threat”.
But why does feeling alone lead to poor health? Over the past few years, scientists have begun to reveal the neural mechanisms that cause the human body to unravel when social needs go unmet. The field “seems to be expanding quite significantly”, says cognitive neuroscientist Nathan Spreng at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. And although the picture is far from complete, early results suggest that loneliness might alter many aspects of the brain, from its volume to the connections between neurons.
Subjective and contagious
Loneliness is a slippery concept. It’s not the same as social isolation, which occurs when someone has few meaningful social relationships, although “they’re two sides of the same coin”, says old-age psychiatrist Andrew Sommerlad at University College London. Rather, loneliness is a person’s subjective experience of being unsatisfied with their social relationships.
The list of health conditions linked to loneliness is long and sobering1 (see ‘Loneliness and health’). Some of these make intuitive sense — people who feel lonely are often depressed, for example, sometimes to the point of being at risk of suicide. Other links are more surprising. Lonely people are at greater risk of high blood pressure and immune-system dysfunction compared with those who do not feel lonely, for example. There’s also a startling connection between loneliness and dementia, with one study reporting that people who feel lonely are 1.64 times more likely to develop this type of neurodegeneration than are those who do not3.
Source: The Cigna Group
A number of physiological effects, including the ability to sleep, increased stress-hormone levels and increased susceptibility to infections, could link loneliness with health problems. But the way in which these factors interact with one another makes it difficult to disentangle the effects of loneliness from the causes, cautions cognitive neuroscientist Livia Tomova at Cardiff University, UK. Do people’s brains start functioning differently when they become lonely, or do some people have differences in their brains that make them prone to loneliness? “We don’t really know which one is true,” she says.
Whatever the cause, loneliness seems to have the biggest effect on people who are in disadvantaged groups. In the United States, Black and Hispanic adults, as well as people who earn less than US$50,000 per year, have higher rates of loneliness than do other demographic groups by at least 10 percentage points, according to a 2021 survey by the Cigna Group, a US health-care and insurance company (see go.nature.com/43eakds). That’s not surprising because “loneliness, by definition, is an emotional distress that wants us to adapt our social situations”, says geriatrician and palliative-care physician Ashwin Kotwal at the University of California, San Francisco. Without financial resources, adapting is harder.
The COVID-19 pandemic might have exacerbated loneliness by forcing people to isolate for months or years, although “that data is still emerging”, Kotwal says. Older adults have long been thought of as the demographic most heavily affected by loneliness, and indeed it is a major problem faced by many of the older people that Kotwal works with. But the Cigna Group’s data suggest that loneliness is actually highest in young adults — 79% of those between the ages of 18 and 24 reported feeling lonely, compared with 41% of people aged 66 and older.
Loneliness eats at you
A growing amount of research is exploring what happens in the brain when people feel lonely. Lonely people tend to view the world differently from those who aren’t, says cognitive neuroscientist Laetitia Mwilambwe-Tshilobo at Princeton University in New Jersey. In a 2023 study, researchers asked participants to watch videos of people in a variety of situations — for example, playing sports or on a date — while inside an magnetic resonance imaging scanner4. People who did not report being lonely all had similar neural responses to each other, whereas the responses in people who felt lonely were all different — from the other group and from each other. The authors hypothesized that lonely people pay attention to different aspects of situations from non-lonely people, which causes those who feel lonely to perceive themselves as being different from their peers.
Feeling lonely in research? You’re not alone
This would mean that loneliness can feed back on itself, becoming worse over time. “It’s almost like a self-fulfilling prophecy,” Mwilambwe-Tshilobo says. “If you think that you’re lonely, you’re perceiving or interpreting your social world more negatively. And that makes you move further and further away.” Some studies have shown that this effect can spread through social networks, giving loneliness a contagious quality5.
Historically, staying close to others was probably a good survival strategy for humans. That’s why scientists think that temporary loneliness evolved — to motivate people to seek company, just as hunger and thirst evolved to motivate people to seek food and water.
In fact, the similarities between hunger and loneliness go right down to the physiological level. In a 2020 study, researchers deprived people of either food or social connections for ten hours. They then used brain imaging to identify areas that were activated by images of either food — such as a heaping plate of pasta — or social interactions, such as friends laughing together. Some of the activated regions were unique to images either of food or of people socializing, but a region in the midbrain known as the substantia nigra lit up when hungry people saw pictures of food and when people who felt lonely saw pictures of social interactions6. That’s “a key region for motivation — it’s known to be active whenever we want something”, says Tomova, who is an author on the study.
More links are emerging between loneliness and how the brain processes feelings of reward. In mice, loneliness sensitizes certain midbrain neurons to a neurotransmitter called dopamine7, which can also cause people to cave in to cravings, such as for food and drugs. Likewise, isolation might make humans more sensitive to rewards and more eager to seek them out. In 2023, Tomova and her colleagues published a preprint8 for a study in which they isolated adolescents from social contact for up to four hours. After isolation, participants were offered the chance to earn a monetary reward. The isolated participants agreed more quickly than did those who were not isolated, suggesting that isolation had made them more responsive to rewarding actions.
Loneliness and health
Although research on dopamine and loneliness is still emerging, scientists have also long recognized the connection between loneliness and another type of chemical signal — stress hormones called glucocorticoids. Humans need some level of glucocorticoids “to function; to wake up”, says neurophysiologist John-Ioannis Sotiropoulos at the National Centre for Scientific Research ‘Demokritos’ in Athens. But persistent loneliness leads to chronically high levels.
These chemicals could provide a link between loneliness and dementia. In a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease, for example, glucocorticoids increased the levels of two proteins that are involved in the main hallmark of the condition, the protein plaques that tangle around neurons and interfere with memory and cognition9.
Stress is an extra assault on brains that are already wearing out as people get older, Mwilambwe-Tshilobo says, but she wants to see more research before committing to an opinion on exactly what part stress-related chemicals play in neurodegeneration. “It could accelerate the rate of ageing, but there hasn’t been work that explicitly looks at that,” she says.
Tomova says that although high levels of stress hormones probably contribute to dementia, it’s also likely that people who feel lonely miss out on the mental exercise that social interactions provide. And just as a muscle needs exercise to stay fit, so does the brain. In fact, loneliness has been associated with a smaller volume of grey matter in the brain10. “This is all hypothesis, really, at this stage,” Sommerlad says, but the idea is that socializing maintains neural connections that might otherwise be lost.
Turning inward
Researchers looking for the neural signature of loneliness have also found differences that could help to explain some of the correlations between loneliness and dementia. Previous research has suggested that there are changes in the connectivity between brain areas in people who feel lonely11. A 2020 study12 examined an area of the brain called the default network — so called because it’s active by default when a person isn’t engaged in a particular task and turns their attention inward — in older people who reported being lonely.
The hurt of loneliness and social isolation
Previous work had suggested that young people who feel lonely have high neural cross-talk between the default network and other networks associated with vision, attention and executive control13, possibly because they’re on high alert for social cues, says Spreng, one of the authors on the 2020 study of older people. But his team found the opposite in brain scans from the UK Biobank cohort of people aged 40 to 69. Loneliness weakened connections between the default network and the visual system and instead strengthened connections within the default network.
That could be because older people remedy loneliness by retreating into memories of past social experiences, Spreng says. In doing so, they strengthen the default network.
The default network is one of many networks in the brain that accrues damage during Alzheimer’s disease. Spreng and his colleagues are investigating whether strong default networks can indeed be linked to neurodegeneration — and if so, why. He wonders whether robust neural connections might allow pathologies to spread more readily in the network. The idea is far from proven, but it’s a plausible explanation and “an interesting hypothesis”, says cognitive neuroscientist Anastasia Benedyk at the Central Institute of Mental Health in Mannheim, Germany.
The study “lays the foundation for us to be able to test some hypotheses a little bit more empirically”, says Mwilambwe-Tshilobo, who was also involved in the work linking the default network with loneliness.
Finding solutions
Some remedies for loneliness will come as no surprise. Increasing access to social activities, for example by housing people in communities with common areas, can help, Sommerlad says. Some researchers are also finding ways to tap into the neural mechanisms underlying loneliness directly, through exercise, for instance.
Walking 4–5 kilometres over the course of an hour completely reversed feelings of low mood associated with loneliness in some people, Benedyk and her colleagues found14. What’s more, people with high connectivity in their default networks — the same area Spreng studied, which is also known to be affected by depression — were among those who benefited from exercise the most.
One possible explanation for this observation is that people with depression are “stuck in rumination” — a behaviour that draws heavily on the default network, Benedyk says. Exercise could force them to use other parts of their brain by interrupting neural processes that are associated with self-reflection and shifting activity to areas associated with physical activities — freeing them from a cycle of negative thoughts.
Exercising is also a great excuse to socialize. These days, Chaklos is retired, but she now leads the Boston branch of a US programme called ‘Walk with a Doc’, in which physicians invite community members to walk with them. At the group’s February walk, about 14 people chatted and strolled inside the Prudential Center mall in Boston, Massachusetts, where they could avoid New England’s winter weather. The activity “just uplifts a person’s mood”, Chaklos says. “Even if you’re still going back home to be by yourself, you don’t feel totally alone any more.”
With AI becoming more mainstream, we’re at the stage now where organizations are actively starting to experiment and identify ways it could help them to improve customer engagement.
Recent research carried out by Twilio has revealed that 79% of UK IT teams are actively implementing AI to varying degrees, or are in the advanced stages of planning for its adoption. But as with all new technology, it’s easy to get caught up in what everyone else is doing.
Rushing to invest and make moves can seem appealing if competitors are doing it, but without a clear sense of how AI could help with broader business goals – and crucially, helping them meet customer needs better – outcomes will be mixed at best.
Customer-centric AI can be a game changer
Unsurprisingly, given so many are either actively implementing it, or planning for its adoption, a majority of IT decision makers agree AI is a game changer for better relationships with their customers. More than four in five (86%) believe it could bring them closer to their customers and help them better address their unique needs. Its ability to analyze as well as apply context and prior learnings is genuinely game-changing for customer service and engagement at scale.
Businesses can create smoother customer journeys by using tools like AI-powered chatbots (54%) that IT decision makers highlighted as the biggest benefit of this advanced technology. These chatbots can help lighten the load for human agents by resolving simple but often time-consuming tasks, leaving human agents to deal with more complex queries.
Sam Richardson
The first chatbots on the market were meant to achieve this, and whilst they did have some impact, they were also a major source of frustration. Natural language and generative bots should be much better at this, although they will still need careful monitoring and nurturing.
As conversations and engagements take place, AI will also play a role by automatically creating, updating, and drawing on customer profiles to learn from past interactions. Incorporating chatbots can help agents triage queries based on urgency, redirect customers to other resources, and source answers more quickly, as well as re-route calls and enquiries to where they might be better resolved.
Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!
Brands can also harness AI to improve how they personalize each interaction with every customer. Working with large amounts of data, AI can near-instantly draw from relevant context and past activity to offer solutions tailored to the individual and situation, reducing friction and increasing sales opportunities. In fact, the right AI tools can act more like an individual sales person for each customer by offering a truly unique experience for each person at a scale which was previously unthinkable.
Businesses can leverage the history they’ve built up of their customers through their previous purchases, interactions, and preferences to use these insights to serve them more effectively, eliminating situations like asking customers for information more than once, or long delays for responses. Leading companies are those that are wholly oriented around their customers, their needs and pain points – and they’re leveraging AI to do this.
With AI able to provide a more sophisticated customer experience by streamlining processes and speeding up decision making, it can play an important role in fueling growth and innovation for businesses. This is captured in Twilio’s State of Customer Engagement Report, which found that eight out of 10 companies that invested in customer engagement were able to meet their financial goals. If implemented correctly to prioritize the customer, brands will be able to experience higher revenues, greater customer loyalty, and a better return on investment.
Balancing technology and customer outcomes
While the benefits of AI might be clear, being able to realize them in practice is another matter. Investing in new technology in isolation will have limited effects without having a wider strategy for what the business would like to achieve with it. Twilio’s research found nearly half of the organizations surveyed (44%) start with their technology first and look for ways to use it, with just 34% starting with customer outcomes first, before then looking at the technology they could use to achieve them. Businesses must continually see AI and other emerging technologies in terms of what it could do for their customers, rather than making investments simply to keep up with competitors.
For example, the power of AI is limited without the associated data and processes in place to fully put it to work. Having a strong foundation of accurate, regularly updated first-party data for it to work with is essential. It’s only then that it becomes possible to fully realize the technology’s potential.
As consumers become increasingly receptive to the idea of companies using AI to improve their experiences, businesses must understand the evolution in the way they use technology is ultimately about helping them meet customer needs more effectively. AI allows businesses to treat every customer as if they have a physical employee dedicated to their needs, which is truly game-changing – but only if it’s underpinned by a solid data foundation, and a clear strategy on what ‘good’ looks like.
AI alone will not fix bad customer service. To truly transform customer experiences, there needs to be strong alignment across strategy, technology, operations and customer needs. This will ultimately make sure any investment in AI drives revenue growth and helps companies meet their financial goals.
This article was produced as part of TechRadarPro’s Expert Insights channel where we feature the best and brightest minds in the technology industry today. The views expressed here are those of the author and are not necessarily those of TechRadarPro or Future plc. If you are interested in contributing find out more here: https://www.techradar.com/news/submit-your-story-to-techradar-pro
If you’re considering buying an S Pen for your Galaxy Z Fold 5 and seeing what the S Pen hype is all about, Samsung is giving you two options. One costs a lot more than the other and might be the worse option if you’re worried about the long-term use of the S Pen.
At first glance, because your Galaxy Z Fold 5 doesn’t have a dedicated S Pen holster, you might be tempted to buy the Slim S Pen Case. That way, you can stick the S Pen to the back of your Galaxy Z Fold 5 whenever you’re not using it. Besides, it doesn’t look bad at all, with its two-color combination and slim profile.
However, you might want to think twice before you spend $100. Not only is the S Pen Slim Case almost twice as expensive as the S Pen Fold Edition, but it is the opposite of a future-proof purchase. It might be the most obsolescent accessory you can buy from Samsung.
The S Pen Fold Edition is way better than the Slim Case
The inherent issue with the $99.99 Galaxy Z Fold 5 Slim S Pen Case is that it won’t be compatible with future Galaxy Z Fold models. Only your Z Fold 5.
Since the S Pen appears to have peaked, the stylus itself will likely work with future Galaxy Z Fold models, but the phone case won’t fit. The only way you will be able to keep using the S Pen is if you carry it around all loose. You will risk the chance of snapping it in half — which you can easily do when you carry it in your pocket if you’re not extra careful.
That is why the Galaxy Z Fold 5 S Pen Fold Edition is the only future-proof choice you have. Although this $54.99 S Pen doesn’t come with a phone case for your Galaxy Z Fold 5, it does come wrapped in a protective case that keeps the S Pen itself safe and secure, and easy to carry around care-free.
The one downside to this design is that you won’t be able to attach the S Pen Fold Edition to your Fold 5 in any way. Again, you’ll have to carry it loose, but at least, this version with the tube-shaped case was made precisely for that.
On the plus side, the S Pen Fold Edition doesn’t lock your Galaxy Z Fold 5 into one specific case model. You can use whatever phone case you want and still have the S Pen secure and ready to be used.
It’s also the cheaper option, and it will most likely keep working with future Z Fold phones if you intend to upgrade later. You won’t have to spend another $100 every time you buy a new Galaxy Z Fold and need an S Pen.
In a way, the S Pen Fold Edition is a real money saver and makes the Slim S Pen Case look ridiculously overpriced, especially if you account for the fact that you’ll need to buy new cases with every new Fold model.
All in all, you may want to steer clear from this Slim Case accessory unless you have money to burn or are certain the Galaxy Z Fold 5 is the last S Pen phone you’ll ever want to use.
Even the latest AirPods rumors can’t cheer us up this week. Image: Cult of Mac
This week on Cult of Mac’s podcast: The latest rumors indicate 2024 will bring big changes to the AirPods lineup. In fact, Apple’s ramping up for “the biggest AirPods launch to date.”
But even this fantastic news can’t cheer us up after the Department of Justice files a wide-ranging antitrust lawsuit against Apple. We recorded this episode of The CultCast right after news of the DOJ’s suit broke, and some of us are fuming!
Also on The CultCast:
So … Apple might lean on Google Gemini to power iOS 18 features? Good luck with that.
iPhone 17 could bring a major upgrade in the display department.
The next-gen Vision Pro headset might drop the price to something much more approachable.
Listen to this week’s episode of The CultCast in the Podcasts app or your favorite podcast app. (Be sure to subscribe and leave us a review if you like it!) Or watch the video live stream, embedded below.
The CultCast live stream archive: 2024 AirPods and DOJ antitrust suit
Here’s the YouTube archive of the live stream:
And below you will find the stories we discuss on the show.
Our sponsors BetterHelp, Squarespace and Backblaze
BetterHelp: Thinking of therapy? Give BetterHelp’s online therapy a try. Learn to make time for what makes you happy. Visit BetterHelp.com/CULTCAST today to get 10% off your first month.
Squarespace: Ready to set up a website? Squarespace gives you all the tools you need to start selling anything online. Begin your free website trial today at squarespace.com/cultcast (no credit card required). Save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain with code cultcast at checkout.
Backblaze: Get unlimited cloud backup for Macs, PCs, and businesses for just $99 per year. Backblaze offers multiple restore options, including rapid recovery in the event of data loss or ransomware. Access your backed-up data from anywhere in the world! Sign up for a free trial at Backblaze.com/cultcast.
This week’s top Apple news
On the show this week: Your host Erfon Elijah (@erfon), Cult of Mac managing editor Lewis Wallace (@lewiswallace) and Cult of Mac writer D. Griffin Jones (@dgriffinjones).
Here are the headlines we’re talking about on this week’s show: