In recent months, there have been rumors that Apple will raise prices again with the new generation of iPhone 17. However, a recent report from JPMorgan brings slightly more optimistic news - at least for the US market.
Apple has officially announced its fall “Awe dropping” event for September 9. The focus will be on the iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max, which are rumored to get a completely new rear with a horizontal “camera bar”, A19 Pro chip (3 nm), 12 GB RAM, Wi-Fi 7, larger screens (up to 6.9") and upgraded optics: for the first time, all three rear cameras are said to be 48 MP, and the selfie is 24 MP. As always: some things are official, but not much is yet — so we're marking what's official and what's “work-in-progress”.
The Albishorn Marinagraph is a new watch from Swiss indie manufacturer Albishorn, which “invents vintage” – it designs watches as if they were made in the past, but no one made them at the time. It combines the cleanliness of a diver’s skin with a very useful regatta countdown and tide bezel. Translated from horological to everyday language: the watch measures the time until the start of a sailing regatta and also helps to understand when the tide is changing. Price: CHF 3,950, limited to 99 pieces per color.
When Apple introduced the iPhone 6 in 2014, we got a bigger screen, but also an unwanted bonus: the first protruding camera module. A small “pimple” that turned into a real mountain with each new generation. If the rumors are true, this “Everest” will reach its peak with the upcoming iPhone 17. But it is saved by Mynus MAGBACK.
In a world where artificial intelligence is already taking over our jobs, chatting with us like old friends and occasionally making up facts, the internet has come up with a new, rather spicy way to express frustration. Meet the "clanker" — a term that sprung from Star Wars and is now synonymous with anything that annoys us about AI. And yes, if you ask ChatGPT, it might think you're talking about old British slang for metallic sounds. How ironic, right?
Tesla announced Tesla Master Plan 4 at X on September 1, emphasizing “sustainable abundance” through artificial intelligence, robotics (Optimus), and autonomy. The document is ambitious, but without clear milestones. Reactions are divided: supporters celebrate the “physical arrival of AI,” skeptics recall unfinished goals from the past and declining vehicle sales.
TIME magazine has revealed this year's selection of the 100 most influential people in artificial intelligence - TIME100 AI 2025. Alongside the obligatory Silicon Valley faces, some very European priorities come to the fore: technological sovereignty, security and infrastructure realpolitik. Meanwhile, DeepSeek, with its Chinese "open-weight" approach, is simultaneously inspiring and triggering bans.
Aluminum foil isn't just for roasting vegetables. It's conductive, reflective, bendable, and surprisingly accurate at taming light, heat, and radio waves. Here's a curated collection of safe, practical, and fun DIY tricks, complete with mini-explanations of where the science is and where the myths are. DIY Aluminum Foil Tricks
If sound is important to you but you don't want to break the budget (or you want to spend it wisely), here are eight headphone models that bring clear ideas to 2025: better noise cancellation, longer battery life, repairability, and even heart rate monitoring.
Qualcomm's next flagship chip is like a Hollywood star with several stage names - Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 or Elite 2 - but when it hits the scene, you'll recognize it by its performance, not its business card. It's already surpassed 4 million points on the AnTuTu test, which is a new benchmark for mobile processors. If numbers bore you, let's put it this way: today's flagships barely breathe at 2.5 to 3 million.
iPhone 17 without a SIM card?! Apple apparently thinks that plastic SIM cards will be as retro as floppy disks or DVDs in 2025. With the new iPhone 17 series, the SIM slot will be gone in Europe - and not just on the "Pro" models, but on the entire line.
Hunters and mechanical watches share three requirements: legibility, robustness, ergonomics. For two decades, the BR‑03 has been Bell & Ross’ visual signature – a circle within a square, inspired by aircraft instruments – and the BR‑03 Chrono Rafale Solo Display version cranks up this DNA to the max. The square here is not a pose, but a user interface.